Trending Today ...
KRW to meet at noon

KINGMAN – The Kingman Republican Women will host

Drug dozing parents’ case closed

KINGMAN – The second parent co-defendant from Bullhead

Police vehicle shot up

BULLHEAD CITY – Authorities report a Bullhead City

Ex-con gets eight years for GV shooting

KINGMAN – A prison sentence is mandated in

MRF to host Todd Steinberger

KINGMAN – The public is invited to the Mohave

I-40/US 93 Kingman interchange project to reach halfway

KINGMAN – The new year will bring welcome

Thank you for reading The Standard newspaper online!

Kino Avenue waterline project update

Willow/Kino intersection opened today

KINGMAN – Friday, October 18, the Willow Road/Kino Avenue intersection reopened at 6:00 a.m. The section that is currently closed to Wells Street will remain closed, however. Beginning Monday, October 21, Kino Ave. will be closed from Willow Rd. to Walleck Ranch Drive until October 31. Detours will be in place, but we urge the traveling public to drive slowly through detours, and give themselves extra driving time, while traveling through work zones.

Up-to-date street closures and restrictions can be found at the City of Kingman’s engineering website page of interactive Maps through the city’s Geographic Information Systems (GIS): https://www.cityofkingman.gov/government/departments/engineering/gis

The project to install a new water transmission main on Kino Ave., between Arizona Street to the Mohave Wash, started August 12, 2019. Portions of Kino Ave. will be closed throughout the project, and detours will be in place for street closures.

The contractor, Freiday Construction, is working with residents in the area regarding notification, but no water service delays or disruptions are scheduled to take place.

This project is the continuation of a multi-phased project to improve water delivery to city water storage tanks that will allow our infrastructure run more efficiently, resulting in an overall benefit to our customers. The total cost for the project is $1.38 million.

The project should last roughly 90 days, over multiple phases for line installation and pavement patching, and is currently on schedule

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *