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The westbound side of the Ted Williams Tunnel that carries motorists to and from Boston's Logan International Airport will be closed overnight for road work, MassDOT announced.
The Ted Williams Tunnel is a highway tunnel in Boston, Massachusetts.The third in the city to travel under Boston Harbor, with the Sumner Tunnel and the Callahan Tunnel, it carries the final segment of Interstate 90 (the Massachusetts Turnpike) from South Boston towards its eastern terminus at Route 1A in East Boston, slightly beyond Logan International Airport.
Drivers from East Boston wanting to reach Downtown Boston will be rerouted to I-90/Ted Williams Tunnel via Bennington Street and onto I-93. Find more detour routes and maps on Mass.gov. Rin ...
When all-electronic tolling went live on the Mass Pike, the Tobin Bridge, Callahan Tunnel, Sumner Tunnel, and Ted Williams Tunnel joined the system and were converted to charging a single toll in both directions, rather than a double toll in one direction. The Tobin Bridge was converted to all-electronic tolling for southbound only in July 2014.
The tunnel was opened in 1961. It was named for the son of Turnpike chairman William F. Callahan, who was killed in Italy days before the end of World War II. Formerly, control signals were used to reverse the direction of one lane in this tunnel or the Sumner Tunnel, when the opposite tunnel was closed for maintenance or emergencies. Under the ...
I-90 Toll / Mass Pike west to I-93 south – Williams Tunnel: Eastern end of I-90; southbound exit and northbound entrance: 50.305: 80.958: Route 145 north (Bennington Street) – Winthrop, Chelsea: Interchange, southern end of Route 145: Revere: 52.487: 84.470: Route 145: Interchange, northbound exit and southbound entrance: 52.852: 85.057
As a result of the leak, the Metropolitan Transportation Authority sent out alerts before 1:30 p.m. that all lanes in both tubes of the heavily trafficked tunnel connecting Manhattan and Queens ...
Traffic crawls over a closed Fort Point Channel Tunnel entrance in Boston during rush hour on July 11, 2006, a day after the collapse.. The Big Dig ceiling collapse occurred on July 10, 2006, when a concrete ceiling panel and debris weighing 26 short tons (52,000 lb; 24,000 kg) and measuring 20 by 40 feet (6.1 by 12.2 m) fell in Boston's Fort Point Channel Tunnel (which connects to the Ted ...