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The city of Waco is planning to replace a decorative lighting system that went into use in 2015 on Interstate 35 access road bridges over the Brazos River.
Artistic LED installations will illuminate several downtown-area underpasses below the newly rebuilt stretch of Interstate 35, and while that work continues, the Waco City Council must decide how to replace floundering decorative lighting installed seven years ago on the top side of access road bridges over the Brazos River.
The idea for decorative lighting fixtures under I-35 at Martin Luther King Jr. Boulevard, University Parks Drive, Fourth and Fifth streets, and 11th and 12th streets originated in 2017, from meetings ahead of an ongoing I-35 overhaul with residents who wanted the underpasses to be more inviting to pedestrians, Public Works Director Amy Burlarley-Hyland said.
“They felt like there was a mental barrier, and the community was disconnected between the Baylor side and the Waco side,” Burlarley-Hyland said. “They said our existing underpasses were ‘ugly, forbidding and unfriendly.’”
The new Interstate 35 underpass at Fourth and Fifth streets is one of four where the city of Waco plans to install decorative lighting. Creative Waco is working with artists to create the lighting at Fourth and Fifth.
Burlarley-Hyland said five years later it is time to make some design choices, and each one will affect the cost of the project, which is up for $2.1 million from the downtown Tax Increment Financing Zone.
“There are a lot of things that we need to consider,” Burlarley-Hyland said. “The extent of the lighting, type of lighting, the extent of the lighting system, how easy it will be to maintain, where people are going to be viewing it from. … We don’t want people on the interstate to be distracted by the lights, but we do want people on the riverwalk to see it and enjoy it.”
Burlarley-Hyland said the city already has some components in storage for the globe lighting that will be installed at the Fourth and Fifth street underpass. Creative Waco is working with artists to develop designs for cladding that will wrap around the lights like lampshades and cast patterned shadows. Each one will be 4 feet tall and weigh about 600 pounds when complete.
Plans for the lighting arose as the start approached of a $341 million Texas Department of Transportation project to rebuild a 7-mile stretch of interstate. All main lanes through the project area opened about a month ago, and the work is on track to be mostly done by the end of the year.
Under an agreement with TxDOT the city council approved in June, the city will maintain decorative lighting along I-35, including lighting installed on the access road bridges over the Brazos in 2015, the year after the bridges opened. Because of their condition, the city is planning to replace the lights.
About half the decorative access road lighting is not working. The upward-facing lights keep collecting moisture, and the manufacturer no longer makes replacement parts.
Burlarley-Hyland said modern LED lights designed for installation over water will prove more resilient.
“Technology has changed a lot in the last seven years,” she said.
The city will pick a builder that focuses on outdoor lighting installations on bridges. Burlarley-Hyland said the city will request $750,000 in TIF funds to pay for the design and manufacture of the replacement lights.
The new University Parks Drive underpass at I-35 will eventually get decorative LED lights designed to make the space feel safer and less foreboding for pedestrians.
Council Member Josh Borderud said he and his family visited Corpus Christi’s Harbor Bridge for a lightshow during a recent trip.
Councilwoman Andrea Barefield said that during a trip to Nashville, she saw an underpass converted into a lighted art exhibit and asked if it would be possible to have similar installations in Waco.
“It makes space welcoming,” she said.
Council Member Kelly Palmer said signs in the underpasses would help new Baylor University students and tourists find their way.
“We’re putting so much money into the riverfront and connecting South Waco to downtown, so if we have to spend some money to make those details pop … that’s money well spent in my book,” Palmer said.
Council Member Jim Holmes also said he is in favor of the projects, and enjoyed the lighting on the access road bridges when it was new.
The system, able to be programmed in essentially any color combination, cast indirect lighting for the towers, cables and decks of the bridges. It often is set with a theme matching a holiday, major event or Baylor football game at the nearby McLane Stadium.
“For a while that was such a neat thing to brag about,” Holmes said of the bridge lighting.
Free Wi-Fi coming to Waco park at community center, Page A3
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Rhiannon Saegert is a graduate of the University of North Texas who formerly worked at The Ardmoreite in Ardmore, Okla., the Denton Record-Chronicle and Eater magazine.
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The city of Waco is planning to replace a decorative lighting system that went into use in 2015 on Interstate 35 access road bridges over the Brazos River.
The new Interstate 35 underpass at Fourth and Fifth streets is one of four where the city of Waco plans to install decorative lighting. Creative Waco is working with artists to create the lighting at Fourth and Fifth.
The new University Parks Drive underpass at I-35 will eventually get decorative LED lights designed to make the space feel safer and less foreboding for pedestrians.
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