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For the Gap enthusiasts:
http://www.grahamstar.com/articles/2...0449359649.txt
North Carolina transportation officials say it may be several months before the Cherohala Skyway can be reopened after part of the westbound pavement collapsed 1,000 feet into a ravine in Graham County Thursday, Jan. 17.
The collapsed roadway is located about one-tenth of a mile west of the Stratton Meadow Bridge, approximately a mile from the Tennessee state line.
The slide is about 150 feet wide and 1,000 feet deep. On Thursday, the sound of falling boulders could still be heard cascading below, as the slide continued. Muddy rivulets descended into the chasm.
Graham County has been pounded by 9 inches of rain during a three-day period, according to Tom Ward, an official National Weather Service observer in the county.
Joel Setzer, district engineer with NCDOT in Sylva, said there have been 22 slides in Graham County, the most in the region.
Setzer said Thursday he expects the Skyway will be closed for at least two months.
The engineer described the slide as a “fill dirt slide,” which destroys pavement and knocks out roads for longer periods of time than “cut slides.” In cut slides boulders and debris fall on the roadway from high “cuts,” the engineer said.
“You just clean them up,” Setzer said.
Fill-dirt slides are more expensive and complex.
The Newfound Gap slide in the Great Smoky Mountains National Park is also a fill slide, Setzer said.
NCDOT officials were installing directional and detour signs in Robbinsville and at the Skyway Thursday afternoon.
Considering it's taking 5 workers just to determine which side of the sign is 'up', my guess is it will take more than 2 months to fix the road.
They better send that decision off to a committee.
Newfound Gap Rd between Gatlinburg, TN and Cherokee, NC also closed for an undetermined amount of time: