Traffic & Transit
Streets In Kirkland Neighborhoods Closing Soon For Construction
The closures will last up to 10 hours, between 7 a.m. and 5 p.m.

From The City of Kirkland: A series of one-day closures will affect eleven sections of residential streets in the Kingsgate and North Rose Hill neighborhoods starting Monday, August 6 through Thursday, August 9 while Kirkland’s contractor applies a layer of emulsified asphalt, water and fine gravel to their surfaces. This slurry seal process will extend their useful lives by five to 10 years.
The closures will last up to 10 hours, between 7 a.m. and 5 p.m. Most, however, will last four to five hours. The City’s contractor, Intermountain Slurry Seal, Incorporated, will post signs one day in advance of the process. The entire slurry seal project encompasses a total of 50 sections of residential streets—14.5 lane-miles of streets—in North Rose Hill and Kingsgate.
The City of Kirkland has been treating residential streets in every neighborhood throughout the city with slurry seal since 2002. Slurry seal prevents moisture from infiltrating the road and undermining its basic structure. It also replenishes the pavement beneath it with aggregate.
Find out what's happening in Kirklandfor free with the latest updates from Patch.
However, slurry seal does have its own limitations. Because it requires full closures, the City of Kirkland uses it exclusively on low-volume residential streets and some collector streets. Additionally, because it is not a structural remedy, streets must already be in good condition.
“Its primary function is to keep those roads in good condition,” says Kirkland’s Streets Engineer George Minassian, Ph.D. “It’s a classic case of ‘a little maintenance now will prevent costly repairs later.’”
Find out what's happening in Kirklandfor free with the latest updates from Patch.
Slurry seal typically costs the City of Kirkland just $1,600 per city block to apply. Repaving costs approximately $17,000 per city block. And rebuilding a road from its base can cost $65,000 per city block.
To see the 2018 slurry seal schedule, visit www.kirklandwa.gov/streetpreservation
Image via The City of Kirkland