VA Cutoff Road bridge to close for two weeks

A map shows the detour routes while the VA Cutoff Road bridge in Hartford Village, Vt., is closed as construction continues on its replacement. (Courtesy Town of Hartford)

A map shows the detour routes while the VA Cutoff Road bridge in Hartford Village, Vt., is closed as construction continues on its replacement. (Courtesy Town of Hartford) Town of Hartford

By CHRISTINA DOLAN

Valley News Staff Writer

Published: 10-01-2024 8:01 PM

HARTFORD — Beginning Monday, Oct. 14, the VA Cutoff Road bridge over the White River will close for two weeks while crews connect two sections of the span.

Traffic will be detoured to the Route 4/Route 5 bridge during the closure.

The newly constructed bridge, also known as the Hartford Bridge #7, which spans the White River and Town Highway 98, is tentatively scheduled to open on Monday, Oct. 28, according to a Vermont Agency of Transportation news release.

During the two-week closure, southbound vehicles will be detoured east Route 14 to the Route 4/Route 5 bridge, onto Route 5, then merge with Route 4.

Northbound traffic will be detoured to the VA Cutoff Road or Mill Road, onto Route 4, then merge onto Route 5 and proceed over the Route 4/Route 5 bridge, then west on Route 14.

Resurfacing work on Route 5 will continue during the bridge closure, and motorists should expect delays.

Construction on the bridge project began in April 2023 and is slated to be complete in Fall 2025.

The new $24.4 million bridge will be widened by approximately 8 feet to meet the minimum state standards for width. This will include a 5.5-foot sidewalk with 4-foot wide shoulders and 11-foot wide travel lanes. The contractor for the project is Queensbury, N.Y.-based Kubricky Construction Corp.

Article continues after...

Yesterday's Most Read Articles

A Life: ‘They all remembered Becky’
Dog dies when car rolls into Lake Fairlee
Dump truck driver faces charges in death of pedestrian in Newport
Woodstock trustees’ report says former police chief failed to serve as town ‘role model’
Black and Hispanic drivers stopped disproportionately across Vermont, traffic stops study finds
Incident that led to school lockdown in Haverhill was hoax, officials say