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Fort Bend Parkway Toll Road: 10.1 16.3 Sienna Parkway US 90 Alt. east (South Main Street) $3.51 (with valid tag) $4.66 (without valid tag) EZ TAG, TxTag, or TollTag required Hardy Toll Road: 21.6 34.8 I-610: I-45: $3.00 ($2.70 with EZ TAG discount) Hardy Toll Road Connector to George Bush Intercontinental Airport: 4 6.4 Hardy Toll Road
This is a list of turnpike roads, built and operated by nonprofit turnpike trusts or private companies in exchange for the privilege of collecting a toll, in the U.S. state of Massachusetts, mainly in the 19th century. While most of the roads are now maintained as free public roads, some have been abandoned.
Mohegan Road: May 1792: New London - Uncasville - Norwich: Route 32: First toll road in New England and second in the country (the first was the road over Snicker's Gap, Virginia, chartered in 1785) Greenwich Road: October 1792: Boston Post Road in Greenwich: U.S. Route 1: Became part of the Connecticut Turnpike in 1806 New London and Windham ...
Route 99 (New Rutherford Avenue) to I-93 north – Charlestown, Somerville: Southbound exit and northbound entrance: Mystic River: Tobin Bridge (toll; E-ZPass or pay-by-plate) Suffolk: Chelsea: 49.567: 79.770 — — Beacon Street: Northbound exit and southbound entrance: 50.038: 80.528 — — Fourth Street: Northbound exit and southbound ...
Most toll plazas were located on the entrance/exit ramps before entering the turnpike itself. An exception was the mainline West Stockbridge toll plaza, designed for toll collection from inbound traffic from New York; it existed shortly after exit 3, an eastbound-only entrance and westbound-only exit in Massachusetts. [9]
I-91 is the longest of three Interstate highways whose entire route is located within the New England states (the other two highways being I-89 and I-93) and is also the only primary (two-digit) Interstate Highway in New England to intersect all five of the other highways that run through the region.
The Connecticut Turnpike was designed and built much differently than other toll roads built around the same time. Unlike toll roads in other states that operated under semi-autonomous, quasi-public toll road authorities, the Connecticut Turnpike was operated by the Connecticut Highway Department (later the Connecticut Department of ...
From Albany, New York, to Portsmouth, New Hampshire, incorporating the route that is now New Hampshire Route 101 and the corridor that is New York Route 7 and Vermont Route 9. From Glens Falls, New York, to Calais, Maine, tracing U.S. Route 4 through Vermont and New Hampshire. The Federal Highway Administration ultimately did not approve the plan.