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North Tarrant Express

The North Tarrant Express (NTE) project is a total highway reconstruction of the Interstate 820 (I-820) and State Highway 121/State Highway 183 (SH 121/SH 183, Airport Freeway) corridor between I-35W and Industrial Boulevard in Northeast Tarrant County, Texas. The NTE and the Texas Department of Transportation (TxDOT) anticipate the new highway system will relieve traffic congestion, improve safety on its roadways and have integrated plans for the anticipated traffic growth in one of the country’s fastest developing regions.[2] When the improvements are completed, the $2.5 billion North Tarrant Express will have upgraded main highway lanes, continuous frontage roads, and 13.3 miles (21.4 km) of newly added tolled managed lanes (TEXpress Lanes).[3]

North Tarrant Express

North Tarrant Express highlighted in red
Route information
Maintained by NTE Mobility Partners
Length13.5 mi[1] (21.7 km)
Existed2010–present
Major junctions
West end I-35W in Fort Worth
Major intersections I-820 in Fort Worth, Haltom City, and North Richland Hills
East end SH 183 / SH 121 in Fort Worth
Location
CountryUnited States
StateTexas
Highway system

Construction began in late 2010 and was scheduled to be completed before the end of 2014, at least six months ahead of schedule.[4]

Also included in the North Tarrant Express' scope is the 10 miles (16 km) of I-35W from north of I-30 (Downtown Fort Worth) to the I-820 interchange. The project will provide over $1.5 billion of needed infrastructure to the Fort Worth area.[5]

The NTE project is completely reconstructing and upgrading existing general highway lanes. It is also improving and expanding frontage lanes to double the existing capacity. Moreover, adding TEXpress managed lanes, or tolled express lanes, is designed for commuters seeking the most reliable and time-saving trip. The variable tolls are based on travel time with a minimum goal to maintain a 50 mph traffic flow on the highway; motorists can choose to use general highway lanes or tolled express lanes depending on their traveling objectives.[6]

History edit

A study by the free-market Reason Foundation in 2009 that focused on 11 metro areas, showed that North Texas would have a huge economic boost by alleviating traffic congestion, calculating the extra productivity from better movement of people and goods around the region. Wise infrastructure investments that eliminate gridlock and produce free-flowing road conditions will more than pay for themselves by boosting the region’s economy, and thus tax revenues to maintain the mobility.[7]

The Dallas–Fort Worth metroplex (DFW) was singled out in the study due to its poor showing in congestion indexes and ranked poorly in many indexes in the annual mobility study by the Texas Transportation Institute. The Reason study says the biggest economic gains would come from eliminating severe congestion, which could add $46 billion a year to the regional economy and over $3 billion in annual tax revenues.[8] Dallas is the fourth fastest-growing city in the country.[9]

For the 150,000+ cars a day that travel through the I-820 and SH 121/SR 183 corridor, drivers are no stranger to some of the bottlenecks that cause these delays. As one of the region's most important corridors, this stretch of highway has not kept up with the growth and North Texas' nearly seven million residents.[10] Dallas/Fort Worth commuters spend an average of two days a year stuck in traffic—the fifth-highest in the nation.[11]

On January 29, 2009, the Texas Transportation Commission voted 5–0 to hire Cintra's NTE Mobility Partners to rebuild phase 1 of North Tarrant Express corridors.[12]

Route description edit

NTE Project (1 & 2W) edit

On June 23, 2009, TxDOT awarded a comprehensive development agreement (CDA) for the North Tarrant Express project to NTE Mobility Partners. This concessions includes the design, development, construction, finance, maintenance, and operation of Segment 1 (West) and Segment 2 (East) for the duration of 52 years.[13]

West Segment edit

The West Segment (I-820) is 6.4 miles (10.3 km) in length and runs from I-35W on the west to the North East Mall interchange on the east across three cities (Fort Worth, Haltom City and North Richland Hills). This segment includes 9 cross-street bridges and 21 on-ramps/off-ramps.

East Segment edit

The East Segment (SH 121/SR 183) is 6.9 miles (11.1 km) in length and runs from the North East Mall interchange on the west to Industrial Boulevard in the east, across four cities (North Richland Hills, Hurst, Bedford and Euless). This segment includes 9 cross-street bridges and 31 on- or off-ramps).

I-35W Project edit

A construction agreement with TxDOT has initiated construction on Segments 3A (I-35W from downtown Fort Worth) & 3B (I-35W from I-30 to U.S. 287). Segment 3A has an expected completion date in 2018 and 3B in 2017. The I-35W project is the next part of the North Tarrant Express. It is divided into three segments:[14]

  • Segment 3A is 6.5 miles (10.5 km) of I-35W from north of I-30 to north of I-820 and includes the I-35W/I-820 interchange. Constructed by NTE Mobility Partners Segments 3, LLC (NTEMP3).[15]
  • Segment 3B is 3.6 miles (5.8 km) of I-35W from north of I-820 to US 81/US 287. Constructed by TxDOT.[15]
  • Segment 3C is from US 81 and 287 to Eagle Parkway. Construction began in September 2020. The public-private project will rebuild 6.7 miles of I-35W and add four TEXpress Lanes, auxiliary lanes and some frontage roads. Anticipated substantial completion is late 2023.[16]

Partners edit

The North Tarrant Express is a collaboration of private and public partners (P3 or PPP), including TxDOT and the North Central Texas Council of Governments (NCTCOG).[14]

The NTE is being designed, built, financed, operated and maintained by NTE Mobility Partners, which is working in close collaboration with TxDOT and local communities. This important highway project will be wholly owned by TxDOT.

Pursuant to the additional agreement between TxDOT and NTE Mobility Partners Segments 3 LLC (NTEMP3), the developer (NTEMP3) will design, build, operate and maintain segment 3A (35W). TxDOT will build segment 3B (35W), from north of Loop 820 to U.S. 287, and will then turn it over to NTEMP3 who will be responsible for the operations and maintenance. NTEMP3 will also collect tolls generated on the managed toll lanes of the facility until 2061 paying off the PAB's, TIFIA loan, private equity partners and then sharing profits with TxDOT.[5]

Developer edit

NTE Mobility Partners LLC is a company with three shareholders, including Cintra, a world leader in private-sector development of transportation infrastructure; Meridiam, a global public-private partnership investor/developer of public facilities; and the Dallas Police and Fire Pension System, the first U.S. pension fund in the country to invest in the building and maintenance of a major toll road project like NTE.[17]

Exit list edit

The entire route is in Tarrant County.

LocationmikmDestinationsNotes
Fort Worth 
 
 
 
I-820 west to I-35W
Haltom City  US 377 (Denton Highway)
North Richland HillsIron Horse Boulevard / Meadow Lakes Drivewestbound exit and eastbound entrance
Hurst      I-820 / SH 26 / SH 121 / SH 183 / FM 1938 / Bedford-Euless RoadI-820 exit 23A
BedfordBrown Trailwestbound exit and eastbound entrance
 
 
SH 121 north – DFW Airport North Entry
eastbound exit and westbound entrance
BedfordEuless line  FM 157 (Industrial Boulevard)eastbound exit and westbound entrance
 
 
SH 183 east – DFW Airport South Entry, Irving
1.000 mi = 1.609 km; 1.000 km = 0.621 mi

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Staff. "Project Timeline". NTE Mobility Partners. Retrieved December 12, 2014.
  2. ^ Staff (July 28, 2011). "North Tarrant Express: Meeting the Needs of North Texas Commuters" (PDF). NTE Mobility Partners. Retrieved December 12, 2014.
  3. ^ Staff. "About the NTE". NTE Mobility Partners. Retrieved December 12, 2014.
  4. ^ Graham, A. Lee (April 16, 2014). "North Tarrant Express Remains Ahead of Schedule". Fort Worth Business Press. Retrieved December 12, 2014.
  5. ^ a b de la Peña, Patricia (September 19, 2013). . Infra Insight Blog. Nossaman LLP. Archived from the original on July 15, 2014.
  6. ^ Fort Worth District. "TxDOT Project Tracker: North Tarrant Express (NTE)" (PDF). Texas Department of Transportation. Retrieved December 12, 2014.
  7. ^ Hartgen, David T. & Fields, M. Gregory (August 27, 2009). "Gridlock and Growth: The Effect of Traffic Congestion on Regional Economic Performance". Reason Foundation. Policy Study 371. Retrieved December 12, 2014.
  8. ^ Jones, Rodger (August 28, 2009). "Ending Traffic Congestion Would Boost DFW Economy by $17 Billion, Report Says". Transportation Blog. The Dallas Morning News. Retrieved December 12, 2014.
  9. ^ Carlyle, Erin (February 14, 2014). "America's 20 Fastest-Growing Cities". Forbes. Retrieved December 12, 2014.
  10. ^ . Archived from the original on May 29, 2014. Retrieved June 13, 2014.
  11. ^ Lomax, Tim; Schrank, David & Eisele, Bill. "InconsIstent TraffIc CondItIons ForcIng Texas Commuters to Allow Even More Extra TIme" (PDF). Texas A&M Transportation Institute. Retrieved December 12, 2014.
  12. ^ Lindenberger, Michael A. (January 30, 2009). "Private Toll Lanes, Free Highways Merge First in Tarrant Project". The Dallas Morning News – via TTC News Archives.
  13. ^ Office of Innovative Program Delivery. "Project Profiles: North Tarrant Express Segments 1 and 2A". Federal Highway Administration. Retrieved December 12, 2014.
  14. ^ a b Staff. "North Tarrant Express". Texas Department of Transportation. Retrieved December 12, 2014.
  15. ^ a b Hinkle, Robert & Hartzel, Tony. "Infrastructure Projects: Interstate 35W". City of Fort Worth, Texas. Retrieved December 12, 2014.
  16. ^ "I-35W Corridor".
  17. ^ Staff. "North Tarrant Express Mobility Partners". Cofiroute USA. Retrieved December 12, 2014.

External links edit

KML is not from Wikidata
  • North Tarrant Express
  • NTE TEXpress Lanes
  • Drive On TEXpress App

north, tarrant, express, major, contributor, this, article, appears, have, close, connection, with, subject, require, cleanup, comply, with, wikipedia, content, policies, particularly, neutral, point, view, please, discuss, further, talk, page, december, 2014,. A major contributor to this article appears to have a close connection with its subject It may require cleanup to comply with Wikipedia s content policies particularly neutral point of view Please discuss further on the talk page December 2014 Learn how and when to remove this message The North Tarrant Express NTE project is a total highway reconstruction of the Interstate 820 I 820 and State Highway 121 State Highway 183 SH 121 SH 183 Airport Freeway corridor between I 35W and Industrial Boulevard in Northeast Tarrant County Texas The NTE and the Texas Department of Transportation TxDOT anticipate the new highway system will relieve traffic congestion improve safety on its roadways and have integrated plans for the anticipated traffic growth in one of the country s fastest developing regions 2 When the improvements are completed the 2 5 billion North Tarrant Express will have upgraded main highway lanes continuous frontage roads and 13 3 miles 21 4 km of newly added tolled managed lanes TEXpress Lanes 3 North Tarrant ExpressNorth Tarrant Express highlighted in redRoute informationMaintained by NTE Mobility PartnersLength13 5 mi 1 21 7 km Existed2010 presentMajor junctionsWest endI 35W in Fort WorthMajor intersectionsI 820 in Fort Worth Haltom City and North Richland HillsEast endSH 183 SH 121 in Fort WorthLocationCountryUnited StatesStateTexasHighway systemHighways in Texas Interstate US State Toll Loops Spurs FM RM Park Rec Construction began in late 2010 and was scheduled to be completed before the end of 2014 at least six months ahead of schedule 4 Also included in the North Tarrant Express scope is the 10 miles 16 km of I 35W from north of I 30 Downtown Fort Worth to the I 820 interchange The project will provide over 1 5 billion of needed infrastructure to the Fort Worth area 5 The NTE project is completely reconstructing and upgrading existing general highway lanes It is also improving and expanding frontage lanes to double the existing capacity Moreover adding TEXpress managed lanes or tolled express lanes is designed for commuters seeking the most reliable and time saving trip The variable tolls are based on travel time with a minimum goal to maintain a 50 mph traffic flow on the highway motorists can choose to use general highway lanes or tolled express lanes depending on their traveling objectives 6 Contents 1 History 2 Route description 2 1 NTE Project 1 amp 2W 2 1 1 West Segment 2 1 2 East Segment 2 2 I 35W Project 3 Partners 4 Developer 5 Exit list 6 See also 7 References 8 External linksHistory editA study by the free market Reason Foundation in 2009 that focused on 11 metro areas showed that North Texas would have a huge economic boost by alleviating traffic congestion calculating the extra productivity from better movement of people and goods around the region Wise infrastructure investments that eliminate gridlock and produce free flowing road conditions will more than pay for themselves by boosting the region s economy and thus tax revenues to maintain the mobility 7 The Dallas Fort Worth metroplex DFW was singled out in the study due to its poor showing in congestion indexes and ranked poorly in many indexes in the annual mobility study by the Texas Transportation Institute The Reason study says the biggest economic gains would come from eliminating severe congestion which could add 46 billion a year to the regional economy and over 3 billion in annual tax revenues 8 Dallas is the fourth fastest growing city in the country 9 For the 150 000 cars a day that travel through the I 820 and SH 121 SR 183 corridor drivers are no stranger to some of the bottlenecks that cause these delays As one of the region s most important corridors this stretch of highway has not kept up with the growth and North Texas nearly seven million residents 10 Dallas Fort Worth commuters spend an average of two days a year stuck in traffic the fifth highest in the nation 11 On January 29 2009 the Texas Transportation Commission voted 5 0 to hire Cintra s NTE Mobility Partners to rebuild phase 1 of North Tarrant Express corridors 12 Route description editNTE Project 1 amp 2W edit On June 23 2009 TxDOT awarded a comprehensive development agreement CDA for the North Tarrant Express project to NTE Mobility Partners This concessions includes the design development construction finance maintenance and operation of Segment 1 West and Segment 2 East for the duration of 52 years 13 West Segment edit The West Segment I 820 is 6 4 miles 10 3 km in length and runs from I 35W on the west to the North East Mall interchange on the east across three cities Fort Worth Haltom City and North Richland Hills This segment includes 9 cross street bridges and 21 on ramps off ramps East Segment edit The East Segment SH 121 SR 183 is 6 9 miles 11 1 km in length and runs from the North East Mall interchange on the west to Industrial Boulevard in the east across four cities North Richland Hills Hurst Bedford and Euless This segment includes 9 cross street bridges and 31 on or off ramps I 35W Project edit A construction agreement with TxDOT has initiated construction on Segments 3A I 35W from downtown Fort Worth amp 3B I 35W from I 30 to U S 287 Segment 3A has an expected completion date in 2018 and 3B in 2017 The I 35W project is the next part of the North Tarrant Express It is divided into three segments 14 Segment 3A is 6 5 miles 10 5 km of I 35W from north of I 30 to north of I 820 and includes the I 35W I 820 interchange Constructed by NTE Mobility Partners Segments 3 LLC NTEMP3 15 Segment 3B is 3 6 miles 5 8 km of I 35W from north of I 820 to US 81 US 287 Constructed by TxDOT 15 Segment 3C is from US 81 and 287 to Eagle Parkway Construction began in September 2020 The public private project will rebuild 6 7 miles of I 35W and add four TEXpress Lanes auxiliary lanes and some frontage roads Anticipated substantial completion is late 2023 16 Partners editThe North Tarrant Express is a collaboration of private and public partners P3 or PPP including TxDOT and the North Central Texas Council of Governments NCTCOG 14 The NTE is being designed built financed operated and maintained by NTE Mobility Partners which is working in close collaboration with TxDOT and local communities This important highway project will be wholly owned by TxDOT Pursuant to the additional agreement between TxDOT and NTE Mobility Partners Segments 3 LLC NTEMP3 the developer NTEMP3 will design build operate and maintain segment 3A 35W TxDOT will build segment 3B 35W from north of Loop 820 to U S 287 and will then turn it over to NTEMP3 who will be responsible for the operations and maintenance NTEMP3 will also collect tolls generated on the managed toll lanes of the facility until 2061 paying off the PAB s TIFIA loan private equity partners and then sharing profits with TxDOT 5 Developer editNTE Mobility Partners LLC is a company with three shareholders including Cintra a world leader in private sector development of transportation infrastructure Meridiam a global public private partnership investor developer of public facilities and the Dallas Police and Fire Pension System the first U S pension fund in the country to invest in the building and maintenance of a major toll road project like NTE 17 Exit list editThe entire route is in Tarrant County LocationmikmDestinationsNotes Fort Worth nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp I 820 west to I 35W Haltom City nbsp US 377 Denton Highway North Richland HillsIron Horse Boulevard Meadow Lakes Drivewestbound exit and eastbound entrance Hurst nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp I 820 SH 26 SH 121 SH 183 FM 1938 Bedford Euless RoadI 820 exit 23A BedfordBrown Trailwestbound exit and eastbound entrance nbsp nbsp SH 121 north DFW Airport North Entryeastbound exit and westbound entrance Bedford Euless line nbsp FM 157 Industrial Boulevard eastbound exit and westbound entrance nbsp nbsp SH 183 east DFW Airport South Entry Irving 1 000 mi 1 609 km 1 000 km 0 621 mi Incomplete accessSee also edit nbsp U S Roads portalReferences edit Staff Project Timeline NTE Mobility Partners Retrieved December 12 2014 Staff July 28 2011 North Tarrant Express Meeting the Needs of North Texas Commuters PDF NTE Mobility Partners Retrieved December 12 2014 Staff About the NTE NTE Mobility Partners Retrieved December 12 2014 Graham A Lee April 16 2014 North Tarrant Express Remains Ahead of Schedule Fort Worth Business Press Retrieved December 12 2014 a b de la Pena Patricia September 19 2013 NTE Segments 3A amp 3B Project Reaches Financial Close Infra Insight Blog Nossaman LLP Archived from the original on July 15 2014 Fort Worth District TxDOT Project Tracker North Tarrant Express NTE PDF Texas Department of Transportation Retrieved December 12 2014 Hartgen David T amp Fields M Gregory August 27 2009 Gridlock and Growth The Effect of Traffic Congestion on Regional Economic Performance Reason Foundation Policy Study 371 Retrieved December 12 2014 Jones Rodger August 28 2009 Ending Traffic Congestion Would Boost DFW Economy by 17 Billion Report Says Transportation Blog The Dallas Morning News Retrieved December 12 2014 Carlyle Erin February 14 2014 America s 20 Fastest Growing Cities Forbes Retrieved December 12 2014 Top Metropolitan Areas Archived from the original on May 29 2014 Retrieved June 13 2014 Lomax Tim Schrank David amp Eisele Bill InconsIstent TraffIc CondItIons ForcIng Texas Commuters to Allow Even More Extra TIme PDF Texas A amp M Transportation Institute Retrieved December 12 2014 Lindenberger Michael A January 30 2009 Private Toll Lanes Free Highways Merge First in Tarrant Project The Dallas Morning News via TTC News Archives Office of Innovative Program Delivery Project Profiles North Tarrant Express Segments 1 and 2A Federal Highway Administration Retrieved December 12 2014 a b Staff North Tarrant Express Texas Department of Transportation Retrieved December 12 2014 a b Hinkle Robert amp Hartzel Tony Infrastructure Projects Interstate 35W City of Fort Worth Texas Retrieved December 12 2014 I 35W Corridor Staff North Tarrant Express Mobility Partners Cofiroute USA Retrieved December 12 2014 External links editKML file edit help Template Attached KML North Tarrant ExpressKML is not from Wikidata North Tarrant Express NTE TEXpress Lanes Drive On TEXpress App Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title North Tarrant Express amp oldid 1105891665, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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