closed #150649
Parks & Rec Programs
3800 E 3rd ST
- Case Date:
- 2/16/2016
Want to add Bloomington Community Band to Calendar of Events and links to Arts organizations.
Want to add Bloomington Community Band to Calendar of Events and links to Arts organizations.
Reported what could be sinkhole forming outside residence at 3749 E. Cameron Avenue. Approximately 1 foot wide and about 8 in. deep. Noticed that street looked hollow underneath, wants response when action is taken.
Called in complaint of possible sinkhole in front of 3749 E Cameron Avenue. A complaint had been called in a few weeks ago (UReport #159862), and the hole was patched up. She said the hole is back, and it looks as if there is a problem underneath the road that cannot be fixed with a patch.
In westbound right lane of E Third St at S Pleasant Ridge Rd, two potholes are a threat to cars turning right on Pleasant Ridge.
Large pothole/damage to the street occurred something in the past 17 days (we were out of town starting 1 June and it wasn't there when we left). Someone did something that seems to have ripped up two layers of pavement. This pothole has the additional feature of being right at the end of our angled driveway, so now it's much harder to avoid scrapping the bottom of the car when pulling in and out. So even a short term quick fix would be appreciated if possible. Thanks, Carrick Rogers
Surface asphalt is crumbling
Pothole....pavement missing...large...been there for over a year and has been reported previously
Asphalt has been tearing away for over a year and running down stream into the walkway directly west of the end of Homestead Dr. Large area 3' by 6' has been torn away and keeps getting worse with every heavy rain.
Many potholes in Hoosier Acres. Specifically at E Cameron Av and S. Christofer Dr. More specifically on S. Christofer Dr just before my driveway to back entrance to house.
3600 block of Brownridge Rd on north side: Due to flooding, the stream bed is encroaching on the road surface so that now there's a 3-ft. drop eroded up to the black-top. It's beginning to undermine the road surface. Some local erosion control for about a 10-foot stretch should arrest the problem for the foreseeable future, I'd think. Of course, we could wait until the road gets undercut, and that'd be quite a bit more complicated, I think.