Dedication date set for city’s long-awaited South Hamilton Crossing

The long-awaited South Hamilton Crossing, sought for more than a century, still has a lot of work to go before it opens in August. NICK GRAHAM/STAFF

The long-awaited South Hamilton Crossing, sought for more than a century, still has a lot of work to go before it opens in August. NICK GRAHAM/STAFF

It’s been more than a century since Hamiltonians started talking about the need for South Hamilton Crossing, an overpass and widened roadway that will link the part of Hamilton around Ohio 4 with the area around Miami University’s Hamilton campus and the city’s west side.

After all that time, a dedication date for the highway is less than 50 days away — Aug. 11, a Saturday, at 9 a.m., so more people will be able to attend, said City Council Member Carla Fiehrer.

“We’re going to have speakers and dedicate it to Jim Blount,” Fiehrer said, referring to the late Hamilton native and historian who focused on Hamilton and Butler County, and since his time as editor of the Journal-News advocated for the highway improvement. Blount also served on the Butler County Transportation Improvement District, which helped make the highway a reality.

“We chose (to hold it) early on a Saturday morning so it’s not so bloody hot,” Fiehrer said. “That’s going to be the big event where we have a lot of state and county and local officials there. And we don’t have a date yet, but maybe the road opens up, we’re going to have a ribbon-cutting ceremony.”

Fiehrer said the event will feature antique cars and fire trucks to commemorate the long span of time it has taken to get the project done.

A ribbon-cutting ceremony likely will held be a few days after the Aug. 11 dedication, she said.

The project broke ground in August 2016. Last summer, beams that serve as the decks for the overpass above the railroad were installed. The project’s completion deadline is Dec. 31. Costs will be an estimated $30 million.

The new roadway will offer a direct east/west link between Ohio 4 and University Boulevard, offering better access from that area to the Miami campus and nearby Vora Technology Park. It also will raise the profile of d0zens of acres available for development at the city-owned University Commerce Park.

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