Flood damage closes portion of Hwy 169 in St. Peter

Flood damage
Minnesota Department of Transportation crews remove temporary levees, Monday, Oct. 4, 2010, near a 140-foot section of northbound Highway 169 near St. Peter, Minn. that was collapsed by the flooding Minnesota River last week. The major highway remains closed north of St. Peter as Mn/DOT works on an emergency contract to establish two-way traffic in the southbound lane and repair the washed-out roadway.
AP Photo/Mankato Free Press, John Cross

State officials say part of a key highway through southern Minnesota could be closed for more than a week because of flood damage.

Water running over Highway 169 north of St. Peter saturated out the ground underneath the concrete road surface and washed the northbound lanes completely away.

The washout happened where the highway splits into widely separated north and south bound roadways between St. Peter and LeSeuer. The northbound lanes were submerged for days by the Minnesota River after record September rains.

"That kind of water and that kind of pressure, you don't know what to expect," said Rebecca Arndt, a spokeswoman for the Minnesota Department of Transporation in Mankato. "So we have, now I'm hearing it could be a 200-foot long section of roadway that's literally washed out."

Arndt said the state will expedite a bid and contract for repairing the road, and expects the work itself to take about a week. Traffic is being diverted onto the southbound lanes until the damage is repaired.

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