Work crews could be seen Thursday making emergency repairs where Interstate 95 South crosses Boyce Road near Exit 10. The discovery Wednesday of an underground void forced the closure of that section of I-95 so the repairs could be made. Steel sheeting has been driven into the ground next to the back wall, where dirt meets the concrete deck to prevent the mound on each side of a suspended bridge from falling onto the road beneath the bridge, said Andrew Barksdale, an N.C. Department of Transportation spokesman. The NCDOT expects the repairs to be completed and the section reopened Friday.

Work crews could be seen Thursday making emergency repairs where Interstate 95 South crosses Boyce Road near Exit 10. The discovery Wednesday of an underground void forced the closure of that section of I-95 so the repairs could be made. Steel sheeting has been driven into the ground next to the back wall, where dirt meets the concrete deck to prevent the mound on each side of a suspended bridge from falling onto the road beneath the bridge, said Andrew Barksdale, an N.C. Department of Transportation spokesman. The NCDOT expects the repairs to be completed and the section reopened Friday.

Work crews could be seen Thursday making emergency repairs where Interstate 95 South crosses Boyce Road near Exit 10. The discovery Wednesday of an underground void forced the closure of that section of I-95 so the repairs could be made. Steel sheeting has been driven into the ground next to the back wall, where dirt meets the concrete deck to prevent the mound on each side of a suspended bridge from falling onto the road beneath the bridge, said Andrew Barksdale, an N.C. Department of Transportation spokesman. The NCDOT expects the repairs to be completed and the section reopened Friday.