Crews and subcontractors with Raimore Construction will begin repaving SE 82nd Avenue south of SE Division Street starting May 18th. This continues repaving work from summer 2025 as part of the Portland Bureau of Transportation’s (PBOT) 82nd Avenue Major Maintenance Project. Work will focus on SE Clinton to Brooklyn streets and then continue south to SE Powell Boulevard later in the month. Road users should anticipate delays from 7 a.m. to 4 p.m., Monday through Friday, due to active in-street construction.

This work is funded as part of the Building a Better 82nd initiative, created to address deferred maintenance issues identified after the jurisdictional transfer of 82nd Avenue from the Oregon Department of Transportation to PBOT on June 1st, 2022. PBOT classifies 82nd Avenue’s existing pavement as severely deteriorated in the section its contractor will repave this summer, including work from SE Clinton to Bush streets, NE Thomson to Hancock, and SE Schiller Street to SE Foster Road. The road surface in these areas exhibits cracking that allows water infiltration below the surface, leading to repeated potholes and shortening the road’s lifespan. Additionally, 82nd Avenue’s past expansions decades ago created weak points that need more significant repairs.

In its early stages, 82nd Avenue supported only three lanes of traffic, with one lane for vehicles traveling in each direction and a center turn lane. Transportation officials reserved the outer edges of the street for parking in many places, and engineers did not build parking pavement to the same standard as the street’s center. When transportation officials removed parking to add another travel lane in each direction, they did not update the road’s supporting base, leading to premature wear. Consequently, unlike many repaving projects that grind off the top layer of asphalt and replace it with a fresh mixture of aggregate and bitumen, this project requires more significant work in the outer lanes of the former State Highway. Crews working on this project will need to remove the outer lanes to their base layer and reengineer them to support the weight of moving vehicles before repaving the entire surface. The project calls for 13 inches of new asphalt pavement on top of the new road base, which can support freight and buses.

The results will provide a smoother road surface that should last longer before requiring future repairs. It will also endure the new usage requirements proposed by the TriMet 82nd Avenue Transit Project that seeks to transform the 72 bus line into a Bus Rapid Transit (BRT) system under TriMet’s FX (Frequent Express) moniker. This enhanced transit service will use 60-foot articulated hydrogen fuel-cell electric buses that will serve 82nd Avenue. On February 13th, project designers were allowed to moved forward in developing 7 miles of Business Access and Transit (BAT) lanes along most of Portland’s portion of 82nd Avenue. With high-capacity vehicles, modern stations, traffic signal priority, and, now, transit priority on the outer lanes of 82nd Avenue, this updated project scope will shorten travel times for BRT riders and increase capacity, but place higher demands on the outer lanes of the roadway.

PBOT anticipates work continuing through July, with contractors working on the western lanes first before transitioning to the eastern lanes. Crews will start on the outside lane, then move to the inside lanes on each side. One lane in each direction will remain open during the majority of the work. The final phases of repaving will create concrete median islands with space for street trees in select areas. Landscapers will plant those trees later this fall, when rainwater can help establish healthy root growth. Financial support from the Portland Clean Energy Community Benefits Fund (PCEF) is helping the transportation agency plant more than 175 trees along 82nd Avenue as part of the 82nd Avenue Major Maintenance Project. Planners expect the shade from these trees will mitigate the impact of extreme heat events, which particularly raise temperatures in paved spaces.

Drivers should expect delays in this area and always follow the crew’s instructions, as people entering and exiting adjacent businesses will require assistance to navigate the construction zone. This roadwork is just one of many PBOT projects underway, all aimed at creating a safer and more stable street. Current projects will extend throughout 2026. Funding for some of the ongoing work comes from the American Rescue Plan Act, which has a deadline of December 31st, 2026, to complete the funded work.
Article and photos by
Disclosure: The author of this article served on the Building a Better 82nd Community Advisory Group and the 82nd Avenue Transit Project Community Advisory Committee (CAC).
Promotion: Check out East Portland News as it continues to advocate for and report on outer East Portland. You will find frequently updated articles and an archive of more than 5,000 stories written over the past 20+ years alongside a robust Community Calendar of events.
