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District of Columbia Route 295 (DC 295), also known as the Anacostia Freeway as well as the Kenilworth Avenue Freeway north of East Capitol Street, is a freeway in the District of Columbia, and currently the only signed numbered route in the District that is not an Interstate Highway or U.S. Highway.
Interstate 295 (I-295) also known as the Anacostia Freeway, is a six-mile (9.7 km) auxiliary Interstate Highway in the US state of Maryland and in Washington, D.C..It connects I-95/I-495 and Maryland Route 210 (MD 210; Indian Head Highway) near the Potomac River (just outside DC's boundary with Maryland) to I-695 and District of Columbia Route 295 (DC 295) in the Anacostia neighborhood of ...
The Anacostia Freeway is a freeway in the U.S. state of Maryland and the District of Columbia. It follows: Interstate 295 (Maryland–District of Columbia), a spur route connecting I-95 / I-495 and Maryland Route 210 (Indian Head Highway) near the Potomac River; District of Columbia Route 295, a freeway in the District of Columbia
MD 5 was directed to follow Branch Avenue to the D.C. border and DC 5 was modified to follow Branch Avenue from the Maryland border to DC 4 (Pennsylvania Avenue), which it followed west to the White House, by 1946. [2] [3] DC 295: 4.29: 6.90 Anacostia Freeway / 11th Street Bridges in Anacostia
Part of the planned North Central Freeway; Maryland portion was known as I-70S until in 1975 I-295: 7.25 [5] 11.67 Anacostia Freeway in Oxon Hill, MD: Anacostia Freeway / 11th Street Bridges in Anacostia: 1964: current Anacostia Freeway (south of the 11th Street Bridges) I-395: 3.48 [5] 5.60
Interstate 695 (I-695), also known as the Southeast Freeway, is a two-mile-long (3.2 km) auxiliary Interstate Highway in Washington, D.C.. [1] It travels from an interchange with I-395 south of the US Capitol building east then south across the 11th Street Bridges to an intersection with I-295 and District of Columbia Route 295 (DC 295) in Anacostia.
Many counties in the Northeast have moderate to high numbers of doctors certified to treat buprenorphine patients. But just 31 percent of the 7,745 doctors in those areas are certified to treat the legal limit of 100 patients.
The Anacostia Freeway (DC-295) continues in a northeasterly direction from the point where I-295 ends at its intersection with I-695 near the 11th Street Bridges on the south side of the Anacostia River and links with the Baltimore–Washington Parkway, which eventually becomes Maryland Route 295, via a short section of Maryland Route 201.