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This district plan has been continued under MassDOT and the Boston area (westward along the Mass Turnpike to Weston and south through to Randolph) was the basis for a sixth district in 2010. [3] The Massachusetts Highway Department conducts an annual traffic data collection program.
The Massachusetts Department of Transportation (MassDOT) oversees roads, public transit, aeronautics, and transportation licensing and registration in the US state of Massachusetts. It was created on November 1, 2009, by the 186th Session of the Massachusetts General Court upon enactment of the 2009 Transportation Reform Act.
Massachusetts's 4th congressional district is located mostly in southern Massachusetts. It is represented by Democrat Jake Auchincloss. Auchincloss was first elected in 2020. The district covers much of the area included in the 10th district before the 1992 redistricting. In prior years, the district stretched from Brookline to Fitchburg.
MassHighway denotes this highway as Route 8A-U Route 9: 135.5: 218.1 US 20 in Pittsfield: Route 28 in Boston: c. 1933: current Route 9A — — Route 9 in Brookline: US 20 in Boston — — Route 10: 60.69: 97.67 US 202 / Route 10 in Granby, CT: NH 10 in Winchester, NH: 1922: current Mostly follows the old New England Route 10: Route 11: 4.4: 7.1
The longest numbered highway in the state is U.S. Route 20, which runs for 153 miles (246 km). The longest state highway is Route 28, which runs for 151.92 miles (244.49 km). The longest Interstate highway in Massachusetts is Interstate 90 (the Mass Pike), which runs 138.1 miles (222.3 km).
Route 4 is an 18.26-mile-long (29.39 km) state highway in northeastern Massachusetts.It runs south to north, serving many of Boston's western and northwestern suburbs, from an interchange with Route 2 in Lexington northwest to an intersection with Route 3A in North Chelmsford.
In the early 2010s, the Massachusetts Department of Transportation (MassDOT) proposed a $137-million (equivalent to $187 million in 2023 [12]) project to widen the existing 2.4-mile (3.9 km) four-lane highway section to six lanes, from north of Route 99 in Saugus to south of Route 60 in Revere. The proposal consisted of adding a 12-foot (3.7 m ...
The Massachusetts Turnpike is informally divided into two sections by MassDOT: the original 123-mile (198 km) "Western Turnpike" extending from the New York state border through the interchange with I-95 and Route 128 at exit 123 in Weston, and the 15-mile (24 km) "Boston Extension" that continues beyond exit 123 through Boston. [4] It is a ...