The Board of Regents May 15 authorized construction of a roadway through the U-M-Flint campus. The estimated $1.9-million project, to be funded by a grant from the Charles Stewart Mott Foundation, will reconnect two sections of East Kearsley Street.
William Webb, assistant vice chancellor for administration at U-M-Flint, says the 1,000-foot-long corridor will be a major step in connecting Flint’s educational and cultural institutions. The project will offer a direct link between Kettering University, the city’s downtown and U-M-Flint on the west, and the Flint Cultural Center campus, Mott Community College and the Applewood estate — owned and operated by the Ruth Mott Foundation — on the east.
“The new corridor will be an asset on the campus, providing a safe roadway for community residents to use as they visit the Cultural Center, the University and the downtown area,” Webb says.
“Flint’s college and cultural institutions have long been vital to Genesee County,” says William White, Mott Foundation president. “The East Kearsley Street project, by more effectively linking those resources, will support the community’s effort to redesign, reinvent and rediscover its future.”
Construction of the roadway was a key recommendation of two independent studies on development and planning for the downtown area conducted in 2003 by Sasaki Associates Inc.
The corridor, to be completed this fall, will require new roadway surfaces, sidewalks, sewers and utility tunnel work, as well as landscaping and street lighting. Vibration dampening measures also will be taken to protect research equipment housed in the William R. Murchie Science Building, which is adjacent to the planned roadway.
The Flint-based engineering firm of Rowe Inc. is designing the planned corridor. Webb says the University intends to begin seeking bids immediately for construction.
