Chapter 25 Operations, Wheeled Vehicles
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Map of Fairbanks
Goldstream...........15 Steese Highway 52 Sheep Emergency Dial.....911 N 23Õ Õ FAIRBANKS Murphy Dome.......25 18 28 25 58 29 Fox.........................12 24 The Golden Heart of Alaska Creek Rd. 13 Yukon River.........129 27 College Road Bridgewater Ave. Circle....................162 Points of Interest Kuskokwim CottonwoodTamarack 1. Fairbanks Convention & Visitors Bureau Willow Prudhoe Bay........487 Jack St. 2. Alaska Public Lands Information Center Jack St. Pine 16 Goldhill Hilling St. Creamers17 Lane 3. Borough Transit Bus Station Rd Bridgewater Dr. Ave. Chandalar Latoya Spruce 4. Westours/Gray Line of Alaska 22 Circle Caribou Way Capitol Ave. Õ Pioneer Way North Jack St. College Road Bridgewater Ave. 5. Alaska Railroad Depot Margaret Koyukuk Alaska Way Diane Marrieta Eleanor Esquire Ave. Bunnel Anna Vogel Ave. Blanch 6. Noel Wien Public Library 21 Hooper St. Mack Rd. Warren Harriet Kobuk Carr Ave. Andrew 7. Fairbanks Police /Fire departments Danby Road Sheenjek Yukon Dr. 37 Jarvis Kathryn Luke St. Cordwood Palmer St. Totem Dr. Rosella 8. Fairbanks Memorial Hospital Kantishna Drive Bonnie 35 Lutke St. Central Ave. O'connor Rd. Bridget Austin Maryleigh Suncha Cir. Copper Ln. Beaver Rd. Hayes Ave. Chinook 9. Growden Memorial Baseball Park Cottonwood St. Cottonwood Taku Dr. 42 31 Porchet Parks Highway Westwood Way Southern Ave Palace Circle UAF Farmers Loop Road 10. Alaskaland 50 Morgan Way Amber Ave. Princess Dr. Aurora Drive West Trainor Gate Road 11. Alaska State Troopers Nenana..................53 Salcha Shanley St. Dogwood St. Old Steese Highway 20 Lane Gloria Birch St. Antoinette Evergreen St. 12. Fairbanks International Airport Denali Park..........120 Alatna Dr. -
Breakwater Inn 1 Juneau, Alaska Presented By
BREAKWATER INN 1 JUNEAU, ALASKA PRESENTED BY 2 NON - ENDORSEMENT AND DISCLAIMER NOTICE Non-Endorsements Marcus & Millichap is not affiliated with, sponsored by, or endorsed by any commercial tenant or lessee identified in this marketing package. The presence of any corporation's logo or name is not intended to indicate or imply affiliation with, or sponsorship or endorsement by, said corporation of Marcus & Millichap, its affiliates or subsidiaries, or any agent, product, service, or commercial listing of Marcus & Millichap, and is solely included for the purpose of providing tenant lessee information about this listing to prospective customers. ALL PROPERTY SHOWINGS ARE BY APPOINTMENT ONLY. PLEASE CONSULT YOUR MARCUS & MILLICHAP AGENT FOR MORE DETAILS. Disclaimer THIS IS A BROKER PRICE OPINION OR COMPARATIVE MARKET ANALYSIS OF VALUE AND SHOULD NOT BE CONSIDERED AN APPRAISAL. This information has been secured from sources we believe to be reliable, but we make no representations or warranties, express or implied, as to the accuracy of the information. References to square footage or age are approximate. Buyer must verify the information and bears all risk for any inaccuracies. Marcus & Millichap is a service mark of Marcus & Millichap Real Estate Investment Services, Inc. © 2018 Marcus & Millichap. All rights reserved. BREAKWATER INN AT JUNEAU, ALASKA Juneau, AK ACT ID ZAA0140246 3 BREAKWATER INN AT JUNEAU, ALASKA PROPERTY OVERVIEW PROPERTY OVERVIEW Marcus & Millichap exclusively presents for sale the Breakwater Inn in Juneau, Alaska. A three-story 49 room full service hotel sits on a open harbor water view less than a mile from Juneau Downtown and one and a half miles from the Juneau Cruise Ship Terminal. -
Haines Highway Byway Corridor Partnership Plan
HAINES HIGHWAY CORRIDOR PARTNERSHIP PLAN 1 Prepared For: The Haines Borough, as well as the village of Klukwan, and the many agencies, organizations, businesses, and citizens served by the Haines Highway. This document was prepared for local byway planning purposes and as part of the submission materials required for the National Scenic Byway designation under the National Scenic Byway Program of the Federal Highway Administration. Prepared By: Jensen Yorba Lott, Inc. Juneau, Alaska August 2007 With: Whiteman Consulting, Ltd Boulder, Colorado Cover: Haines, Alaska and the snow peaked Takhinska Mountains that rise over 6,000’ above the community 2 TABLE OF CONTENTS 1. INTRODUCTION..............................................................5-9 2. BACKGROUND ON Byways....................................11-14 3. INSTRINSIC QUALITY REVIEW..............................15-27 4. ROAD & TRANSPORTATION SYSTEM...................29-45 5. ToURISM & Byway VISITATION...........................47-57 6. INTERPRETATION......................................................59-67 7. PURPOSE, VISION, GOALS & OBJECTIVES.......69-101 8. APPENDIX..................................................................103-105 3 4 INTRODUCTION 1 Chilkat River Valley “Valley of the Eagles” 5 The Haines Highway runs from the community byway. Obtaining national designation for the of Haines, Alaska to the Canadian-U.S. border American portion of the Haines highway should station at Dalton Cache, Alaska. At the half way be seen as the first step in the development of an point the highway passes the Indian Village of international byway. Despite the lack of a byway Klukwan. The total highway distance within Alaska program in Canada this should not prevent the is approximately 44 miles, however the Haines celebration and marketing of the entire Haines Highway continues another 106 miles through Highway as an international byway. -
Chugiak-Eagle River Comprehensive Plan Update
Chugiak-Eagle River Comprehensive Plan Update December 2006 Planning Department Municipality of Anchorage CHUGIAK-EAGLE RIVER COMPREHENSIVE PLAN UPDATE Adopted December 12, 2006 Assembly Ordinance 2006-93(S-1) Prepared by the Physical Planning Division Planning Department Municipality of Anchorage Mark Begich, Mayor C HUGIAK-EAGLE R IVER C OMPREHENSIVE P LAN U PDATE -ii- MUNICIPALITY OF ANCHORAGE Assembly Dan Sullivan, Chair Debbie Ossiander, Vice-Chair Paul Bauer Janice Shamberg Chris Birch Ken Stout Dan Coffey Allan Tesche Anna Fairclough Dick Traini Pamela Jennings Planning and Zoning Commission Toni Jones, Chair Art Isham, Vice-Chair Lamar Cotten Nancy Pease Jim Fredrick Bruce Phelps Andrew Josephson Thomas Vincent Wang Jim Palmer Planning Department Tom Nelson, Director Physical Planning Division Cathy Hammond, Supervisor Tom Davis Van Le Susan Perry Parks and Recreation Department Eagle River John Rodda Information Technology Department GIS Services Lisa Ameen Jeff Anderson C HUGIAK-EAGLE R IVER C OMPREHENSIVE P LAN U PDATE -iii- Chugiak-Eagle River Comprehensive Plan Update Citizens’ Advisory Committee Jim Arnesen, Eklutna, Inc. Andy Brewer, South Fork Community Council Susan Browne, Eagle River Valley Community Council Michael Curry, Eklutna, Inc. Gail Dial, Chugiak, Birchwood, Eagle River Rural Road Service Area Judith Fetherolf, Eagle River Community Council Bob Gill, South Fork Community Council Susan Gorski, Chugiak-Eagle River Chamber of Commerce Bobbie Gossweiler, Eagle River Community Council Lexi Hill, Chugiak-Eagle River Parks & Recreation Board of Supervisors Charlie Horsman, Eagle River Community Council Val Jokela, Birchwood Community Council Ted Kinney, Chugiak Community Council Linda Kovac, Chugiak Community Council Diane Payne, Birchwood Community Council Tim Potter, Eklutna, Inc. -
Area Management Report for the Sport Fisheries of Northern Cook Inlet, 2017–2018
Fishery Management Report No. 20-04 Area Management Report for the Sport Fisheries of Northern Cook Inlet, 2017–2018 by Samantha Oslund Sam Ivey and Daryl Lescanec January 2020 Alaska Department of Fish and Game Divisions of Sport Fish and Commercial Fisheries Symbols and Abbreviations The following symbols and abbreviations, and others approved for the Système International d'Unités (SI), are used without definition in the following reports by the Divisions of Sport Fish and of Commercial Fisheries: Fishery Manuscripts, Fishery Data Series Reports, Fishery Management Reports, and Special Publications. All others, including deviations from definitions listed below, are noted in the text at first mention, as well as in the titles or footnotes of tables, and in figure or figure captions. Weights and measures (metric) General Mathematics, statistics centimeter cm Alaska Administrative all standard mathematical deciliter dL Code AAC signs, symbols and gram g all commonly accepted abbreviations hectare ha abbreviations e.g., Mr., Mrs., alternate hypothesis HA kilogram kg AM, PM, etc. base of natural logarithm e kilometer km all commonly accepted catch per unit effort CPUE liter L professional titles e.g., Dr., Ph.D., coefficient of variation CV meter m R.N., etc. common test statistics (F, t, χ2, etc.) milliliter mL at @ confidence interval CI millimeter mm compass directions: correlation coefficient east E (multiple) R Weights and measures (English) north N correlation coefficient cubic feet per second ft3/s south S (simple) r foot ft west W covariance cov gallon gal copyright degree (angular) ° inch in corporate suffixes: degrees of freedom df mile mi Company Co. -
Offering Overview
GLACIER VILLAGE 9107 Mendenhall Mall Road Grocery anchored J U N E A U , A L A S K A Community Shopping Center $15,250,000 / 7.14% Cap in Southeast Alaska 100% Leased Grocery-anchored investment opportunity Multi-tenant community destination 27.23 acres / 1,186,138 square feet Offering Overview Address: 9107 Mendenhall Mall Road Jones Lang LaSalle (JLL) is pleased to exclusively offer for sale Glacier Size: 242,797 square feet Village (the ”Property” or the “Offering”) located in picturesque Juneau, Alaska. The property is situated on a strong commercial intersection in Year Built: 1972 - 1991 one of Juneau’s neighborhood retail destinations. Built between 1972- 1991, this Super Bear (IGA) grocery-anchored center is a dominant Occupancy: 100% shopping center serving the trade area since construction. The property # of Tenants: 4 Fee Simple & 12 Ground Lease boasts excellent frontage along Egan Expressway, a four lane, asphalt surfaced roadway maintained by the State of Alaska, which runs to Site Area: 27.23 acres / 1,186,138 square feet the east toward the Juneau International Airport and into Downtown Juneau. With occupancy of 100%, Glacier Village offers a good mix of retail choices which serves a large customer base. Since construction, the property has been well maintained and continues to be one of the primary retail centers. This offering is situated on approximately 27.23 acres with premium frontage and 4 access points. The center features a tenant lineup including Super Bear Grocery, Sears, Napa Auto Parts, Papa Murphy’s, and Nugget Alaskan Outfitters. investment highlights central location Egan Drive (Alaska Route 7) and Menden Hall Loop are two of the major thoroughfares servicing the entire Juneau trade area with daily r traffic counts of over 25,000 vehicles e GLACIER VILLAGE v 11,193 VPD i R per day. -
Richardson Highway / Steese Expressway Corridor Study Draft Purpose and Need
Richardson Highway / Steese Expressway Corridor Study Draft Purpose and Need The Alaska Department of Transportation and Public Facilities (ADOT&PF), in cooperation with the Alaska Division Office of the Federal Highway Administration (FHWA), is developing a Planning and Environmental Linkage (PEL) Study for the Fairbanks, Alaska area Richardson Highway / Steese Expressway corridors from Badger Road interchange (Richardson Highway milepost 360) to Chena Hot Springs Road interchange (Steese Highway milepost 5). Purpose The purpose of the study is to collaborate with State, local, and federal agencies, the general public, and interested stakeholders to develop a shared corridor concept that meets long ‐range transportation needs to improve safety, mobility, air quality, and freight operations. Additionally, the concept will promote improvements that reduce transportation deficiencies (e.g. delay and congestion), enhance the corridor’s sustainability (e.g. infrastructure longevity and maintenance costs), and minimize environmental and social impacts. Project Need Summary I – Safety Safety for motorized and non‐motorized traffic needs improvement by developing a corridor concept that: Upgrades the transportation infrastructure to current ADOT&PF design standards where practical Reduces conflict points Reduces the frequency and severity of crashes at “high crash locations” Improves pedestrian and bicycle crossings II – Mobility The mobility of people and goods in the corridor needs improvement by developing a concept that: Reduces delay -
Reconnaissance for Radioactive Deposits in Eastern Interior Alaska, 1946
GEOLOGICAL SURVEY CIRCULAR 331 RECONNAISSANCE FOR RADIOACTIVE DEPOSITS IN EASTERN INTERIOR ALASKA, 1946 This report concerns work done on behalf of the U.S. Atomic Energy Commission and is published with the permission of the Commission. UNITED STATES DEPARTMENT .OF THE INTERIOR DouglaE? McKay, Secretary GEOLOGICAL SURVEY W. E. Wrather, Director GEOLOGICAL SURVEY CIRCULAR 331 RECONNAISSANCE FOR-RADIOACTIVE DEPOSITS IN EASTERN INTERIOR ALASKA, 1946 By Helmuth W edow, Jr., P. L. Killeen, and others This report concerns work done on behalf of the U.S. Atomic Energy Commission and is published with the permission of the Commission. Washington, P. C., 1954 Free on application to the Geological Survey, Washington 25, D. C. CONTENTS Page Page ·CHAPTER A. -Areas adjacent to highways in the CHAPTER A. -Areas adjacent to highways in the Tanana. and upp,er Copper River valleys, by Tanana and upper Copper River valleys-Con. Helmuth Wedow, Jr., and J. J. Matzko Areas investigated-Continued Abstract.·. 1 Alaska. Highway belt-Continued Introduction. 1 Radioactivity studies-Continued Measurement of radioactivity. 2 Localities northwest of Outcrop tests ........... : . 3 Tok Junction. 13 Unconcentra.ted crushed samples . 3 Localities southeast of Concentrated samples. 3 Tok Junction. .. 16 Areas investigated. 3 Highway area. between Slana and Fairbanks district . 3 Tok Junction . 16 Geology.......................... 3 Geology .......................... 16 Radioactivity studies in the Radioactivity studies.. 16 Pedro Dome area.. 6 Donnelly Dome-Paxson area ... : ........ 18 Radioactivity studies in the Geology .......................... 18 Ester Dome area... 7 Radioactivity studies . 18 Steese Highway belt in upper Conclusion . 18 Cha.ta.nika. valley. 8 Literature cited. 20 Geology.......................... 8 CHAPTER B. -
10 Pt Font Template for Standard Fonts
Roads and Highways Advisory Board Meeting August 9, 2019 – 10:30 AM – 4:00PM Via Teleconference Anchorage: 4111 Aviation Road, Main Conference Room, Top Floor Call in Number: 1-800-315-6338 Access Code: 39051 Board Members: John Baker, Scott Eickholt, Donna Gardino, Daniel Hall, Anton Johansen, Howard Thies, Aves Thompson 1. Call to Order 2. Board Roll Call to Establish Quorum a. Welcome and Introduction of other participants 3. Phone Roll Call and Introduction of Those Present 4. Approval of Agenda 5. Approval of Minutes 6. Public Comments (3 minutes per speaker) 7. Chair’s Remarks 8. FHWA Presentation – Sandra Gracia-Aline 9. State of Alaska Owned Material Sites – DNR 10. Status of the Ad-Hoc Transportation Advisory Board 11. Capital Budget 12. Freight Program Funding Allocation Process (Sterling Highway) DOT&PF 13. Reinstate the Alaska Exemption – DOT&PF 14. Board Comments 15. Next Meeting – TBD (teleconference) 16. Adjourn ROADS AND HIGHWAYS ADVISORY BOARD MATERIAL SITES QUESTIONS DNR/DMLW RESPONSE TO QUESTIONS – AUGUST 9, 2019 BACKGROUND - ALASKA LAND ACT The Statehood Act authorizes the State of Alaska to select and accept conveyance of the new state’s land entitlement, pursuant to Pub. L. No.85-508. The Alaska Constitution acknowledges that the legislature may authorize different state agencies to manage certain state lands or perform certain duties pursuant to different statutes. The Alaska Land Act was drafted and passed by the first state legislature under Chapter 169, SLA 1959, titled “An Act Relating to Alaska Lands and Resources.” The Alaska Land Act created and established the Division of Land, as well as the Director of Lands, within the Alaska Department of Natural Resources (DNR). -
"Let's Keep Moving 2036" Freight Element
Let’s Keep Moving 2036: Freight Element This Page Intentionally Blank Alaska Statewide Long-Range Transportation Plan | December 2016 TABLE OF CONTENTS Executive Summary ....................................................................................................................................... 1 About This Document ................................................................................................................................. 10 Freight Demand Drivers .............................................................................................................................. 16 Freight System Elements............................................................................................................................. 41 Critical Freight Trends ................................................................................................................................. 69 Opportunities and Needs ............................................................................................................................ 93 Freight Goals, Policies, and Actions .......................................................................................................... 116 Freight Performance Measurement, Prioritization, and Project Evaluation ............................................ 128 Relationship with Other Plans and Federal Guidance .............................................................................. 140 Appendix: Selected Truck Counts TABLE OF EXHIBITS Exhibit 1: Statewide Planning Process -
Elliott Highway Determination of Eligibility
Determination of Eligibility Elliott Highway Fairbanks-North Star Borough and the Yukon- Koyukuk Census Area of the Alaska Unorganized Borough Prepared for Alaska Department of Transportation and Public Facilities December 2014 DOT&PF NOTE: PILOT DOE SHPO CONCURRENCE 2/19/15 THIS PAGE INTENTIONALLY LEFT BLANK Determination of Eligibility Elliott Highway Fairbanks-North Star Borough and the Yukon-Koyukuk Census Area of the Alaska Unorganized Borough Prepared for Alaska Department of Transportation and Public Facilities Prepared by www.meadhunt.com December 2014 DOT&PF NOTE: PILOT DOE SHPO CONCURRENCE 2/19/15 THIS PAGE INTENTIONALLY LEFT BLANK Management Summary The Alaska Department of Transportation and Public Facilities (DOT&PF) retained Mead & Hunt, Inc. (Mead & Hunt) to complete a Determination of Eligibility of the Elliott Highway (Alaska Heritage Resources Survey numbers are listed in Appendix A; Coordinated Data System (CDS) number 153000). This work was completed as a component of the Applied Historic Context of Alaska Roads Project completed in 2012-2014. Mead & Hunt conducted a field survey of approximately 154 miles (248 kilometers) along the Elliott Highway from its termini of the Steese Highway at Fox to the Tanana River at Manley Hot Springs between August 9 and 15, 2014. Research found multiple periods of construction in the development of the current Elliott Highway. This Determination of Eligibility evaluates the highway in four segments reflecting various periods of development, including those of predecessor roads. As a result, the Elliott Highway has been divided into Segments A, B, C, and D (see maps in Appendix A). Certain bypassed sections within Segments A, B, and D possess significance at the local level and retain integrity under Criterion A for their direct and important association with Transportation and under the supplemental area of significance of Industry and are eligible for listing in the National Register of Historic Places (National Register) as indicated below. -
Susitna-Watana Hydroelectric Project Document ARLIS Uniform Cover Page Title
Alaska Resources Library & Information Services Susitna-Watana Hydroelectric Project Document ARLIS Uniform Cover Page Title: Transportation resources study, Study plan Section 15.7 : Initial study report -- Part A: Sections 1-6, 8-9 SuWa 223 Author(s) – Personal: Author(s) – Corporate: DOWL-HKM AEA-identified category, if specified: Initial study report AEA-identified series, if specified: Series (ARLIS-assigned report number): Existing numbers on document: Susitna-Watana Hydroelectric Project document number 223 Published by: Date published: [Anchorage : Alaska Energy Authority, 2014] June 2014 Published for: Date or date range of report: Alaska Energy Authority Volume and/or Part numbers: Final or Draft status, as indicated: Document type: Pagination: 155 pages in various pagings Related work(s): Pages added/changed by ARLIS: The following parts of Section 15.7 appear in separate files: Part A ; Part B ; Part C. Notes: Contents: Part A. Sections 1-6, 8-9 -- Appendix A. Bibliography -- Appendix B. Asset inventory -- Appendix C. Highway data for future traffic, funded projects, and planned projects -- Appendix D. Aviation data for future operations, funded projects and planned projects -- Appendix E. Rail data for future traffic, funded projects, and planned projects -- Appendix F. Port data for future operations, funded projects and planned projects -- Appendix G. Interviews -- Appendix H. Chapter 25, Operations, Wheeled vehicles : commercial vehicle size, weight & permit regulations. (17 AAC 25) -- Appendix I. Municipality of Anchorage truck routes -- Appendix J. Alaska Department of Transportation and Public Facilities seasonal weight restriction. All reports in the Susitna-Watana Hydroelectric Project Document series include an ARLIS- produced cover page and an ARLIS-assigned number for uniformity and citability.