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$4 million secured for road county officials think is key to West Side development

Atrisco Vista Blvd

Vehicles drive down Atrisco Vista near the Amazon complex on sa国际传媒官网网页入口鈥檚 West Side, just north of Interstate 40. Bernalillo County recently received $4 million in federal funding for a project to rehab the road, which was identified as a transportation priority by a county commission.

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Bernalillo County has netted $4 million in federal funding to update a road that county officials believe could boost West Side economic development.

鈥淭he Atrisco Vista Boulevard Corridor on sa国际传媒官网网页入口鈥檚 West Side is one of the fastest growing areas of the state for job growth in the manufacturing, warehousing, and transportation sectors,鈥 U.S. Sen. Martin Heinrich said in a statement. 鈥淟ocal infrastructure needs to keep up.鈥

The first steps for the rehab project include surveying and acquiring rights of way, said Priscilla Benavides, with design consultant Parametrix, in an email to the Journal. The road needs to be realigned to comply with current design standards, according to a Bernalillo County news release.

The planned 2.35-mile project will add two driving lanes and bike lanes, as well as a multi-use trail. The trail will tie into the Paseo de la Mesa trailhead. The design phase is near completion, the release from the county said. Eventually, the design could allow for four lanes.

鈥淭o flatten the horizontal and vertical curves, we need to acquire land adjacent to the property to tie in our improvements,鈥 Benavides said.

New Mexico Democrats Heinrich and U.S. Rep. Gabe Vasquez teamed up to secure the funding. It鈥檚 about a third of what鈥檚 needed to complete the project.

Benavides said, as funding hasn鈥檛 been fully secured, there isn鈥檛 an estimated start date for construction.

County commissioners voted in 2023 to make Atrisco Vista NW a transportation priority. A 2019 study recommended widening Atrisco Vista from Double Eagle II to Paseo del Norte and extending the road to Southern.

A 2021 report found that there were 鈥渃ultural resources鈥 in the proposed project area. In an email to the Journal, Parametrix said three 鈥減rehistoric archaeological sites鈥 were discovered along the area that require testing to see if there are archaeological deposits below the surface before construction starts. The age is currently unknown.

But those sites aren鈥檛 a concern for the current phase of the project, they continued, as they鈥檙e located between Paseo del Norte and Southern.

In the future, however, if the project team finds an archeological site during construction, 鈥渢he operation will cease in that particular location,鈥 Benavides said, until a team of archaeologists can clear the area. Such sites are common in New Mexico and Parametrix and the county have experience mitigating them, Benavides said.

The road connects the Double Eagle II Airport, an Amazon fulfillment and distribution center and could eventually be a major access road for the proposed Santolina development, which was recently scrutinized after a February report found the planned community might not bring in as many people or as much revenue as expected.