Two lanes really are faster than three, at least where westbound Interstate 40 meets the U.S. 70 Clayton Bypass. And so the state Department of Transportation says an unusual traffic lane change that it put in place there last September will continue for the next several years.
To make the morning rush hour run more smoothly, DOT closed one of three lanes on I-40 and one of two lanes on U.S. 70 as it merges with I-40. The lane slimming was called temporary in September, but DOT workers will install lane markings to make it semi-permanent today. Traffic studies have shown that the morning rush hour runs a bit faster and more smoothly with two lanes there than it did with three.
DOT added a third lane for a two-mile stretch of I-40 in 2008, when it built the new U.S. 70 bypass interchange near the Wake-Johnston county line. This created a rush-hour bottleneck caused by drivers who move into the new lane as it opens up and then try to squeeze back into the other two lanes when the third lane ends.




