Repaving scheduled on sections of the Blue Ridge Parkway

The National Park Service announced Wednesday that more than 115 miles of the Blue Ridge Parkway will be resurfaced beginning this month. Work is expected to start in late-May and continue through November, with no work scheduled during October. Work locations, within scheduled project areas, will change weekly. Visitors in active work zone areas should expect single lane closures and delays.

Work will take place on the following sections of Parkway, and includes the paved road-side pullouts:

As with any road project, motorists and park users must exercise caution. In the interest of visitor safety, park visitors are asked to:

Project vendors will work in short sections and repeat the resurfacing process as they move from section to section of the full project. The steps in this process include prepping the surface, applying a chip seal surface of liquid asphalt and stone chips, allowing the surface to properly cure, vacuuming the work area to minimize loose gravel, applying a fog seal on top of the chip seal surface, and finishing by painting new road marking lines.

The Blue Ridge Parkway inventory of paved roads includes bridges, tunnels, parking areas, spur roads, service roads, campground and picnic area roads, and the 469-mile Parkway motor route itself. Given the large inventory of paved surfaces along the Parkway, and in order to effectively invest available funding, the pavement preservation strategy focuses on keeping the good sections good and returning fair sections to good condition. 

Pavement preservation is becoming a regular road maintenance strategy in national parks. Studies find that for each dollar spent on pavement preservation between $6 and $10 in future pavement rehabilitation costs are saved. Funding for road maintenance in national parks, including the Parkway, comes in large part from the Highway Trust Fund, which is derived from a federal gas tax managed by the Federal Highway Administration.

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