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Mansfield Avenue Improvements Wrapping Up

The disruptions will ultimately be well worth it. 

Mansfield Avenue, on the north side of the City, remains a construction zone and will be one until the end of  this year, but the improvements being made to that thoroughfare are already showing benefits, with more to  come. 

Work is now under way along the road to install a shared-use path, or  

SUP, which will ensure that students have a safe way to walk to and  

from Dan Emmett Elementary School. There were previously no  

sidewalks along Mansfield Avenue above Belmont Avenue. The work  

is scheduled to be finished by the end of this year. 

Before construction could begin on the SUP, however, the  

underground infrastructure had to be replaced and upgraded. As the  

accompanying photographs clearly show, the existing stormwater  

system that had been under Mansfield Avenue for decades had more  

than reached the end of its useful life.  

These old pipes, mainly made of steel, had completely failed and were  

likely contributing to increased inflow and infiltration into the City’s  

The old water pipes dug up  along Mansfield Avenue this  year were found to no longer  be functional.

sanitary sewers, in addition to creating  elevated groundwater conditions that were  reducing the service life of the street  aboveground. 

Water had been seeping into residents’  basements because of the failed pipes, a  scenario that was rectified when the City  had 4,894 feet – nearly a mile – of new  double-wall HDPE (high-density  

polyethylene) pipes laid down earlier this  year to carry and redirect stormwater. 

With the below-ground improvements  completed, work has now begun on the  shared-use path, which will start at the  north side of Belmont Avenue on the  eastern side of Mansfield Avenue and  continue north to Fairgrounds Road, where  a crosswalk will be installed with flashing  beacons so pedestrians can cross the road  there safely. The SUP will then continue on  the western side of Mansfield Avenue up to  Grange Avenue. 

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The SUP will generally be from eight to 10 feet wide, with a five-foot-side stretch from Belmont Avenue to  Nash Street on the west side of Mansfield Avenue. While giving kids a path to use on school days is the  SUP’s primary purpose, the path, which will be compliant with the Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA), can  also be used for outdoor recreation and as an option for alternative forms of transportation. 

Along with the construction of the path, the stormwater system in the area is also being improved with new  curb, gutter and storm drains, along with the new stormwater lines. The process of fixing and putting in new  grass will extend into next spring. 

“We have to take the long view when it comes to municipal improvements,” said Mayor Matthew Starr. “This  year’s work along Mansfield Avenue has been inconvenient, but getting water out of those residents’  basements, giving their kids a safer route to school, all while taking advantage of the availability of state and  federal funding for this major project, will bring benefits to that part of town for decades to come.” 

The cost of the entire project is $3.4 million, broken down as follows: 

• Federal funds: $1.2 million 

• Ohio Department of Transportation: $1.5 million 

• City stormwater funds: $293,517 

• Toll Revenue Credit: $236,842 

• City capital improvement fund: $70,345 

• City water funds: $48,200 

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