Overview
- After more than 40 days of work, the lateral from Río San Joaquín to Avenida Primero de Mayo—about 1,560 meters—reopened and was inaugurated by Governor Delfina Gómez and Mayor Isaac Montoya.
- Crews laid high‑resistance hydraulic concrete to extend pavement life and improve safety on one of the metro area’s busiest corridors.
- Officials say the upgraded stretch will directly benefit roughly 187,000 daily users, with added repairs to pedestrian bridges, new lighting, security cameras, and protective meshes.
- Most construction was scheduled at night to limit disruptions, though authorities acknowledged the works initially caused heavy traffic delays.
- Local investment totaled 57 million pesos for the lateral; a separate 3.5‑kilometer upgrade on Boulevard Luis Donaldo Colosio cost 45.3 million pesos, as the state prepares to launch the corridor‑wide rebuild in Naucalpan in January 2026.