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I-94 rebuilding in Berrien County wraps up for the winter

Fast facts:

  •   Work to rebuild 8.5 miles of I-94 and four bridges, as well as repair nine other bridges, between Puetz Road and Britain Avenue in Berrien County has been completed. All lanes are expected to reopen by Thanksgiving.
  •   This is the second year of a three-year, $204 million investment funded in part by Gov. Gretchen Whitmer’s Rebuilding Michigan program.
  •   This year's work included rebuilding westbound I-94 from Washington Avenue to Britain Avenue. Eastbound I-94 will be rebuilt in 2026.

COLOMA, Mich. - The Michigan Department of Transportation (MDOT), in partnership with contractors Rieth Riley Construction, Kalin Construction, and Milbocker and Sons Inc., has completed the second year of the three-year, $204 million investment to rebuild I-94 in Berrien County.

All ramps have reopened and westbound traffic has been shifted onto the newly built lanes. While there are single-lane closures remaining for concrete repair work, all lanes are expected to reopen by Monday, Nov. 24, in time for Thanksgiving weekend.

Work this year included completing the I-94 interchange with Red Arrow Highway (Exit 23), rebuilding westbound I-94 between Britain Avenue and Washington Avenue, and rebuilding the westbound ramps at the Napier Avenue (Exit 30), Pipestone Road (Exit 29) and Exit 27 Niles Road (Exit 27) interchanges.

In 2026, crews will return to rebuild the eastbound I-94 lanes and ramps between Britain and Washington avenues.

Based on economic modeling, this investment is expected to directly and indirectly support 2,911 jobs.

Funding for this three-year, $204 million investment is made possible by Gov. Gretchen Whitmer's Rebuilding Michigan program to rebuild the state highways and bridges that are critical to the state's economy and carry the most traffic. The investment strategy is aimed at fixes that result in longer useful lives and improve the condition of the state's infrastructure.

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