No issues with plan, but hoping sound barrier walls will be installed for Highland residents so close to the highway. Can we install sound barrier walls for the residential houses from Highland Ave exit up? The sound from the highway is detrimental to property sales.

A detailed noise study is being completed for the project. If warranted, reasonable and feasible in accordance with PennDOT Publication 24, noise walls will be proposed as part of this project.  In areas where noise walls are proposed, the local impacted property owners will have a vote on whether to accept the noise wall.  A simple majority will determine whether the potential proposed noise wall will be incorporated into the project.

Do the right thing and avoid disrupting neighborhood streets and use of eminent domain of people’s homes. Try relocation of the roundabout to the West Ave Interchange and keep it scaled so that these plots of land WITHOUT HOMES can be used here. In all circumstances proposed DO NOT USE PINE AVE/ROUTE 413 for cross traffic. We are a small walkable community, PINE AVE is where the LIBRARY is, and the PLAYGROUND and our brain-injury school population uses Pine Ave in their wheelchairs to be active in the community, go to stores, go to library. PINE AVE is the heart of Langhorne Borough. Your family wouldn’t like this disruption so don’t do it to US.

Pine Street is expected to have a relatively minor 4% traffic increase (85 additional vehicles out of 1330 total vehicles) south of Flowers Avenue in the PM Peak versus the existing condition. PA 413 / Pine Street is a State-owned principal arterial that provides traffic movement through the region between Penndel and Newtown in the existing condition. 

The proposed project will not change this travel pattern.  An interchange at West Interchange Road will completely disrupt travel patterns in the area and put undue stress on roads as traffic would move from the West Interchange Road area to PA 413 to head to Newtown or Penndel. 

The proposed design includes bicycle and pedestrian accommodations not currently present along PA 413 to connect Langhorne Manor and Langhorne and connects areas with sidewalks and a sidepath to improve safety for bicyclists and pedestrians.  Additionally, PennDOT is coordinating with Langhorne Borough to include traffic calming and pedestrian safety improvements from the Flowers Avenue intersection north to the PA 213 (Maple Avenue) intersection.

There are a number of people who take the bus to and from work at Woods Services. The bus stop they use is at PA 413 (Pine St) and Woods Dr. I would very much like to see an area reserved for a bus shelter on both the southbound and northbound sides of PA 413. I have empathy for those people who have to wait for a bus in bad weather with no shelter. Are there any plans for an area reserved for a bus shelter? I am not asking PENNDOT to provide the bus shelter only that an area set aside so other organizations can provide the shelter (ex. Rotary Club of Langhorne).

PennDOT will be actively coordinating with SEPTA to accommodate relocating the bus stops along the widened roadway and to potentially provide concrete pads for future bus shelters.

I asked this similar question during the meeting: I am concerned about increased traffic on West Highland Ave. Many currently exit Rt 1 N onto Hulmeville Ave vs Bellevue Ave to avoid the Penndel train tracks. (Hulmeville Ave has a bridge over the tracks) With the removal of this exit people will exit onto Pine St and as they head to Penndel will exit the roundabout onto West Highland and cut through the neighborhood to Hulmeville Ave. This street has no sidewalks and lots of children and neighborhood foot traffic. The response was the road has stop signs. This response did not address that a road with little traffic will see a major uptick in usage and I strongly feel West Highland should be considered for some safety features including: sidewalks; raised crosswalks, speed bumps, etc.

It is anticipated that traffic will be split between the proposed southern and proposed northern interchanges depending on where they are coming from and where they are heading in Penndel.  It is anticipated that the traffic would split between the two interchanges to use either the Hulmeville Road underpass or the Hulmeville Road overpass to get to Business Route 1 if they anticipate their travel conflicting with trains at the Pine Street at-grade crossing. 

It is anticipated that neither of these alternative routes would be a significant increase over their existing usage.  PennDOT is actively coordinating with the municipalities regarding traffic calming opportunities.  Please note that while sidewalks would be installed as part of a PennDOT project, maintenance of the sidewalks would be municipal responsibility and typically municipalities pass maintenance responsibilities on to the adjacent property owners.

Slide 26 – The ramp from 413 S to RT 1. How many drivers will use this ramp? If they are coming from Newtown, they will head towards the Maple Ave interchange. Why is this ramp necessary? Same thing with the 413 N to RT 1 S ramp. If I’m in Penndel, I’m not going to go north to this interchange, I’m going to take Business 1 towards Bensalem. This is massively overbuilt infrastructure which will not see the usage it was constructed for.

JMT completed an origin-destination analysis to determine how many vehicles would be expected to take the proposed SR 413 interchange. It is anticipated that 255 vehicles would take the northbound interchange ramp to exit US 1, and 355 vehicles would take the southbound interchange ramp to exit Route 1 during the PM Peak hour. These volumes are similar to the volumes that the existing slip ramps near Bellevue Avenue currently experience.

While I didn’t get to watch the webinar, I see that this interchange doesn’t have an official rendering like slide 13. So I ask this, why traffic lights? Why not a dog bone or double/twin roundabout? The town desires to keep traffic move slowly through the area. Using traffic lights to divide the traffic into platoons encourages speeding and is inefficient. In a world ruined by cars and infrastructure, it’s a shame to see even more houses demoed for no reason.

The PA 413 (Pine Street) interchange has a rendering as can be seen in the color roll plot on the project website.  Roundabouts were investigated for the interchange; however, single lane roundabouts caused traffic backups onto US 1 and two-lane roundabouts would have required more property acquisition and would not have performed any better than traffic signals from a safety standpoint.  As noted, traffic signals require less property acquisition than a two-lane roundabout and do not require any additional total property acquisitions. 

I wanted to express my opposition to the removal of the access road in front of my home. For added context I live on North Street. I’ve been on this block for 20 years and the access road has enabled us to have gatherings at our residence with ease. We are the only street along the project area that is not suitable for parking cars. I have a small driveway and no garage, removal of the access road in front of North Street would make parking impossible for events that we may have. I look forward to hearing from you, and I hope that this will be taken into consideration. In addition, if a sound barrier were to be considered for in front of North Street would it be possible for them to be transparent so that our view would not be obstructed and lead to the street having an enclosed feeling?

The preferred alternative removes the portion of the service road parallel to North Street.  This area will be used for stormwater conveyance in the build condition along with a potential multi-use trail.  A traffic noise study is being completed for the project in accordance with PennDOT’s Publication 24: Project Level Highway Traffic Noise Handbook. If warranted, feasible, and reasonable, noise walls will be proposed as part of this project. In areas where noise walls are proposed, the benefited members of the community will have a vote on whether to accept the noise wall.  A simple majority will determine whether a potential proposed noise wall will be incorporated into the project. PennDOT will need to consider whether a transparent noise wall may be included as an option prior to the property owner vote.  Similar transparent noise walls typically require more maintenance cost and can pose issues for birds.

The live streamed meeting scheduled for 7 p.m. on 4/23 never happened. The fact that the virtual meeting was never conducted is disappointing as information is tough to come by.

The virtual public meeting occurred on 4/23/2025 from 7pm to 10pm and was attended by 168 individuals.  A pdf of the presentation and a recording of the presentation have been uploaded to the project website.  Visuals of the current preferred alternative are posted to the project website and are up-to-date.  Additional information will be posted as the Environmental Assessment (EA) process continues culminating in the publication of the EA document later this year.