Tipton City is moving into the final stages of a major West Street reconstruction after completing underground work, Dylan Dietrich, superintendent of the municipal services department, said on the Tipton Thrives podcast.
The project has completed water-main installation and sanitization, and "the water test came back good," Dietrich said. Crews are installing service lines and expect that work to take two to three weeks; subgrade treatment would then take about one to two weeks, followed by paving and a multiuse path on the road’s east side.
The reconstruction replaces the roadway’s subgrade, separates sanitary and storm sewer systems and adds new pavement, features Dietrich said are intended to improve drainage and increase road strength. "With separating the sanitary and storm sewer, it'll be one of the best-draining roads in the city of Tipton along with it'll be one of the strongest roads that we have," Dietrich said.
City staff framed the work as a full reconstruction rather than a surface overlay: crews are removing and recompacting subgrade material before placing new roadway layers. Dietrich cautioned that remaining schedule steps are weather-dependent and that recent rain has slowed progress.
Next steps for the project are finishing service-line connections, completing subgrade treatment, paving the roadway and installing the planned multiuse path. The city did not state exact dates for each step; Dietrich gave time estimates and emphasized the schedule depends on weather.
Residents living along West Street should expect continuing construction activity and staged access impacts as crews complete the surface work and the multiuse path.