CHOKEPOINTS

WSDOT archaeologist solves mystery of structure under Maple Valley Highway

Oct 21, 2021, 5:01 AM | Updated: 2:16 pm

The Maple Valley Highway finally reopened to all traffic Wednesday after an unexpected discovery pushed a weekend culvert project out an extra three days. All we knew earlier this week was that workers found an old wooden road under State Route 169 that stopped the excavation work.

King County crews find mystery structure under Maple Valley Highway

The Washington State Department of Transportation’s archaeologist, Jason Cooper, was called in to solve the mystery. And when Cooper’s phone rings over the weekend, someone on a construction project usually has found something interesting, and that’s exactly what happened.

Workers installing new culverts under the highway, north of Cedar Grove Road, uncovered a long section of wood planks. They weren’t sure if it was part of a bridge or a road, so they stopped work and made the call to Cooper.

“Their supervisor gave me a call and said, ‘hey, are you available to take a look at this,'” Cooper told KIRO Radio.

This is why he keeps his phone close during construction season.

Cooper did some quick research, including looking at the King County map vault online, to see what might have been there before the Maple Valley Highway was paved.

“I found a road survey map from 1929, which doesn’t show the wood plank, but within the plan it gave 8,100 linear feet of wooden plank boards,” he said. “That’s my smoking gun.”

But Cooper had to check it out in person to be sure.

“It was my job to evaluate it and make the determination if this was a significant piece of roadway,” he said.

It became clear after just an hour that it was nothing special. There were no other artifacts nearby, like cans, bottles, or any indication of a camping site.

“People thought it was a bridge, but there was no superstructure or no trestle buried underneath the fill,” Cooper said. “It was just a one-tier wooden plank road.”

But what road?

Cooper was able to determine that it was from the original road built by King County in the 1920s from Renton to Maple Valley and eventually toward Mount Rainier. It became Primary State Highway #5 in 1937 when the state took the road over. It wasn’t paved until 1953. The entire road wasn’t made of wood, like the planks found over the weekend, but rather was a combination of packed dirt, gravel, and then this particular section along the Cedar River.

“It was built as a solution to this particular wet, soggy spot,” Cooper said.

We both chuckled over that because workers are still dealing with that wet, soggy spot nearly 100 years later. That section of SR 169 floods all the time, and last year the road was closed for five days because of flooding. That’s what the culvert project was aiming to fix.

I asked Cooper if he was disappointed that it wasn’t something spectacular.

“You always want the Ark of the Covenant,” Cooper joked. “When you’re dealt a plank road, you do what you can.”

Cooper’s wife asked him if the road was “Roman.” Now that would have been the discovery of the century.

Check out more of Chris’ Chokepoints.

Chokepoints

US Route 2 trestle...

Chris Sullivan

Sullivan: Tussling with the future of the US Route 2 trestle

The US Route 2 trestle from Lake Stevens to Everett needs some TLC, and the state is looking for your input on its future.

1 day ago

Photo: A Washington State ferry pulls up to the dock on March 29, 2020 in Edmonds, Washington....

Julia Dallas

Why were Washington ferries out of service this weekend?

It's been a tough Memorial Day weekend for those using Washington ferries as many travelers have been faced with cancellations.

3 days ago

Image: Traffic on Interstate 5 passes through downtown on Nov. 28, 2013, in Seattle. Seattle, locat...

Steve Coogan

The holiday weekend is here, but traffic still could slow drivers down

AAA notes that traveling by car is appealing for many during a holiday weekend because of the flexibility it provides. But it brings traffic.

5 days ago

sound transit violent attacks...

Chris Sullivan

Sound Transit CEO on recent violent attacks: It’s ‘my job to restore confidence’ in public transit

Just how concerned are you about your safety while riding the light rail? Three violent attacks this year have many people concerned about crime on the trains.

6 days ago

Image: Members of the community hold oversized scissors as part of a ceremony to mark the completio...

Chris Sullivan

Sullivan: Oversized scissors, shovels used to celebrate I-405 project progress

The Washington State Department of Transportation used big scissors and more to celebrate the Interstate 405 project north of Bellevue.

8 days ago

Photo: Alaska Airlines planes at Sea-Tac Airport....

Julia Dallas

Why was Sea-Tac Airport so busy Sunday? Will it get worse?

Warmer weather means a busy summer travel season is ahead. Visitors may find longer than usual lines at Sea-Tac Airport and delays.

10 days ago

WSDOT archaeologist solves mystery of structure under Maple Valley Highway