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Pennsylvania Route 28 Truck is a 3-mile-long (4.8 km) truck route in Brookville, Jefferson County, Pennsylvania. As Route 28 travels through the Brookville city center, it becomes a narrow main street and features a relatively sharp turn just west of the bridge over North Fork Creek.
old PA Route 28: State Route 1002: PA Route 28 in O'Hara Township: SR 1001 in O'Hara Township connection between new and old PA Route 28: State Route 1003: North Canal Street, Kittanning Pike, Dorseyville Road, Kittanning Street SR 1001 in Sharpsburg: SR 4109 in Etna: State Route 1004: Seifried Lane, Kirkwood Drive SR 1007 in O'Hara Township
Former route of US 222 through the Reading area that was replaced by multiple expressways US 322 Bus. 9: 14 I-99/US 220/US 322 near State College: US 322 near Boalsburg: 1985: current Former route of US 322 through State College and Boalsburg that was replaced by an expressway US 322 Truck: 4: 6.4 US 30 Bus./US 322 in Downingtown: US 30 Bus./
Inbound route duplicated 8 Perrysville Avenue. Initially closed without bus replacement due to grades and narrow streets on outbound route. [11] Later duplicated by PAT bus route 11 22 Crosstown by 1918 [5] Jul 4, 1964 [6] From North Side (formerly Allegheny City) business area to 6th/5th in downtown. 23 Coraopolis – Sewickley by 1916 [4] Jun ...
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As of 2011, this river plain is dominated by Pennsylvania Route 28, an expressway which begins at East Ohio Street and then follows the river north. But before Route 28 became an expressway, this plain was a Croatian neighborhood that was settled by immigrants from Jastrebarsko, who called the neighborhood "Mala Jaska" and founded St. Nicholas ...
This terminus is very close to PA Route 28, a limited access highway carrying traffic away from Pittsburgh to the northeast direction. All of these junctions, some major, some minor, contribute to the massive congestion on PA 228. Starting at the western terminus with US Route 19, PA 228 is a four-lane, divided highway.
Interstate 279 (I-279), locally referred to as Parkway North, is a north–south auxiliary Interstate Highway that lies entirely within Allegheny County, Pennsylvania. Its southern end is at I-376 at the Fort Pitt Bridge in Pittsburgh, and the north end is in Franklin Park at I-79 .