Orange County

Busy downtown Chapel Hill road closed since last summer reopens. Another will soon.

An 1,100-space parking deck at 125 E. Rosemary St. is nearing the end of construction in downtown Chapel Hill. The public parking deck could open later this year.
An 1,100-space parking deck at 125 E. Rosemary St. is nearing the end of construction in downtown Chapel Hill. The public parking deck could open later this year. tgrubb@heraldsun.com

A key street in downtown Chapel Hill reopened to traffic Monday, easing months of congestion.

The 100 block of East Rosemary Street, between North Columbia and Henderson streets, had been closed since August to let construction crews use a crane to install massive concrete sections of a new public parking deck.

Crews were clearing the last of the construction debris from the street on Thursday and will continue to work on the parking deck, which could open by summer.

The street closure forced drivers downtown to use Franklin Street, which narrows to one lane near the North Columbia intersection. Many drivers heading west used Hillsborough Street to get around downtown instead, regularly backing up the winding, two-lane road.

Downtown business owners, including Chris Carini, who closed Linda’s Bar & Grill earlier this year, have said the construction also kept customers away. Drivers unfamiliar with local traffic could be seen turning around at the barricades, including on Friday, while looking for a route around town.

Chapel Hill closed the intersection of Martin Luther King Jr. Boulevard at North Columbia Street and North Street in January 2024 to create a safer intersection alignment. The work is adding a traffic light, sidewalks and pedestrian crossings.
Chapel Hill closed the intersection of Martin Luther King Jr. Boulevard at North Columbia Street and North Street in January 2024 to create a safer intersection alignment. The work is adding a traffic light, sidewalks and pedestrian crossings. Town of Chapel Hill Contributed

Other roads in Chapel Hill opening

Other road closures that have exacerbated the downtown traffic problem could be resolved soon, including:

A $6 million project that’s adding new travel lanes, sidewalks, bike lanes and a multi-use path on North Estes Drive from Martin Luther King Jr. Boulevard to Caswell Road has kept the westbound lane closed for two years. Traffic in both directions could be restored in May.

An intersection redesign on MLK Jr. Boulevard near downtown closed North Street and North Columbia Street, behind the town’s Fire Station No. 1, in January. North Street is now open at MLK Jr. Boulevard; no word yet on when the North Columbia Street side could reopen.

The project is “squaring up” the intersection to make it more safe for drivers and pedestrians, adding sidewalks, marked crosswalks and a traffic signal. A rear exit from the new parking deck is also being added on North Street.

An 1,100-space parking deck at 125 E. Rosemary St. is nearing the end of construction in downtown Chapel Hill. The public parking deck could open later this year.
An 1,100-space parking deck at 125 E. Rosemary St. is nearing the end of construction in downtown Chapel Hill. The public parking deck could open later this year. Tammy Grubb tgrubb@heraldsun.com

East Rosemary parking deck details

Location: 125 E. Rosemary St., Chapel Hill

Cost: $51 million

Details: Construction of an 1,100-space public parking deck with a ground-floor patio that will feature pop-up and food truck spaces

Why was it needed: The town decided to replace the 30-year-old Wallace Parking Deck at 150 E. Rosemary St. instead of making critical repairs and adding another level. The new deck will double the parking available on East Rosemary Street, although UNC and developer Grubb Properties plan to lease some of those spaces.

What happened: The council worked with Grubb Properties to arrange a land swap — the Wallace deck for Grubb’s CVS parking deck at 125 E. Rosemary St. Once the new parking deck is built, Grubb Properties can move ahead with plans to demolish the Wallace deck and replace it with a seven-story, wet lab and office building. Grubb is also poised to build a seven-story apartment building at 101 E. Rosemary St.

More information: newsobserver.com/news/local/counties/orange-county/article286217820.html

This story was originally published April 12, 2024 at 10:03 AM.

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Tammy Grubb
The News & Observer
Tammy Grubb has written about Orange County’s politics, people and government since 2010. She is a UNC-Chapel Hill alumna and has lived and worked in the Triangle for over 30 years.
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