The South Carolina Department of Transportation
(SCDOT) has contracted for repairs to Robert Edge Parkway in North
Myrtle Beach. The repair contract period is September 8 through
September 30.
The
contract focuses on repairs to the bridge approach slab on the west
side of the Intracoastal Waterway, which is the transition piece between
the roadway and the bridge that spans the Waterway (formally named the
J. Bryan Floyd Bridge).
According to information provided by SCDOT:
- On
September 8 – The eastbound (inbound) lanes on Robert Edge Parkway from
Highway 17 to beyond the bridge will close for a period of about two
weeks. During this time, motorists will not be able to enter North
Myrtle Beach using Robert Edge Parkway but will have to do so via
alternate routes.
- On September 22 (estimated) – The eastbound (inbound) and
westbound (outbound) lanes on Robert Edge Parkway from Highway 17 to
beyond the bridge will close for three to five days. During this time,
motorists will not be able to enter or exit North Myrtle Beach using
Robert Edge Parkway but will have to do so via alternate routes.
- Detours will be posted via SC Highway 31 (Carolina Bays Parkway), SC Highway 9 and U.S. Highway 17.
Robert
Edge Parkway opened September 3, 2009. According to news articles at
the time, the road required nearly 200 workers, 2 million pounds of
steel in the bridge, 8,000 linear feet of concrete beams supporting the
bridge, concrete equivalent to 570 dump trucks loads, and nearly five
years to complete.
The
parkway is named for Robert Edge Sr., who became North Myrtle Beach’s
first mayor in 1968. For 12 years prior, Edge was the mayor of Crescent
Beach, one of the four towns that through Edge's efforts merged to
become the city of North Myrtle Beach.
On
September 8, 2010, a ceremony was held to name the Intracoastal
Waterway bridge that is part of the parkway for J. Bryan Floyd, who
succeeded Edge as mayor, serving from 1974 to 1980.