A celebration on Wednesday marked the completion of a Fall River Entrance Station construction project at Rocky Mountain National Park.

According to a news release from Kyle Patterson, public affairs officer for the park, three new entrance kiosks are ready to go, along with a new office, updated entrance sign, a wider road and a lane specifically for visitors using transponders.

The wastewater and water systems that serve Fall River Entrance and the Bighorn Ranger Station got major improvements as well.

Workers put in an on-site wastewater treatment system and made upgrades to the water treatment building.

“This project addresses aging infrastructure as part of a broader effort across national parks to reduce the agency’s maintenance backlog,” Patterson said in the release.

“Funding came through the National Park Service Line-Item Construction and Repair-Rehabilitation programs, which are authorized by Congress to support critical visitor service investments.”

Patterson said National Park Service staff, elected officials, congressional staff, project contractors and representatives of the Rocky Mountain Conservancy attended the celebration.

More than 10 years of planning and work went into the upgrades, according to the release.

It marks the fifth version of an entrance station in the Fall River area. Patterson called the achievement a reflection of the park’s continued evolution over its 110-year history.

The Fall River Entrance is on the U.S. 34 entrance to the park.