The city began the $3.6-million project in February. Road crews have
channeled traffic on the six-lane road into four and five lanes, causing
occasional bottlenecks and backups.
Arruda said the underground sensors that trigger street lights will
not be in place by the fair's opening day. He said he expected police to
help direct traffic near the fair.
But while the pylons and tractors will be gone from Fairview Road next
week, night construction on the San Diego Freeway may cause delays coming
and going to the fair, said Peter Naghavi, the city's transportation
director.
Naghavi is scheduled to meet with officials from the California
Department of Transportation, which is responsible for the project, to
discuss whether the eight weekends of construction will slow fair
traffic. At times, the roadwork just north of the Harbor Boulevard exit
will narrow the freeway to one northbound lane.
"I think there will be some impact, I'm just not sure how much,"
Naghavi said.
Construction crews will work from 9 p.m. Fridays to 9 a.m. Saturdays,
and from 9 p.m. Saturdays to 10 a.m. Sundays. Fair officials said earlier
they didn't anticipate that construction would cause major delays, but a
Caltrans spokeswoman recommended drivers find a different route to the
fair.