Skip to main content

Ohio Turnpike infrastructure project funds

The Ohio Turnpike and Infrastructure Commission (OTIC) has approved the US$930 million funding needed for ten projects in northern Ohio, each within twenty miles of the turnpike. The 241 mile-long, limited-access toll highway serves as a primary corridor to Chicago and Pittsburgh.
September 17, 2013 Read time: 2 mins
The Ohio Turnpike and Infrastructure Commission (OTIC) has approved the US$930 million funding needed for ten projects in northern Ohio, each within twenty miles of the turnpike.

The 241 mile-long, limited-access toll highway serves as a primary corridor to Chicago and Pittsburgh.

The projects were among ten that received funding in the turnpike’s first venture into financing projects using funds from toll charges.  Of the projects receiving funding, US$340 million was allocated towards construction of the eastbound bridge on the inner belt. The westbound bridge is under construction and expected to open to traffic this fall. It will carry traffic in both directions until the second bridge is completed in the fall of 2016. US$39 million was allotted to the Opportunity Corridor to help pay for the first leg of a US$334 million project to widen a one-mile stretch of East 105th Street from Chester Avenue to Quincy Avenue.

The corridor and bridge projects were among 12 for which the Ohio Department of Transportation sought funding. The commission rejected two as not meeting the basic criteria for securing turnpike money, which include the distance between the projects and the turnpike and the project’s impact on turnpike traffic density and toll revenue.

“This is a true partnership between our agencies. No trips start or end on the Turnpike, so our financial support of these projects is a benefit to the entire transportation system and Turnpike customers as well,” stated Rick Hodges, OTIC Executive Director.

Related Content

  • EU funding for Danish EV charging project
    February 24, 2015
    Fast charging of electric vehicles (EVs) in Denmark is about to become easier thanks to over US$1.1 million of funding from the EU's TEN-T Programme, which is funding a pilot project upgrading the existing charging stations in Denmark to common European standards. This will allow different types of electric vehicles from all over Europe to travel freely in Denmark and will serve as best practice to other European countries. The pilot project will transform 40 of Denmark’s 46 existing charging stations into
  • Asecap Days 2023: Data drives the best decisions
    December 22, 2023
    Almost all the data being collected by highway operators is going to waste. But if firms collect and analyse these ‘vast lakes of data’ they can investigate threats, monitor management systems and drive up revenues, delegates were told at Asecap Days 2023. Geoff Hadwick reports
  • Florida's free flow tolling eases congestion, improves safety
    July 24, 2012
    A decade since Florida's Turnpike Enterprise first deployed electronic toll collection, the organisation's Director of Toll Operations Rick Nelson and Tom S. Knuckey of PBS&J look at progress. A decade on from the deployment of Florida's Turnpike Enterprise's state-wide SunPass pre-paid Electronic Toll Collection (ETC) programme, transponder sales have ballooned from 5,000 to more than 4,000,000. Over 70 per cent of the state's turnpike drivers participate in the system and transponder sales continue to gro
  • Brazilian bypass tender green-lighted
    May 1, 2015
    Brazil's Pernambuco state environmental authorities have approved a preliminary licence for construction of the US$459 million Arco Metropolitano bypass road's São Lourenço da Mata-Cabo de Santo Agostinho stretch. National transport infrastructure department DNIT is preparing final details to tender the project in state capital Recife's metropolitan region. It includes developing a basic plan and executing civil works, said national transport federation CNT in a release The project to build a 45km two