Laughlin Neighborhood Road Rehab Project to Resume After Summer Pause
After a temporary pause due to high summer temperatures, work is scheduled to resume on Wednesday, Sept. 4 on Clark County’s road rehabilitation project in several Laughlin neighborhoods. Work hours will be from 7 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday through Thursday with traffic control setups maintained to advise motorists of impacts.
The second phase of this $7.5 million project began in April and includes improvements to 6.8 miles of roads in five neighborhoods located west of Needles Highway along El Mirage Way/James A. Bilbray Parkway. The project consists of roadway pavement removal and replacement and the installation of sidewalk ramps, ADA curbs and new signage and striping. The first phase of the Laughlin Residential Roadway Rehabilitation Project was completed in 2023 and included $7 million of improvements to nine miles of roadways.
To date in the second phase of the project, concrete and utility-related work has been completed. When the project resumes next week, crews will be working to widen a portion of El Mirage Way near Banyon Drive. Additionally, milling and paving operations will begin in neighborhoods starting with Cottage Lilly Street and nearby streets on Sept. 4. The work is scheduled to begin on Coos Beach Lane and area streets the following week.The project is scheduled to be complete by the end of the year.
Anyone with questions about the project may contact the County’s Laughlin Administrative Offices at (702) 298-0828 or email Commissioner Naft’s office at DistrictA@ClarkCountyNV.gov.
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Clark County is a dynamic and innovative organization dedicated to providing top-quality service with integrity, respect and accountability. With jurisdiction over the world-famous Las Vegas Strip and covering an area the size of New Jersey, Clark is the nation’s 11th-largest county and provides extensive regional services to 2.4 million citizens and 45.6 million visitors a year (2023). Included are the nation’s 5th-busiest airport, air quality compliance, social services and the state’s largest public hospital, University Medical Center. The County also provides municipal services that are traditionally provided by cities to 1 million residents in the unincorporated area. Those include fire protection, roads and other public works, parks and recreation, and planning and development.