Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
PA Routes are also called Pennsylvania Traffic Routes, and formerly State Highway Routes. [ 2 ] There are 41,643 mi (67,018 km) of roadway maintained by state agencies, with 39,737 mi (63,951 km) maintained by PennDOT, 554 mi (892 km) maintained by the Pennsylvania Turnpike Commission , and 1,352 mi (2,176 km) maintained by other state agencies.
Also known as the Parkway North, North Shore Expressway, East Street Valley Expressway and the Raymond E. Wilt Memorial Highway [3] I-283: 2.91: 4.68 I-76 near Highspire: I-83/US 322 near Harrisburg: 1972: current The highway is entirely in Dauphin County and Lancaster County, Pennsylvania and is an eastern shore bypass of Harrisburg. [3] I-295 ...
Pennsylvania Route 22: Keystone Trail (1927) Pennsylvania Route 24: Washington-Harrisburg Route (after 1924) Pennsylvania Route 33: Lykens Valley Trail (1927) Pennsylvania Route 41: Reading - Harrisburg (after 1924) Pennsylvania Route 44: Highway to the Stars (Potter County) Pennsylvania Route 46: Bradford Farmers' Valley Highway (1927 ...
Original route of US 22 in Monroeville, changed to business route when the main route was added to I-376: US 22 Bus. 5: 8.0 US 22/US 522 in Granville Township: US 22/US 322 in Derry Township: 2005: current Original route of US 22 through downtown Lewistown that was replaced by an expressway US 30 Bus. 3: 4.8 US 30 in Bedford Township
The section of the highway from US 40 to I-70 was signed PA 43 Toll until 2000, and in 2001, it was officially named the James J. Manderino Expressway in honor of James J. Manderino, a Pennsylvania State Representative who pushed for the construction of the highway.
Pennsylvania Route 66 Business (PA 66 Bus. ) is an 8-mile-long (13 km) business route in Westmoreland County, Pennsylvania , connected two fingers of suburbia located east of Pittsburgh . The highway was signed PA 66 Business after PA 66 was shifted onto a newly created toll road bypass.
Pennsylvania Route 41 (PA 41) is a 22-mile-long (35 km) state highway located in southeastern Pennsylvania, United States. The southern terminus of the route is at the Delaware state line in Kennett Township, where the road continues as Delaware Route 41 (DE 41). The northern terminus is at U.S. Route 30 (US 30) in Gap.
However, when the initial numbers were assigned later that year, they were drawn on a 1947 map, and so the corridor across Northern Pennsylvania became part of I-84, while the Scranton–New York route became I-82. I-80 ran along the Pennsylvania Turnpike to Harrisburg, where it split into I-80S to Philadelphia and I-80N to New York. [3]