Traffic & Transit
Falls Church Project Gets Funding In Transportation Authority's 6-Year Plan
The Northern Virginia Transportation Authority approved its six-year program, setting funding for Falls Church area projects and others.

FALLS CHURCH, VA — Two Falls Church area projects have funding in the Northern Virginia Transportation Authority's latest six-year program, which was approved Thursday.
The Fiscal Years 2022-2027 Six Year Program funds regional multimodal transportation projects in Northern Virginia through regional revenues. The program provides nearly $625 million in funding to 20 projects.
This was the sixth time the authority has updated its six-year plan to prioritize and fund regional transportation projects. For the latest plan update, nine localities in Northern Virginia submitted 26 proposed projects totaling over $1.2 billion. Committees recommended 20 of these projects for the 2022-2027 six-year funding plan, and over 1,600 public comments were received from April 15 to May 22. The six-year program is updated every two years.
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"Most people when they're driving, they don't know when they leave when they're leaving Loudoun County and driving into the Fairfax County or leaving Arlington and driving into Alexandria," said Phyllis Randall, chair of the Northern Virginia Transportation Authority and the Loudoun County Board of Supervisors. "That's why the authority is so important to do multimodal transportation options and focus on congestion relief built up to cost in the Northern Virginia area, because the Northern Virginia area is such an important part of the Commonwealth."
One project receiving funding was the City of Falls Church's North Washington Street Multimodal Improvements Project from Great Falls Street to Gresham Place. According to the city, the project includes sidewalk widening, improved intersection geometry, signal improvements, crosswalks, utility undergrounding, lighting and landscaping between Great Falls Street and Gresham Place. The project received its full funding request of $22.5 million. Construction is expected to begin in fiscal year 2026.
Find out what's happening in Falls Churchfor free with the latest updates from Patch.
A Seven Corners project in Fairfax County received partial funding of $4.2 million instead of the full request of $94.8 million. A ring road around part of the Seven Corners interchange has been one of the options being planned to improve the busy intersection.
While the Northern Virginia Transportation Authority's main goal in prioritizing projects is addressing traffic congestion, part of that strategy is through funding multimodal projects. The six-year plan includes funding for transit, bike and pedestrian, and transportation technology projects, while most roadway projects also have a pedestrian and bicyclist component.
"We have rail, we have buses, we have roads, we have bike paths, we have bus rapid transit projects, because as I always say in Northern Virginia, there is no one-size-fits-all solution," said Backmon. "There is no single mode that really taps into our congestion issues."
Through its latest six-year plan and five previous ones, the authority is helping Northern Virginia localities advance 122 regional multimodal transportation projects, totaling nearly $3.12 billion, for congestion reduction throughout the region.
The 20 projects included in the six-year plan are:
- Arlington County: Ballston-MU Metrorail Station West Entrance: $80,000,000
- Fairfax County: Fairfax County Parkway Widening: Nomes Court to Route 123: $108,000,000
- Fairfax County: 8 New Battery Electric Buses - Fairfax Connector Buses for Tysons to Franconia Service: $10,000,000
- Fairfax County: Richmond Highway Widening From Mt. Vernon Memorial Highway/Jeff Todd Way to Sherwood Hall Lane: $60,207,038
- Fairfax County: Richmond Highway (Route 1) BRT: $80,000,000
- Fairfax County: Soapstone Drive Extension: Sunset Hills Road to Sunrise Valley Drive: $73,793,037
- Fairfax County: Seven Corners Ring Road Improvements: Arlington Boulevard (Route 50)Westbound Ramp to Castle Place/Sleepy Hollow Road: $4,200,000 (request partially funded)
- Loudoun County: Route 7 Corridor ITS Implementation Program: $2,500,000
- Loudoun County: Route 7 Improvements: Route 9 to Dulles Greenway: $20,000,000
- Loudoun County: Ryan Road Widening (Phase 2): Evergreen Mills Road to Beaverdam Drive: $16,000,000
- Loudoun County: Loudoun County Parkway Interchange at US 50: $35,250,000
- Prince William County: University Boulevard Extension: Devlin Road to Wellington Road: $53,000,000
- Prince William County: Old Bridge Road Widening: Colby Drive to Minnieville Road: $25,000,000
- Prince William County: Van Buren Road North Extension: Route 234 to Cardinal Drive: $8,000,000 (request partially funded)
- Prince William County: Route 1 at Route 123 Interchange: $3,000,000 (request partially funded)
- City of Alexandria: West End Transitway Phase 1b: South Van Dorn Street and Bridge Design: $5,000,000
- City of Alexandria: Alexandria Bike and Pedestrian Trails Construction and Reconstruction: Holmes Run Trail - Dora Kelly Fair-weather Crossing Bridge: $5,000,000
- City of Falls Church: North Washington Street Multimodal Improvements Project: Great FallsStreet to Gresham Place: $22,500,000
- City of Manassas: Liberia Avenue 3rd Lane Eastbound: Route 28 to Euclid Avenue: $8,851,639
- Town of Herndon: Herndon Parkway Improvements at Worldgate Drive Extension: $4,581,000
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