
Improvements of NE 152nd Avenue corridor from NE Padden Parkway to NE 99th Street include two travel lanes, bike lanes, curb, gutter and sidewalks, and stormwater treatment via infiltration
VANCOUVER – Neighbors and community members are invited to learn about the upcoming Northeast 152nd Avenue project.
Public Works staff will host a virtual open house from 5 to 6 p.m., Wednesday, June 29, via WebEx. Residents will learn about the project’s design, environmental impacts, and construction timeline from county staff. Attendees will have the opportunity to ask questions and offer comments.
To ask questions or make comments during the meeting, registration at https://clark.wa.gov/public-works/ne-152nd-ave is required. Registrants will receive a confirmation email with a link to join the meeting. Those who do not register can listen in by dialing 1-408-418-9388 and entering meeting number “2489 908 4713” and password “NE152,” when prompted. Callers using this method cannot use the chat function.
Community members are encouraged to email questions to the project manager before the presentation. A recording of the meeting will be available on the project website within three business days.
Improvements of Northeast 152nd Avenue corridor from Northeast Padden Parkway to Northeast 99th Street include two travel lanes, bike lanes, curb, gutter and sidewalks, and stormwater treatment via infiltration. The intersection at Northeast 99th Street will be improved to include left turn lanes and a traffic signal. The project can also accommodate a center-left turn lane at York Elementary School to facilitate traffic flow during the highest volume periods.
More information can be found on the county’s website https://clark.wa.gov/public-works/ne-152nd-ave. You can also find real-time information on the Public Works Twitter, Facebook and Instagram profiles, and on NextDoor.
Information provided by Clark Co. WA Communications.
Also read:
- POLL: Did the Clark County Council make the right decision by rejecting the auditor authority proposal?The 3-2 council vote rejected giving the auditor’s office power to write financial impact statements for ballot measures.
- Low sockeye salmon returns lead to fishery changes in the Columbia RiverWDFW projects sockeye returns to Bonneville Dam at less than half the pre-season forecast of 275,000 fish.
- WA employers added jobs in May, but unemployment rate stayed stuck at 5.2%Washington added 10,600 jobs in May — its best month this year — yet unemployment held at 5.2%, up from 4.5% a year ago.
- Opinion: Hospital price transparency is good, but its impact will be limitedWashington still shields hospitals from competition through certificate-of-need laws other states have repealed.
- Evergreen Public Schools and Teachers Union agree to a five-year contractEvergreen Public Schools reached a five-year deal with its teachers union, covering 22,000 students across 38 Vancouver schools.
- Vancouver amends municipal code, banning pedestrians from staying on traffic islands, mediansVancouver’s new ordinance targets people who remain on medians, not those crossing legally at crosswalks.
- Tri-County SAR Teams conduct joint training exercise to enhance emergency
response readinessSix Southwest Washington SAR teams trained together in a simulated aircraft crash requiring day and nighttime rescue operations.







