Colorado will leave house-sized boulder along highway

The Associated Press
June 5, 2019 at 8:35PM
Colorado Department of Transportation official work to clean up Colorado State Highway 145 after two large boulders fell 1,000 feet from the nearby ridge and destroyed the pavement Monday, May 27, 2019 between Cortez and Tulleride, Colo.
Colorado Department of Transportation official work to clean up Colorado State Highway 145 after two large boulders fell 1,000 feet from the nearby ridge and destroyed the pavement Monday, May 27, 2019 between Cortez and Tulleride, Colo. (Associated Press/The Minnesota Star Tribune)

DENVER — A boulder the size of a house that tumbled across and gouged a southwestern Colorado state highway last month will stay put. State officials plan to rebuild the highway next to it, saving taxpayers money and possibly creating a tourist attraction.

Democratic Gov. Jared Polis said Tuesday that Colorado will save about $200,000 by not blasting the 8.5 million pound (3.9 million kilogram) boulder. He said people will also have the opportunity to see the boulder dubbed "Memorial Rock," which fell on Memorial Day weekend.

It was the largest rock in a rockslide on Colorado Highway 145 near the town of Dolores on May 24 and ended up just off the road.

The Colorado Department of Transportation says the total cost of fixing the road, adding a guardrail in front of the boulder and cleanup will be about $1.3 million.

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