Elm Street Pedestrian Crossing Enters Final Stretch, Paving Set for April 13, 15
Drivers should expect single-lane closures and occasional access interruptions in Downtown Woodstock as the long-awaited project enters its final stretch
Woodstock Community News Staff||1 min read

Drivers heading into Downtown Woodstock should plan for brief delays this week. Milling and paving work on the long-awaited Elm Street pedestrian crossing improvement project is scheduled for Monday through Wednesday, April 13, 15, the City of Woodstock announced. Single-lane closures and occasional access interruptions along the corridor are expected across all three days.
One lane will remain open at all times, so through traffic won't be cut off entirely, but anyone heading downtown during that window should build extra time into their commute.
After paving wraps up, crews will step back for roughly two weeks to let the new surface cure properly before returning for the project's final phase. That last round of work, covering striping, signage, and signal installation, is expected to require an additional one to three days of lane closures. The city has pledged to give advance notice before that phase gets underway.
The Elm Street crossing is part of Woodstock's sustained push to make its walkable downtown core safer as foot traffic has grown alongside the area's restaurant, retail, and entertainment scene. Elm Street is a key artery for residents, shoppers, and diners moving through the heart of the city, and the updated crossing will reduce conflict points between pedestrians and vehicles at one of downtown's busier passages. The city's own characterization of the project as a "long-awaited improvement" suggests it has been on residents' wish lists for some time.
When the final phase is complete, new pavement, fresh striping, updated signals and all, the finished crossing should be in place within roughly three to four weeks of this week's paving work.
The City of Woodstock will post updates on its official Facebook page before the striping and signal work begins. Residents can follow along at facebook.com/WOODSTOCKGAGOVT.
Share
Related

Rain Won't Fix This: Woodstock Under Level 1 Drought Response as Georgia's Water Crisis Deepens
Georgia EPD's formal drought declaration means Woodstock water customers must follow landscape watering restrictions even as wet weather moves through the area
Woodstock Community News Staff|

Woodstock Arts Opens Registration for Summer Visual Arts Classes
Offerings range from drawing fundamentals to watercolor travel themes and the traditional craft of shuttle tatting
Woodstock Community News Staff|

Cherokee High School Opens New $179 Million Campus in Canton
The replacement for Cherokee County's oldest high school opens Aug. 3, bringing 2,600 Warriors into a facility built for the next generation, and beyond
Woodstock Community News Staff|

Cherokee High Senior Ian Zeller Lands $10,000 National Merit Scholarship from Emerson Electric
The Class of 2026 standout, bound for aerospace engineering at the University of Alabama, is among the top 1% of U.S. high school seniors recognized by the prestigious program
Woodstock Community News Staff|