Some Fermilab Roads Will Be Closed All Winter

Some Fermilab Roads Will Be Closed All Winter

  • Editor’s Note: This article was previously published in Fermilab Today.

If you plan a visit to Fermilab this winter, you might run into a few green cones.

Some roads on the Fermi National Accelerator Laboratory site will be closed all winter, starting with the first significant snowfall. With the road closures, crews can maintain the same level of service in critical areas of the site.

On the Fermi campus, North Eola Road from Batavia Road to Road C East and Wilson Road from McChesney to B Road will be closed for the winter. In addition, Main Ring Road will be closed to all travel except for emergency and service vehicles. Limited snow removal service in the Main Ring will only provide access for these vehicles. Service levels and access will not change in the F4/AZero and CZero areas.

“Parking during the winter can also be more complicated,” said Dave Shemanske, of Fermilab’s FESS Roads and Grounds. “Every winter, our Roads and Grounds crews clear more than 85 parking lots across the Fermilab site during and after each weather event.”

In an effort to streamline parking lot plowing operations without jeopardizing safety, FESS Roads and Grounds, in cooperation with building managers, designate areas in about 25 parking lots that will not receive snow removal service. These areas are marked with lime-green safety cones.

The cones will designate the areas as no-parking zones throughout the winter season. No vehicles may park in the marked zones. The cones will remain in place until the second half of March. Fermilab security personnel will monitor the no-parking areas.

Establishing these areas allows for effective and frequent snow removal efforts in high-priority locations while keeping costs low. In addition, using less salt and less fuel will have a beneficial environmental effect.

“With more than 400 building entrances on site, it is challenging for snow crews to keep every entrance snow and ice free all winter,” Shemanske said. “Employees and users are encouraged to walk more slowly, to take smaller steps and to look closely for snow and ice. Uneven surfaces can complicate matters. Chunks of ice and snow or even coarse rock salt can cause normally smooth surfaces to become uneven. Expect the unexpected, wear footwear that provides traction on snow and ice, slow down and don’t let yourself become distracted while walking in winter conditions.”

In Related News …

The Fermilab Today online newsletter posted its final issue on Nov. 30, 2015. It had been an institution since its launch in July 2003, but the communications folks decided to divide its content up for in-house users and for the general public.

Friends and fans of Fermilab can visit the Fermilab newsroom to get the latest lab news. Fermilab followers outside of the employee pool will be able to follow on social media — Fermilab’s Facebook, Twitter, LinkedIn and Google+ pages — and on Fermilab Frontiers, a monthly e-newsletter geared for people interested science, technology, outreach and local events.

SOURCE: Fermilab Today

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