Margaret Street Concept Study
About the Project
The City of Plattsburgh will be replacing outdated public utility infrastructure under the section of Margaret Street between Cornelia Street and Broad Street and will be consulting the community as to what improvements can be made to the street as it is being reconstructed.
Current utilities servicing the residents and businesses on Margaret Street date back as far as 1903. There has been an increase in main line utility issues over the past 10 years including an uptick in water line breaks and several sewer line issues which may be attributed to the age and material of the existing utilities. The City of Plattsburgh would like to take a proactive approach by replacing the aging infrastructure vs. a reactive approach and fixing the utilities as they fail.
Funding
Funding for this project is to be provided, in part, by the NYS Touring Route Program, capital funding, federal funding, and ARPA funds. We anticipate this project to run anywhere between $7-10 million but will have a better understanding once the necessary infrastructure mapping, planning, and engineering is completed.
How to Provide Feedback
- Take the Survey! (link above)
- Email cdo@cityofplattsburgh-ny.gov
- Call 518-563-7642
- More details about the project can be found at www.cscos.com/margaretstreet
Frequently Asked Questions
Everything from water lines, sewer lines, and electric lines. This is a full-depth reconstruction that will have a “facade to facade” impact on Margaret street from Cornelia to Broad Street. Lesser impacts will be the redesign and redevelopment of Court and Brinkerhoff streets. The improvements to those streets will have less of an impact on the day-to-day business of those on Margaret Street.
It’s anticipated that this will last through at least 1 ½ construction cycles, with current proposed dates of May 2023- August 2024.
Truthfully, we don’t know yet. We do know that this is going to be a major interruption: Streets will be torn up, services will be limited, businesses will be impacted. The closest example we can use right now is the work that Lake Placid is going through on their main street. The goal for engaging with community members and stakeholders is to ensure we’re all on the same page, that there are open lines of communication, and that we get through this together.
The question is, can we build back better? If our community goes through the process of infrastructure replacement, is there a better design for one of our most valued streets in our downtown to make it more friendly for today and future users? If our community goes through this exercise; does all of the community engagement, planning for current and future use, and determines the best path forward for placemaking, and comes up with the exact same design as it is now, it will be rebuilt exactly as it is now. The City doesn’t feel that will be the case, but the whole point of going through this exercise is because once the city’s century old infrastructure is replaced, we want to rebuild in a way that makes the most sense.