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Overnight closures at Fruitridge Road and South Watt Avenue set to begin on March 23 as Sacramento pushes forward with major roadway improvement project

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Sacramento, California – A familiar stretch of road in Sacramento County is about to fall quiet each night, as crews prepare to take over a busy intersection for a series of overnight closures tied to a larger effort to reshape South Watt Avenue.

Beginning Monday, March 23, the intersection at Fruitridge Road and South Watt Avenue will close to all traffic starting at 7 p.m. each evening. By early morning, at 6 a.m., the roadway will reopen, restoring the steady flow of commuters and local traffic. This nightly pattern is expected to continue for as many as five consecutive nights, creating a temporary rhythm of disruption followed by daytime normalcy.

The closures, announced by the Sacramento County Department of Transportation, are not without purpose. Beneath the pause in traffic lies forward motion, as construction crews move ahead with work on the South Watt Avenue Improvement Project. It is a project rooted in expansion and modernization, one that aims to reshape how people move through this corridor.

For drivers, the impact will be immediate. The intersection itself will be fully closed during the overnight hours, cutting off a key crossing point in the area. Still, not everything will be out of reach. Businesses positioned at the corners of the intersection will remain accessible, with existing driveways providing a way in and out even as the surrounding roads fall temporarily still.

To keep traffic moving, detours will guide drivers around the closure. Those traveling along South Watt Avenue between Jackson Road or Elder Creek Road will be redirected to use Hedge Avenue or Florin Perkins Road as alternate routes. It is a shift that may add a few extra minutes to a trip, but one designed to keep the broader network functioning while work continues.

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At the heart of these closures is a larger transformation. The South Watt Avenue Improvement Project is set to widen the roadway from two lanes to four between Florin Road and Jackson Road, creating space not just for more vehicles, but for safer, more balanced travel. Plans include dedicated accommodations for bicycles, pedestrians, and transit users, signaling a move toward a more connected and accessible corridor.

For now, though, the focus remains on the immediate task. Crews will work through the night hours, when traffic is lighter, using the quiet window to push the project forward with minimal daytime disruption. Signs will mark the detours, and drivers are being urged to follow them carefully as the work unfolds.

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There is a certain tradeoff at play, short, term inconvenience in exchange for long, term improvement. For those who rely on this intersection, the coming nights may require a bit of adjustment, a new route, or a few extra moments behind the wheel. But beyond the closures, the promise of a wider, more accommodating roadway continues to take shape, one night at a time.

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