The Pulaski Skyway will be closed all weekend in a preview of what users face when the road closes in February for two years.

Pulaski Skyway
Pulaski Skyway (NJ DOT)
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The 80-year-old roadway will be closed starting Friday night at 9 p.m. until 5 a.m. on Monday as workers install a new floor beam that supports the travel lanes over the Tonnelle Circle in Jersey City.

The northbound lanes will be closed at the Skyway entrance near Newark Liberty International Airport. Routes 1 and 9 south will be closed at the ramp from Route 139 west to the Tonnelle Circle.

Motorists heading south on 1 and 9 trying to get onto the Skyway near the Tonnelle Circle will be able to do so. Westbound motorists on Route 139 will be able to cut through the circle and get on the Skyway southbound.

When the road reopens on Monday, trucks will not be able to use the ramps to the Holland Tunnel until Sunday, September 1.

Drivers heading for the Holland Tunnel can take the New Jersey Turnpike's Newark Bay Extension

New Jersey Fast Traffic's Bob Williams says this will be an early test of what drivers can expect when the road's northbound lanes close in February after the Super Bowl for two years as the road's $1 billion rehabilitation project gets underway.

Drivers will need to find alternates to the Holland Tunnel on a daily basis which Williams expects to radically alter driving patterns throughout the area.

The rehabilitation project includes the replacement of the Skyway deck, strengthening the steel superstructure, repairing ramps, increasing the Skyway’s ability to withstand an earthquake and improving drainage and lighting. The bridge will also be repainted.

The Associated Press contributed to this story

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