Crews are continuing their blasting work along Nevada Highway 160, the route connecting Pahrump with Las Vegas.
The effort removed fractured bedrock outcroppings for a $58.6 million, six-mile-long highway widening project that began this summer, NDOT said.
Additional blasting and a temporary highway closure was set for Tuesday, Oct. 9, from 12:45 p.m. until 1:30 p.m.
“Cleanup and associated travel delays will last longer than recent blasts, as work is occurring in areas of steeper, taller rock zone,” NDOT said in a statement.
The area is east of Mount Potosi, in southwest Clark County.
NDOT began blasting in the Mountain Springs area starting Sept. 24 with plans calling for that to continue through Oct. 15 east of Mount Potosi Canyon Road, in southwestern Clark County. Delays for motorists are expected, as the highway will be closed during the blasting period, according to NDOT.
Motorists do have an option to use other routes, including heading north on Highway 160 toward U.S. Highway 95. Once Highway 95 is reached, motorists would turn right (south) toward Las Vegas. The U.S. Highway 95 alternative route does add mileage and travel time to the typical trip through the mountain pass to Las Vegas.
The planned blasting may cause some delays for emergency vehicles.
“If an emergency vehicle needs to travel along 160 during an emergency response, it will be too dangerous for them to go through,” Don Christiansen, resident engineer for NDOT, said last month. “During the actual blast time, they will not be able to go through, but once the blasting is over and they are doing the cleanup, we can shuttle and escort an emergency vehicle through, if there is a need for that.”
Christiansen added that “the general public, however, will have to wait until the road is cleaned up.”
Highway 160 widening project
That portion of the nearly $59 million project will occur between mile markers 16 and 22, which start east of the mountain pass and heads to the western edge of Mountain Springs. The contractor of the project is Aggregate Industries SWR Inc.
“This vital southwest valley corridor serves as a crucial link between Las Vegas and Pahrump,” said NDOT spokesman Tony Illia in a recent news release about the overall project. “Rapid development, additional residents, and increased travel has ratcheted the need for freeway improvements. This project, as a result, will expand capacity and enhance motorist safety while also improving mobility and reliability.”
According to a release from NDOT, “the project calls for installing five miles of raised concrete median barrier, new signage and flattening side slopes for safer turnouts, as well as placing new cattleguards and a wildlife undercrossing near mile marker 18. The Mountain Springs community, meanwhile, will receive new frontage roads, improved intersection lighting and an emergency signal for Clark County Volunteer Fire Station #79.”
A rebuilding and paving project on Highway 160’s eastbound lanes, from the western edge of Mountain Springs to around the Nye County line, is also part of the project planned for completion in August 2020. According to previous comments by Illia to the Pahrump Valley Times, the overall project will occur segmentally.
For more information about conditions on Nevada’s highways, head to NvRoads.com or call 511. NDOT also uses the Waze app to inform the public about planned highway restrictions. “But unscheduled construction changes, closures and restrictions are possible due to weather or other factors,” NDOT stated in a release.
With information from the Pahrump Valley Times archives