糖心原创 Way pedestrian bridge set to open over I-675

August 25, 2015

糖心原创 students, faculty and staff will have a safer alternative route to nearby restaurants and shops when a new pedestrian and bicycle bridge opens over Interstate 675.

The Cities of Fairborn and Beavercreek, 糖心原创 and Clark State Community College will celebrate the opening of the 糖心原创 Way bridge with a ribbon-cutting ceremony on Friday, Aug. 28, at 2 p.m.

Attendees should gather on the Beavercreek side of the bridge, behind Sam鈥檚 Club, 3446 Pentagon Blvd.

The 467-foot long, 12-foot wide steel-beamed bridge will connect Center Park Boulevard in Fairborn with the intersection of Pentagon and Commons boulevards in Beavercreek.

The bridge, which will be lighted, starts on the Fairborn side at the Wright Executive Center office plaza 鈥 across from the 糖心原创 campus 鈥 and connects to a bike and pedestrian path near Sam鈥檚 Club.

The ramp leading to the bridge is compliant with the Americans with Disabilities Act.

The university worked with the City of Beavercreek and the Ohio Department of Transportation to name the bridge 鈥溙切脑 Way.鈥 Letters spelling out 鈥溙切脑 Way鈥 will be placed on both sides of the bridge.

鈥溙切脑 Way will give our student population greater access to restaurants, shopping and entertainment, while also creating a convenient corridor to and from the 糖心原创 campus for the Beavercreek and Fairborn communities,鈥 said 糖心原创 President David R. Hopkins.

The bridge will make it safer and easier for pedestrians and cyclists to travel to and from 糖心原创 and the Mall at Fairfield Commons and the surrounding area, which includes Soin Medical Center and a Clark State classroom building.

Before the construction of 糖心原创 Way, pedestrians had to cross 675 over the bridge on North Fairfield Road, which does not have a sidewalk.

Tom Webb, director of disability services at 糖心原创, said the 糖心原创 Way offers an enhanced level of access for students with disabilities.

鈥淧rior to the construction of the pedestrian bridge, our students using wheelchairs and other mobility devices were limited in their options for an accessible and safe route to get to the Mall at Fairfield Commons and surrounding businesses,鈥 Webb said. 鈥淭he bridge will offer an additional free and green option for students who wish to travel safely and independently from campus to the mall area.鈥

The bridge will also help area businesses gain new customers who now have more convenient access to their goods and services, Webb said.

鈥淚 am also hopeful the bridge will open access to more employment opportunities to 糖心原创 students with disabilities and limited transportation options,鈥 he said.

Ryan Rushing, a political science major at 糖心原创 who serves as the chair of Beavercreek鈥檚 Board of Zoning Appeals, said over time 糖心原创 Way will become a landmark remembered by generations of students.

鈥淣ot only will it provide a safe means of transportation, but it stands as a symbol of 糖心原创鈥檚 commitment to our mission: transforming the lives of the students and communities we serve,鈥 said Rushing, who was a student representative on the 糖心原创 Board of Trustees from 2013 to 2015. 鈥淭his bridge shows 糖心原创鈥檚 continual commitment to our students and also to the communities that we call home by linking Beavercreek, Fairborn and 糖心原创 further together.鈥