Section of US 101 north of Hoquiam closed in July

Travelers will use 23-mile detour July 9-31 while crews remove multiple fish passage barriers in Grays Harbor County

HOQUIAM – Travelers using US 101 north of Hoquiam are encouraged to plan for extra travel time starting the evening of Sunday, July 9.

Contractor crews working for the Washington State Department of Transportation will close 2 miles of US 101 between Failor Lake Road and Larson Brothers Road from 8 p.m. Sunday, July 9 to 11:59 p.m. Monday, July 31.

The work is part of a project that improves fish habitat in six streams and tributaries under US 101 in Grays Harbor County.

What to expect

  • During the around-the-clock closures, a 23-mile signed detour will be in place using East Market Street, North B Street, Wishkah Road, East Hoquiam Road and Youmans Road.
  • Alternating one-way traffic on Youmans Road at the East Fork Hoquiam River Bridge.

Three additional construction work sites
Three additional culvert sites under US 101, from mileposts 102.97 to 111.3 will be under construction through the fall. WSDOT’s contractor will keep traffic moving using a single lane around each work zone. A temporary traffic signal will control the flow of traffic on that single lane.

First of a multi-year effort to improve fish habitat
This project is part of the US 101-SR 109 Grays Harbor, Jefferson and Clallam Counties – Remove Fish Barriers project which corrects 29 culverts that are barriers to fish passage upstream. Construction will occur through 2026 and is part of WSDOT’s program to remove barriers to fish under state highways.

Real-time traffic information is available on the statewide travel map and the WSDOT app. Additional information is available on the WSDOT regional Twitter account.

Slow down – lives are on the line. 

In 2023, speeding continued to be a top reason for work zone crashes.

Even one life lost is too many.

Fatal work zone crashes doubled in 2023 - Washington had 10 fatal work zone crashes on state roads.

It's in EVERYONE’S best interest.

95% of people hurt in work zones are drivers, their passengers or passing pedestrians, not just our road crews.