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Wisconsin Transportation Builders Association

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Archives for June 2025

Work Zone Safe Wisconsin Scholarship Winners

June 26, 2025 by Lane Kimble

Click to read more about each WTBA Work Zone Safe scholarship winner.  The Wisconsin County Highway Association generously sponsors each month’s $500 drawing.

Register for the FREE online course HERE

May 2025: Alexa Martin | Wauzeka-Steuben High School

April 2025: Evalin Hammett | Immanuel Lutheran High School

March 2025: Aron Nuredini | Milton High School

February 2025: Milana Koutnik | Brookfield East High School

January 2025: Macy Myers | Rhinelander High School

December 2024: Devin Maconaghy | Reedsburg Area High School

November 2024: Adrian Guttierez | Verona Area High School

October 2024: Matthew Seabright | Gibraltar High School

September 2024: Carter Roberts | New London High School

August 2024: Macey Nelson | Milton High School

July 2024: Spencer Thiry | UW-Platteville

June 2024: Dakoda Funk | Milton High School

May 2024: Clara Haass | Nathan Hale High School

Filed Under: News

Deja vu for the paving crews: Return of I-894 blitz helps WTBA members put finishing touches on major project

June 20, 2025 by Lane Kimble

GREENFIELD, Wis. — Interstate 894 in Milwaukee County transformed almost overnight this past weekend.  What had been a stretch of cracked and pothole-filled roadway is now nearly four miles of fresh, incredibly smooth pavement.

Magic?  No.  Deja vu?  Sure.

Payne+Dolan (Walbec Group) crews and fellow subcontractors utilized a rare full directional freeway closure to work day and night, starting on the westbound lanes in early June and the eastbound lanes June 13-15.

They had the opportunity to do part of the freeway last September.  This time, they’re totally finished.

“It’s relief and joy,” Operations Manager Dan Markeland said.

Supported this time by 70 dump trucks running non-stop, crews milled the existing pavement, replaced it with fresh asphalt, and striped the freeway, finishing more than five hours ahead of schedule.

“It’s not an easy feat to take on a project like this and everybody from field personnel all the way up to upper management is super willing to help out on this,” Senior Project Manager Joe Jones told WTBA.  “It’s much safer, it’s a lot better quality of a product and I believe it’s, hopefully, the way of the future.”

Much of the task at hand was similar to last year, but 2025’s workload was even greater.  Crews had to pave all three lanes in both directions, while also paving reconstructed shoulders and all of the on and off ramps.

P+D was able to accomplish in a few nights what would take weeks or months under normal single-lane closures.  It took great coordination (and many months of meetings) with WisDOT, local leaders, police and fellow contractors.  In the end, it was well worth the time.

“Our (company’s) value of safety is extreme and this is the definition of extreme: shutting down a freeway for us and making it work.  That value to us is huge,” Markeland said.

Prime contractor Zignego Company will close out the multi-year project this summer.

Filed Under: Industry News, News, Video

Share your thoughts: South Bridge Connector public hearing set for July 9

June 13, 2025 by Lane Kimble

In order to build a new $56 million bridge that better connects and clears up congestion in the Fox Valley, Brown County leaders need to hear from you first.

The county will hold a public hearing Wednesday, July 9 on the proposed South Bridge over the Fox River.  The four-lane structure would carry people and goods over the river about two miles south of the nearest existing bridge in De Pere.

The public hearing runs from 5-7:30 p.m. at Susie C. Altmayer Elementary School in De Pere.  People will have a chance to review displays and early bridge designs, ask questions, and register to give up to three minutes of public testimony.

Brown County’s preferred alternative is a concrete girder-style bridge with four 12-foot lanes, a concrete median, and divided sidewalks on either side.  Construction is scheduled for 2027-29, pending permits from the DNR, U.S. Coast Guard, and Army Corps of Engineers.

The bridge is a key piece of an overall $180 million “South Bridge Connector” project, which includes a new interchange, roundabouts, and roads.  Crews began work on other segments of the project this spring.  County and state leaders held a groundbreaking ceremony in May.

Gov. Tony Evers and the Legislature included $50 million in state transportation funding to pay for the bridge in the 2023-25 budget.

Filed Under: News, Industry News

NEW POD: Build up to the Big Gig

June 11, 2025 by Lane Kimble

You can expect to see a good deal of extra traffic flowing through I-794 and the connecting Hoan Bridge over the next several weekends in Milwaukee.

Summerfest returns for its 57th year starting Thursday, June 19, bringing hundreds of thousands of people to the city to see the likes of James Taylor, The Killers, Benson Boone, Lainey Wilson, Third Eye Blind and more.

The freeway not only provides critical transportation to and from the world’s largest music festival; it also serves as a part of Henry Maier Festival Park’s overall aesthetic, with stunning views of the lakefront and downtown high rises.

The “Big Gig” is about much more than just music, though.  It’s the sights, sounds, smells, snacks, and sentimental feelings that come rushing back when you arrive.

“You get out on the grounds, it just feels good.  All the rain we’ve had, everything looks really green and lush.  Hopefully you can tell I’m jazzed, I love it,” Milwaukee World Festival, Inc. CEO Sarah Smith Pancheri said.

So, what’s new this year?  Where are the best “secret spots” to take in a show?  What’s the weirdest request from a performer? How do you get there? And how does transportation infrastructure play a role in making Summerfest a reality?

Find out in the latest episode of Road Trippin’ with WTBA.  Episode 5: Build Up to the Big Gig is live now.

You can find us by searching “WTBA” on Apple Podcasts, Amazon Music, Spotify, or wherever you get your pods.

Filed Under: News, Public Affairs

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