Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Aerial image of Delaware Memorial Bridge (left), Wilmington, Delaware (top right), 2012. The Delaware Memorial Bridge is a dual-span suspension bridge crossing the Delaware River. The toll bridges carry Interstate 295 and U.S. Route 40 and is also the link between Delaware and New Jersey.
Construction on an interchange with the Delaware Memorial Bridge approach at Farnhurst began on July 12, 1950. [61] On August 16, 1951, the Delaware Memorial Bridge opened to traffic. [62] US 40 was rerouted to use the new Delaware Memorial Bridge to cross the Delaware River, being realigned to follow US 13 north from Hares Corner to Farnhurst ...
The Delaware Memorial Bridge opened in 1951, and US 40 was rerouted north along US 13 before heading east along the bridge approach, with Delaware Route 273 (DE 273) extended east along the former route into New Castle. In 1959, the Delaware Memorial Bridge approach became a part of I-295.
I-295 / CR 551 south – Delaware Memorial Bridge: Exits 2B-C on I-295; western end of CR 551 concurrency: 0.66: 1.06: CR 551 north (South Pennsville-Auburn Road) – Swedesboro: Eastern end of CR 551 concurrency: 0.96: 1.54: N.J. Turnpike / US 40 (Wiley Road) to I-295 south – Atlantic City, Delaware Memorial Bridge Route 140 ends
The Dupont Boulevard transformed the state of Delaware, but just imagine what could have been with a tunnel under the Delaware River. The Dupont Boulevard transformed the state of Delaware, but ...
Since the 1950s, a freeway has been planned along the US 301 corridor between I-95 and the Maryland border southwest of Middletown in order to provide a connection from the Delaware Memorial Bridge towards the Chesapeake Bay Bridge and the Washington, D.C. area. [62] The most recent proposal called for US 301 to be built as a limited-access ...
The Durham Performing Arts Center and the Durham Bulls Athletic Park are across the street. Klein said 1.2 million people visit each year and 4,500 workers are employed across the campus today.
This is a list of bridges, ferries, and other crossings of the Delaware River and Delaware Bay from the Atlantic Ocean upstream to the confluence of the East Branch and West Branch at Hancock, New York. There are no tunnels under the Delaware (excepting utilities), and no dams crossing the full width of its main stem.