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Franklin County Engineer

As a local public works agency headquartered in Columbus, Ohio, the Franklin County Engineer's Office is responsible for the maintenance and construction of 271 miles of county roadway and 351 county bridges, as well as upkeep of all county ditches, drains, retention basins, and other storm water facilities within the right-of-way of county roads in unincorporated areas. To meet the continuing development and infrastructure needs of Franklin County, the Engineer's Office utilizes the latest technologies for determining and maintaining roadway centerlines and boundaries; retracing and setting new monuments for original public land surveys; preparing geographic information system mapping for real estate tax assessments; and establishing precise countywide horizontal and vertical control to maintain uniformity in construction, surveying, and mapping.
Franklin County Engineer
Franklin County Engineer
Notice to Contractors: We are accepting bids on the Franklin County Engineer’s Office CDBG Sidewalk Improvements Project in Clinton Township and Franklin Township, Franklin County, Ohio. Visit: https://www.bidexpress.com/solicitations for more information.
Franklin County Engineer
Franklin County Engineer
Please join us in wishing Franklin County Engineer Adam W. Fowler, P.E., P.S., a happy birthday! Wishing you a great day!
Franklin County Engineer
Franklin County Engineer
Frank Road from Gantz Road to the I-71 Ramp, and Hardy Parkway from Frank Road to Feddern Avenue, are now open to traffic.
Franklin County Engineer
Franklin County Engineer
Frank Road from Gantz Road to the I-71 Ramp, and Hardy Parkway from Frank Road to Feddern Avenue, are closed for a gas line repair. The roads will remain closed until the issue has been resolved.
Franklin County Engineer
Franklin County Engineer
W. North Broadway over the Olentangy River is reduced to one lane in each direction, between SR-315 North On-Ramp/Ohio Health Parkway and Milton Avenue, for bridge rehabilitation. The reduction will last approximately one-hundred fifty-two (152) days, weather permitting.
Franklin County Engineer
Franklin County Engineer
Groveport Road, between Gender Road and Lithopolis Road, is now open to traffic.
Franklin County Engineer's Office
970 DUBLIN ROAD
COLUMBUS, OHIO 43215
(614) 525-3030
fracoeng@franklincountyengineer.org

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Highway Chronicle Chapter 6

Highway Chronicle Chapter 6

Demands for Better Travel Lead to Road Alternatives

boats
train

Columbus was becoming a major commercial and government center noted for its financial and legal institutions, the state penitentiary, restaurants, hotels, shops, buggy and carriage works, breweries, foundries, textiles, rock quarries, agriculture, and livestock.

The rising prosperity created new challenges to the highway system that would ultimately lead to a public outcry for different and more efficient modes of transportation.

A viable alternative was the Ohio & Erie Canal, located between Cleveland and Portsmouth, completed in 1832 at a cost of $4.2 million. The 308-mile long waterway passed through Canal Winchester and Lockbourne, and was linked to Columbus by an 11-mile long feeder canal. The local channel system, fed by the Scioto River and Big and Little Walnut Creeks, was a major freight and passenger route that provided mud-free travel until its closure in 1904.

The slow, horse drawn canal boats were overshadowed by the “iron horse” railroads that began operation in Ohio in the 1850s. Notable railroads, such as the Baltimore & Ohio, and the Cleveland, Columbus, Cincinnati & Indianapolis, would monopolize long distance freight and passenger travel throughout the nation for nearly a century, establishing Columbus as a key station, roundhouse, and freight yard location.