McKinney | November 2024

BY SHELBIE HAMILTON CONTRIBUTIONS BY DUSTIN BUTLER

Zooming out

Daugherty said the county is facing a challenge to provide necessary transportation infrastructure for both residents of cities in Collin County, as well as residents in unincorporated parts of the county. The county has little control over development that occurs outside of city limits, which can lead to high-density developments that create space for more residents than county officials estimated, Daugherty said. “We’ve got so much growth in the last three years outside of the cities,” he said. As a result of growth throughout the county, US 380 is expected to see 114,400 drivers daily by 2050, according to TxDOT documents. “When you see that Dallas County is 2.5 mil- lion [people], Tarrant County is about 2 million [people], and we’re going to be that size, and you look at the number of freeways in those counties, and what we have ... The problem is obvious,” Daugherty said.

Freeway and highway infrastructure Collin County Population: 1,079,153 Tarrant County Population: 2,113,854 Dallas County Population: 2,604,053 Denton County Population: 914,870

75

377

35

121

288

160

380

380

DNT TOLL

287

35E

SRT TOLL

377

78

121

75

114

PGBT TOLL

114

635

35W

30

199

360

635

12

161

80

820

30

35E

820

30

20

20

45

175

377

287

35W

67

342

SOURCE: 2022 AMERICAN COMMUNITY SURVEY, US CENSUS BUREAU/ COMMUNITY IMPACT

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Looking ahead

Portions of the roadway will proceed at various times, with sections being deemed “ready to let”, meaning conditions are met to allow the project to be bid on, according to TxDOT’s website.

cost $150 million to relocate 65,000 feet of water lines and 16,000 feet of wastewater lines. Cost estimates from other cities have not been finalized, Daugherty said. The first US 380 construction project is set to be awarded in 2027, Schein said. The project sections will be conducted based on traffic needs and funding available. “Construction, it gets worse before it gets better,” Daugherty said.

Additional business closures and relocations are expected in McKinney as the right-of- way acquisition process continues. Work to relocate utility lines in conflict with the road project will also occur prior to construction. The Collin County Commissioner’s Court committed $227 million in funding assistance for affected cities to assist with the cost of necessary utility relocation. In McKinney, officials estimate that it will

Frisco and Prosper section - Ready to let: 2026 McKinney section - Ready to let: 2027 Spur 399 - US 380 to US 75 - Ready to let: 2026 Princeton section - Ready to let: 2027 Farmersville section - Ready to let: 2026

SOURCE: TEXAS DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION/COMMUNITY IMPACT

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