Pavement renewal that respected the wooded corridor it runs through.
Piper Road's pavement had failed, but its setting - a narrow, tree-lined rural corridor in the Town of Eagle - was worth keeping. Lynch's rehabilitation pulverized the existing surface and placed a new asphalt overlay, restoring the roadway without redrawing it.
The design protected wooded roadside areas and drainage features throughout, and maintained practical driveway tie-ins for adjacent properties during construction - a context-sensitive approach that renewed performance while preserving what makes the road worth driving.
Pulverize-and-overlay renewal of the failed rural surface.
Wooded roadsides and drainage features protected through construction.
Access maintained for adjacent properties throughout the work.
Performance restored without sacrificing the corridor's character.