News

VDOT says Troutville Rest stop should re-open by Thanksgiving

VDOT Icon
INTERSTATE 81 TROUTVILLE REST AREA EXPECTED TO REOPEN BY THANKSGIVING
SALEM – The Troutville Rest Area located on southbound Interstate 81 near mile marker 158 in Botetourt County is now expected to reopen by Thanksgiving.  The rest area has been closed since May for work on a $4.9 million project to extend the ramps at the facility and was anticipated to reopen prior to Labor Day.
The Virginia Department of Transportation’s contractor Branch Civil Inc. has encountered challenges with a slope that have affected the schedule. The facility is now expected to reopen before Thanksgiving to support holiday travel.A concrete barrier wall is currently in place in front of the rest area, and motorists are not able to enter the facility or use the parking lot and restrooms. Southbound I-81 drivers can still use the Fairfield Rest Area at mile marker 195 in Rockbridge County or the Radford Rest Area at mile marker 108 in Montgomery County. Portable toilets and parking will continue to be available temporarily for commercial vehicles at the Troutville Weigh Station located on southbound I-81 at mile marker 149.

The ramp extension project at the Troutville Rest Area is intended to improve safety by providing motorists more space to accelerate or decelerate. The off ramp into the rest area is being extended approximately 500 feet and the ramp onto southbound I-81 is being extended approximately 2,100 feet. The project also includes expanding the truck parking area at the facility by about 10-13 spaces.The project is a part of the I-81 Corridor Improvement Program approved by the Commonwealth Transportation Board in December 2018. The more than $2 billion package of focused improvements was funded by the Virginia General Assembly and signed into law in spring 2019.Additional information about the I-81 Corridor Improvement Program is available at Improve81.org. The website includes interactive maps and schedules and details about upcoming and current projects that are designed to improve safety, increase reliability and foster economic growth along the 325-mile I-81 corridor.

–Jason Bond, VDOT Salem District