Another four-mile segment of I-59 northbound in DeKalb County will close for reconstruction as a $41 million project enters its second phase.
Weather permitting, contractor Wiregrass Construction will shift traffic from the northbound roadway to the inside lane of the southbound roadway north of Hammondville either this afternoon or Tuesday, Dec. 2. The shift will start south of milepost 233. Traffic will return to the northbound roadway north of milepost 237. Traffic will be reduced to one lane in each direction in the work zone, with the opposing lanes separated by concrete barriers.
Please expect brief stoppages or delays during the transition. Visit ALGOtraffic.com or download the ALGO Traffic app for real-time traffic and road condition information.
With traffic shifted, the contractor will begin demolishing and reconstructing the closed roadway.
The segment of roadway to be closed lies immediately south of a recently reconstructed segment that opened to traffic last month. The recently reconstructed segment extends another four miles to the Georgia state line. In total, the project will reconstruct eight miles of the northbound roadway.
ALDOT anticipates completion of the project in late 2026.
I-59 reconstruction projects
Age and deterioration of the underlying concrete roadways led ALDOT undertake reconstructing much of I-59 in DeKalb and Etowah counties. The effort is ongoing, with future projects planned in addition to two current projects. ALDOT has awarded nearly $192 million in contracts to reconstruct I-59 so far.
Contractor Vulcan Materials is working to reconstruct nearly eleven miles of the southbound roadway in Dekalb and Etowah counties. ALDOT anticipates 2027 completion of that segment, between Collinsville and Reece City, at a cost of $40.7 million.
ALDOT previously completed three reconstruction projects on the corridor:
- In 2022, Wiregrass finished replacing eight miles of the northbound roadway through Fort Payne at a cost of $25.2 million.
- The following year, Wiregrass completed reconstruction of eleven miles northbound between Reece City and Collinsville at cost of $44 million.
- Earlier this year, contractor A.G. Peltz Group completed replacement of an eight-mile segment between Fort Payne and Hammondville at a cost of $40.8 million.



