Take online survey May 5-19, 2025; more at vaprojectpipeline.virginia.gov
STAUNTON – The Virginia Department of Transportation (VDOT), in partnership with the City of Harrisonburg, is seeking feedback on a transportation study assessing potential solutions on Route 42 (Virginia Avenue) between Gay Street and the Harrisonburg city limit.
This study will focus on identifying measures to encourage lower speeds, improve safety for turning movements, and enhance multimodal connectivity, including for pedestrians. The study will evaluate alternatives to preserve throughput on the two-lane segment from Gay Street to Edom Road, identified in the Harrisonburg Rockingham Metropolitan Planning Organization 2045 Long Range Transportation Plan as being over capacity in the future. The corridor also has barriers to use for people biking and walking to destinations such as nearby activity centers and the transit connections used for travel throughout the city and beyond, each of which will be considered.
VDOT invites residents and travelers to learn more and take an online survey which is available May 5-19, 2025. Community input received through this survey will help the study team identify existing issues along the study corridor and develop recommendations for potential improvements that will be evaluated and presented during the next phase of the study, which will include another opportunity for public comment.
The survey, which has a translation tool for other languages, is available at https://publicinput.com/st-25-01. Comments can also be sent to brad.reed@vdot.virginia.gov or to Brad Reed, Virginia Department of Transportation Staunton District, 811 Commerce Road, Staunton, VA 24401-9029.
In addition to the survey, VDOT and Harrisonburg Public Works will host an open house for the study on Tuesday, May 6. There will be two location/timeframe options to attend where the community may share their experiences, thoughts and questions related to traveling the area. The open house location/time options include:
This study is being conducted as part of the Project Pipeline program, which was created by the Commonwealth Transportation Board (CTB). Project Pipeline is a performance-based planning program to identify cost-effective solutions to multimodal transportation needs in Virginia. Project Pipeline is led by Virginia’s Office of Intermodal Planning and Investment (OIPI), in collaboration with VDOT and the Department of Rail and Public Transportation (DRPT).
This study is expected to be completed in summer 2026; it does not set construction dates for any improvements. The study will recommend projects, solutions, and investment strategies that may be considered for statewide funding programs such as SMART SCALE, Revenue Sharing, and Virginia Highway Safety Improvement Program (HSIP), as well as regional and local funding sources.
The VDOT Staunton District is on Facebook and X (Twitter). Follow VDOT statewide accounts on Facebook, Flickr, and YouTube.
The VDOT Web page is located at https://www.vdot.virginia.gov/.
The VDOT Staunton District serves Frederick, Shenandoah, Clarke, Warren, Page, Rockingham, Augusta, Highland, Rockbridge, Alleghany and Bath counties.
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Last updated: May 7, 2025