A massive
rebuilding of about a mile of busy Interstate 5 in downtown Sacramento
begins this Friday, May 30th. Detours and delays are expected to cause
consternation for the estimated 200,000 motorists who use that section of the
freeway daily. At various time, northbound and southbound lanes will be closed
to all traffic during the six-week project. Caltrans says there will be approximately two weeks of lane and
ramp restrictions to each direction of I-5 from the Capitol City Freeway-U.S.
Highway 50 interchange to Richards
Boulevard so contractors can replace
freeway drainage and pavement. After curing, an additional week of lane and
ramp restrictions will take place to allow time for the contractor to apply a
polyester sealant. The area is called the "Boat Section" because it
is below the water level of the nearby Sacramento River.
In the late 1960s when I-5 was being built, the area had to be drained and a
system of pumps installed to keep it from filling up with water during storms. “The problem is underneath the
surface,” Caltrans says. “River silt and sand have blocked the drainage system
that has been in place since the road was completed in the early ‘70s.
As ground water has pushed through joints in the seals slab, the water has
nowhere to go but up through the pavement. This is causing cracks, spills and
deterioration on the surface.”

