The plans for a $1.2 billion Interstate 10 widening project and reconfiguration of Barraza-Aviation Parkway recently cleared an important hurdle in efforts to one day provide better travel experiences in Pima County.
The Arizona Department of Transportationβs final environmental assessment to determine impacts to areas surrounding the project was determined to have βno significant impact,β the report said.
The goal is to widen I-10 from I-19 to Kolb Road and to provide an extension of Arizona 210, Barraza-Aviation Parkway, from Golf Links Road to I-10.
Alvernon Way in this area would be designated Barraza-Aviation Parkway along with an interchange that provides direct access from Palo Verde Road to I-10, ADOT said.
βAdding a connection between I-10 and SR 210 in southeast Tucson would facilitate the use of SR 210 as a business spur, providing local downtown traffic with a desirable alternative to I-10, offloading traffic, and thereby improving traffic operations on I-10,β ADOT said.
Overall, the project would add up to two lanes in each direction from the I-10/I-19 interchange to Alvernon Way, up to four lanes on I-10 from Alvernon Way to Kolb Road as well as the improvements to the corridorβs interchanges and bridges. About 15 miles of road will be addressed.
While not directly tied to the ongoing Downtown Links project connecting Broadway and I-10, this will bring benefits in accessing the downtown area, according to ADOT.
The plans were put in motion to address a growing area population thatβs expected to reach nearly 1.4 million people by 2040, including Tucsonβs estimated growth from 530,000 to nearly 720,000 people in this period.
ADOT also acknowledged that the I-10 system east of the I-19 interchange established in the 1960s, along traffic interchanges like Kino Parkway, are elements that currently βadversely impact traffic operational efficiency and safetyβ and will further degrade as traffic volumes increase.
The assessment lists some 495 crashes on average that have happened within the project limits from 2014 to 2018 and may be attributed to the old design of the interstate system.
The department also listed in the assessment that there is a high rate of crashes at the Barraza-Aviation connection at Alvernon.
To address these concerns, the long-term plan will be broken up into 18 projects to be completed in the next 15 to 20 years.
The design of the first two projects, the traffic interchanges at Kino Parkway and Country Club Road, are included in the five-year transportation plan by the Pima Association of Governments, the taxpayer-funded regional planning organization.
PAG is seeking to have the projects designed in 2022, followed by utility work and construction about a year to two years later.
Protecting surrounding area
However, before breaking ground crews will have to be aware of possible impacts ADOT said it would follow in the final assessment, including concerns for community members, plants and animals.
Crews will construct noise barriers βas early as possible in the construction phasingβ as a mitigation effort to aid properties in the project area from construction-related noises, ADOT said.
Engineers will ensure βdetailed drainage analysesβ are completed in each phase of final project design to hopefully relieve homeowners who reported concerns
Department officials added that there will be other impacts, such as noise, vibration, dust and temporary street restrictions or closures.
βHowever, these construction-related impacts will be temporary, and traffic control plans will be implemented to maintain access to schools, parks, emergency services, commercial properties and neighborhoods throughout construction.β
Not to be excluded from the impacts is the right-of-way acquisitions needed near Aviation and Golf Links Road.
The assessment said it would lead to 25 businesses being relocated resulting in potential job loss. Those business in the project areas will receive help from the Regional Transportation Authority Main Street Assistance Program, which specializes in business consulting.
Protecting plants and animals
The assessment said that protected native plants within the project area will be impacted, however, ADOTβs Roadside Development Section will seek approval from the Arizona Department of Agriculture for any native plant relocation.
Crews will even have to address invasive plant species from being transported into the construction area by washing hauling equipment prior to entering the area.
Thereβs a similar process to address concerns for animals, including birds. ADOTβs Environmental Planning biologist will evaluate how to avoid active bird nests. Additionally, crews will have to review materials regarding the Western burrowing owl as no activities can take place within 100 feet of active burrows.
βThough the positive effects of widening the interstate and traffic interchanges would most directly apply to the operation of personal and commercial vehicles, trucks and buses, the project would enhance the movement of people, goods and services throughout the region, which would benefit all residents,β ADOT said.
Down the Road
Overnight lane restrictions at I-10 near Houghton Road: As part of the I-10, Houghton Road interchange project, motorists will experience overnight lane restrictions on Monday and Tuesday.
On Monday, westbound I-10 will be reduced to one lane followed by eastbound travel on Tuesday. Each restriction will last from 9:30 p.m. to 5 a.m.
Overnight ramp closures along I-19 in Nogales: The southbound I-19 off-ramp to Arizona 189, Mariposa Road, will be closed overnight Tuesday and Wednesday from 8 p.m. to 6 a.m.
Motorists should access Mariposa Road using the Grand Avenue ramp.
The traffic signal at Mariposa and northbound I-19 on-ramp will be temporarily deactivated on Tuesday and Wednesday between 8 a.m. and 4 p.m. to relocate two electrical boxes.
Law enforcement will direct traffic through the area.
Stories behind Tucson-area street names:
The stories behind 11 Tucson-area street names
Craycroft Road
UpdatedFrank Craycroft, a mechanical and mining engineer, built one of the most impressive houses of the day on the road that now bears his name.
Craycroft was born in Louisville, Ky., in 1872, to Elkanah and Louise Craycroft. He graduated from the University of Kentucky and then, following in the tradition of men in his family, enrolled in the University of Edinburgh in Scotland. On graduation day in 1889, he received his degree in mining engineering and also became a CPA.
He spent the next four years working with his father on water works projects. After his father died, he lived in Boulder, Colo., Bisbee, Globe and Los Angeles. He also served in the Spanish-American War in 1898.
In 1904, Craycroft came to Tucson, working mostly in heating and power plant construction. He also was chief engineer for the J. Knox Corbett Co., and later went into business for himself. The 1925 Tucson City Directory lists his business, Frank Craycroft Plumbing and Heating, at 40 Toole Ave., downtown.
He was also an important promoter of the El Conquistador Hotel, where El Con Mall is now.
Craycroft was married twice, first to Mary L. Norman, of Texas, who died in 1917, and again in 1925 to Edna E. Huckabee (some sources site her last name as Greene). He had three children.
In 1925, he built a house in the desert, just off a dirt road that was then called Kenyon. A Tucson Citizen article in May of that year described the house as "of Spanish architecture and is built in the shape of an 'H.'
" The article said it "contains nine rooms and three baths . . . two large sleeping porches, and a porch built on the roof, which is gained by means of a spiral stairway."
The house, at 5524 E. Fourth St., off Craycroft Road, has been remodeled and changed hands several times. In the 1990s, it was the headquarters of the
Tucson chapter of the American Cancer Society. It is now a private business.
Roughly 15 years after the house was built, Kenyon Road was renamed Craycroft Road.
Frank Craycroft died suddenly on May 10, 1929, at his home. He was 56 years old.
Kino Parkway
UpdatedEusebio Francisco Kino, the father of Tucson's San Xavier Mission, is the namesake for Kino Parkway, which runs from East Broadway south to Benson Highway.
Kino, whose nickname became "The Apostle of Arizona," was born in 1645 in the town of Segno, Italy. He excelled in cartography, mathematics and astronomy.
As a teenager, he fell seriously ill and vowed to St. Francis Xavier that if God would save him he would become a missionary to the Orient. Entering the priesthood in 1665, he spent a dozen years studying to become a Jesuit priest.
At age 36, in 1681, he arrived in Mexico, and the following year, he mapped out Baja California and the Sea of Cortez. Later he became the first person to confirm that California was not an island, as was a common belief at that time.
His 1706 map of Southern Arizona was so accurate that it went unaltered for a century.
In 1691, Kino embarked on the initial expedition into the Pimeria Alta, land of the Upper Pimas, in northern Sonora and Southern Arizona; he would make a total of nine trips to Arizona. He followed the Santa Cruz River north and stopped by what became the Tumacacori Mission. On his second mission about a year later, he visited the village of Bac, south of Tucson, where he laid the foundation for the San Xavier Mission. It was built after his death and is still active today.
At Bac and Schookson, he counted 900 and 800 Indians, respectively; the Spanish incorrectly pronouncing Schookson as Tucson, which translates roughly to "at the foot of the black hill." The Indians were living in clusters of houses along the banks of the Santa Cruz River.
Kino spent 20 years in the Pimeria Alta and established 24 missions. He trained natives as cowboys - the roots of the cattle industry in the Southwest stem from the rancho missions he started in Arizona.
He also earned the respect of his fellow missionaries and the Indians with whom he worked. He was known for his compassion and his hard work.
Kino died at Magdalena, Sonora., in 1711 at 65.
Egleston Drive
UpdatedEgleston Memorial Drive and Egelston Drive, both in Oro Valley, are named in honor of landowners who helped preserve some of Tucson's most scenic land.
Charles Egleston was born in 1895 in Westfield, Mass., and his wife, Anna (Kehr) Egleston, was born three years later in 1898 in New York City. The two arrived in Tucson in the 1920s with their two children - three others later would be born in Tucson. Before moving to Arizona, Charles had served in the U.S. Navy.
When they first moved to Tucson, the Eglestons lived near East Glenn Street and North First Avenue, and Charles worked as a self-employed electrician. In the 1930s, they purchased large tracts of land around Tucson, including 65 acres near Pusch Ridge, which was their largest holding. It was bounded by Oracle Road on the west, Linda Vista Boulevard on the north, and Calle Concordia on the south and also included two parcels totaling 30 acres on the west side of Oracle Road north of Calle Concordia.
Part of that land is now the James Kriegh Park, which sits next to Egleston Drive. On one of these two parcels they built the family home, which was finished in 1951 and still exists today at 9465 N. Oracle Road.
Outside of work, the Eglestons volunteered with the Beacon Group, a non-profit organization dedicated to supporting and providing opportunities for individuals with developmental disabilities. Charles died in 1965, but Anna lived until her 99th birthday. Throughout her life she was dedicated to her Christian faith, including her mission work on the Indian reservations throughout Arizona.
Perhaps the couple's greatest legacy was preserving the land on North Oracle where Pusch Ridge Christian Academy and Canyon del Oro Baptist Church are now located. They gave the land to the Palo Verde Baptist Church in 1958, with the stipulation that it be used "for religious and educational purposes only."
The road in the Pusch Ridge property is named Egleston Memorial Drive, in honor of Charles and Anna.
Bentley Avenue
UpdatedBentley Avenue was named not for the famed automobile, but for a Tucson family whose most prominent member helped improve education and health-care opportunities for the area's poorest residents.
Evalyn Bentley was born in Friend, Neb., in 1878. Her parents, Randall and Sarah Bentley, of Canada, had five children together. After Randall Bentley died, the family moved to Arizona in 1914.
That same year, Evalyn Bentley traveled by horseback to the Hopi Indian Reservation to assist in the development and improvement of the nation. She served as a field nurse, home economist, lawyer and doctor for the Hopi families.
She later became a home demonstration agent for Pima County, and in this role she organized programs that aided families with cooking, sewing and other items related to home management in rural Arizona. She also established a 4-H club.
Bentley paved the way for better education, health, and home life for Southern Arizona by introducing health and homemaking programs for rural housewives, and propelling Pima's first adult extension classes. One of the programs she introduced to the county, the "Keep Growing Project," offered free medical and dental services in rural areas and county schools.
The program was such a success that it later became part of the Pima County Health Center.
In 1947, Bentley retired from her home demonstration work in Pima County. She worked as Pima's home demonstration agent for 26 years and received honorable mention for her achievements at the First Presbyterian Church.
In 1960, while crossing Speedway on her way to church, Bentley and a friend were struck and killed by a car; she was 82 years old.
Bentley Avenue runs north-south between North Tucson Boulevard and North Country Club Road and between East Pima Street and East Grant Road.
The street was named after the family, which owned land west of Country Club Road.
Mabel Bentley, who was Evalyn's sister, married a member of the Stewart family, and that is where the name of the street next to it came from.
Β
Brichta Drive
UpdatedAugustus C. Brichta was such a strong advocate of education that he worked two months without pay as the area's first school sputtered and then closed.
But his educational legacy lives on in the Augustus Brichta Elementary School, 2110 W. Brichta Drive, and the street named in his honor off North Silverbell Road and West Speedway.
Brichta was born in New York City on Sept. 2, 1821, to Francis and Amelia (Rudolphus) Brichta, who were from Germany. He was one of four children and was educated at the Jesuit College in Havana, Cuba, and at St. Louis University.
After finishing school he went to work with his father in Nacogdoches County, Texas. When the Mexican-American War began, he enlisted and served in the Second Mounted Volunteers under Gen. Zachary Taylor.
In 1846 and 1847 he was on the front lines and fought in the Battle of Monterrey. Many years later, he was a member of the Society of Mexican Veterans, which he had joined in San Francisco.
In 1849, Brichta traveled to California during the Gold Rush, mining for the precious metal on the American, Feather, and Yuba rivers, but found slim pickings.
He arrived in Arizona around 1864, and worked as a clerk for the First Arizona Territorial Legislature.
His next stop was Tucson, where he taught in the first English-speaking school. Held in an adobe building downtown, in 1868 it had about 55 students, all boys.
It had dirt floors, and the only furniture was pine benches and desks.
Due to lack of funding by the town, the school closed less than six months after opening, and Brichta taught the last two months without pay.
After that, Brichta worked for the firm Lord & Williams and did a stint as deputy postmaster.
He was Pima County Recorder for one term and also the first Justice of the Peace of Nogales.
Mining was his major endeavor throughout his life, and he worked three copper claims in the Tucson Mountains.
In 1872 Brichta wed Maria Jesusita Franco of Santa Cruz, Mexico, and adopted her three children. He died Dec. 21, 1910.
Samaniego Avenue
UpdatedSamaniego Avenue, located south of the Tucson Convention Center downtown, is named in honor of a naturalized U.S. citizen who became one of the most powerful men in early Tucson.
Mariano Guadalupe Samaniego was born in Sonora, Mexico, in 1844. His parents, Bartolo and Ysabel Samaniego, were born there also.
Ysabel's father, Pedro Luna, was a soldier from Sonora; Bartolo's father, Tiburcio Samaniego, was a large land owner, magistrate and adviser and friend to the Opata and Yaqui Indians. His family was one of the oldest in Sonora.
After Bartolo's death in Mexico in 1850, Ysabel moved to what is now Mesilla, N.M., where she and Mariano ran a store. A few years later they became naturalized as a result of the Gadsden Purchase.
Mariano Samaniego attended St. Louis University, graduating in 1862. Next he signed on as an interpreter for the Confederate Army. In 1864, he began freighting supplies to and from multiple posts, traveling as far east as the Missouri River.
After marrying Dolores Aguirre in Las Cruces, N.M., he came to Tucson in 1869, and was awarded numerous contracts to carry supplies to various Arizona forts.
In 1881, after the murder of his brother Bartolo Jr. in an ambush by Apaches, he sold his contracts and started raising cattle, which he continued until his death. He also owned a large amount of real estate, including the Canyon del Oro and Rillito ranches, both north of Tucson.
The Canyon del Oro ranch is now the site of Biosphere 2.
Mariano Samaniego served as a Tucson city councilman, Pima County assessor, chairman of the Pima County Board of Supervisors and representative in the Arizona Territorial Assembly.
He also was on the University of Arizona's first board of regents and served two terms as president of the Arizona Historical Society.
During the last decade of the 1800s, when he was at the apex of his career, he was one of the most powerful men in Tucson. He died in 1907, at the age of 65.
Note: Samaniego's house, built in 1876, is at 222 S. Church Ave., south of La Placita Village.
Herbert Avenue
UpdatedHerbert Drachman was born in 1876 in Tucson to Samuel and Jennie Drachman at a time when the Old Pueblo was still part of the Old West.
He grew up with his cousin Harry Arizona Drachman, who is said to be the first Anglo born in Tucson.
Toward the end of the 1800s, Herbert journeyed by stagecoach to Berkeley, Calif., where he studied at the University of California for five years. After graduating, he returned home and worked in his father's cigar store downtown. He also became active in athletics, with a particular fondness for baseball.
In 1909, after 10 years of business and civic duty, he went to San Francisco and founded a curio shop.
After the death of his father, he returned home in 1916 and set up a real estate and insurance company in which he flourished and was active until his death in the spring of 1937. He was married to Eda Drachman and had a stepson, Richard Drachman, who worked with him in his real estate and insurance business.
In 1934, he spearheaded a campaign to save the Orndorff Hotel downtown, but the landmark fell the following year to make room for a parking lot.
He spent more than two decades aiding the Tucson Chinese colony, the Yaqui Indians of Pascua Village and in many other civic activities.
He also advocated against attempts to legalize gambling but seemed most proud of being a member of Tucson's first volunteer fire department - he often showed off pictures of himself and other firefighters.
According to a file at the Arizona Historical Society, his father purchased the block between Broadway, Fifth Avenue and Ochoa Street for $48 around 1880 and named the street to the east Herbert Avenue after his son.
Blacklidge Drive
UpdatedFrank E. Blacklidge Sr., the namesake of a street in central Tucson between Fort Lowell Road and Glenn Street, was an early contractor who was also a celebrated rancher and cook.
Blacklidge was born in Redondo Beach, Calif., on Nov. 15, 1888. In 1890 or 1891, he arrived in Benson with his family.
His parents divorced in 1892, and his mother, Laura (Trask) Blacklidge, gained custody of Frank, his brother, Harry J., and his sister, Myrtle.
He spent much of his childhood on his grandfather Jacob Trask's ranch. At about 10 years old, he roped his first steer while riding an old horse named Baldy. This experience came in handy later on when he worked as a cowhand for Jim Cummings on his Circle Five Ranch close to PeΓ±a Blanca Lake.
In 1912, the year Arizona gained statehood, Blacklidge was living in Patagonia, which was then so small that its jail was a "grilled iron door" at the entrance to a small mine just south of town. Blacklidge was one of the first people to enjoy the new jail, after a night of drinking with a cowboy friend, while driving a Model T.
In 1921 he arrived in Tucson, where he established a contracting company. Business was slow during the Great Depression, so he ran the O-J Ranch south of Three Points, off the road to Sasabe.
Blacklidge, whose nickname was "Pancho," loved to cook and reminisced in a 1966 Arizona Daily Star article about a Fourth of July celebration at the ranch, where neighboring families barbecued, drank moonshine and danced to a fiddle and guitar. Some of his recipes were even published in Sunset magazine and a few cookbooks.
In the 1920s, Blacklidge built many of the homes on what is now Blacklidge Drive. This street was first recorded in the county records in 1922 and was one block long, between Cherry and Campbell avenues.
He owned a little ranch at 4200 E. Glenn St., just west of Columbus Boulevard.
He was married twice, first to Eleanor (Roberts) Blacklidge of Tombstone, with whom he had two children: Frank E. Blacklidge Jr. in 1926 and Ruth Marie Blacklidge in 1925. After Eleanor died in 1927, he married Augusta Frances (Haller) Blacklidge, who helped raise the kids.
Blacklidge died in 1973 in Tucson at the age of 84.
Runway Drive
UpdatedRunway Drive, as the name suggests, was a runway at the old Gilpin Airport.
In the late 1930s, Walter Douglas Jr., a longtime pilot and flight instructor at the Davis-Monthan Airfield, purchased farmland northwest of Tucson. The area, near West Prince and North Romero roads, was leveled in 1939 by Fred Grissom, who became Douglas' chief mechanic.
A control tower, which was built on top of the passenger terminal, was built later, surrounded by hangars to the north and south. These structures exist today as part of the R.E. Darling Co., west of Romero Road.
Farming next to the airport continued for a few years. Douglas operated Gilpin Airlines as well as a flight school, which trained members of the University of Arizona's Reserve Officer Training Corps, among others.
In the late 1940s and early 1950s, Gilpin Speedway, an unpaved race track, drew crowds to watch midget-car and jalopy races.
In 1957, the airport was renamed the Central Airpark, and in 1958, under new ownership, it was rechristened Freeway Airport.
Thomas R. Borst purchased the 42-acre airport and several buildings in 1970. The airport went under in 1978. The land now is an industrial park, which includes the 25-acre Sun Tran Northwest Bus Facility.
Runway Drive is about a block east of Interstate 10, north of Prince. It runs parallel to the interstate.
Gates Pass
UpdatedThomas Gates came to Arizona in 1866 with Billy Brannen, a fellow poker player.
The two made money hand over fist in Tucson, Las Cruces, N.M., and Santa Fe, where the partnership ended in 1867.
Gates was born in Mount Pleasant, Canada, in 1834. Indian Territory (now Oklahoma) was the family's next stop, and then on to California.
After parting ways with Brannen, Gates returned to California by way of Salt Lake City. He made several visits to Arizona in the following years, and sometime in the 1870s he was married in Los Angeles and brought his wife to Arizona.
He became partners with territorial legislator Albert Franklin Banta for some time and later invested in mining.
In 1883, he acted as a lobbyist and helped repeal the bullion tax law. That same year he was head of the Democratic Territorial Central Committee. He was also a founding member of the Arizona Pioneers Historical Association and spent some time as a saloonkeeper.
He was appointed superintendent of the Yuma Prison by Gov. C. Meyer Zulick. In 1887, during a prison riot, he was stabbed in the neck and back. The trauma would haunt him for nearly a decade and eventually led to his suicide at the prison hospital.
Author William Ascarza wrote: "It was his legacy to discover the path through the Tucson Mountains, now called Gates Pass. Gates' objective was to establish a faster route between the Waterman Mountains in Avra Valley to the city of Tucson.
"Gates owned a profitable claim in the Waterman Mountains known as the Abbie Waterman Mine, which was 33 miles southwest of Tucson. It was to his economic advantage to find a shorter trade route to his carbonate mine. He discovered such a route via 'a natural canyon' that was 3,500 feet in height and a little over a mile long.
"Unfortunately, the Tucson Board of Supervisors failed to appropriate the necessary funding to build a road. Thomas Gates determined it a necessity and funded the project out of his own pocket. The total cost was $1,000. The result was the completion of a dirt road that directly linked Tucson with Avra Valley and shortened Gates' travel route from Tucson to the Waterman Mountains by eight miles."
Plumer Avenue
UpdatedPlumer Avenue, between Campbell Avenue and Tucson Boulevard, is named in honor of a banker who helped Tucson grow and develop.
Nathaniel E. Plumer was born in 1866 in Detroit to Nathaniel B. and Martha (Sanborn) Plumer but grew up in Boston.
Plumer's first job was as a representative with the George H. Hammond Packing Co. After several years, he went into business for himself in the same field.
He arrived in Tucson in 1899, coming from Denver in a wagon due to health issues. Here he created a partnership with Fred J. Steward and was involved in real estate and insurance for three years as a member of the firm Plumer & Steward. Their offices were at 32 N. Stone Ave., where the Steinfeld Department Store would later stand.
With Steward and other investors, Plumer organized the Southern Arizona Bank & Trust Co. in 1903 and was elected president of the corporation - a role he would hold until his death. The bank was one of the strongest in the state, and in 1913 it had resources of more than $1 million.
Plumer was deeply involved in the creation of the Tucson YMCA. He became president of the board of trustees and guided the construction of the headquarters and purchase of equipment.
He also was active in the prohibition of alcohol and gambling in Tucson.
He owned property near the University of Arizona -likely in the area bounded by East Speedway, North Campbell Avenue, East Elm Street and North Tucson Boulevard - which he organized into a subdivision. He loved to play desert golf on the land, and also to race cars down Speedway.
Plumer married Mabel Roberts of New England, and they had one daughter, Alice Plumer.
After a visit to his summer home in Oracle, he became ill and died in 1917.