Department of Transportation officials say the long stretch of I-94 closure could be opened to through traffic by the end of this week.
On Tuesday afternoon, the Department of Transportation (DOT) announced it was beginning a nearly $900,000 emergency construction project for the 4-mile stretch of road between Johnson Creek and Lake Mills.
The 28-mile stretch from Highway 83 in Delafield to Highway 26 in Johnson Creek has been closed to westbound traffic since Friday because of high waters in the Crawfish and Rock rivers
The construction began early this week and will create two-way traffic (one lane each way) in the normal eastbound lanes, allowing vehicles to crossover and nudge together near the Johnson Creek Outlet Mall and travel for several miles before opening back up to the full interstate near Lake Mills.
The bidirectional traffic lanes will be separated by median wands, while the northern portion of the road – the normal westbound lanes – will remain closed until water recedes.
Plans call for speed limits to slow to 55 miles per hour and even 45 miles per hour in some areas.