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Pages in category "Garden State Parkway" ... New Jersey) This page was last edited on 30 June 2020, at 14:45 (UTC). Text is available under the Creative ...
Immediately north is an exit for Grand Avenue serving Park Ridge; this is the northernmost exit of the Garden State Parkway, which crosses into the state of New York soon afterwards. From there, the route becomes the Garden State Parkway Connector, a component of the New York State Thruway system, which heads north toward the thruway mainline ...
Route 147 eastbound past the Garden State Parkway in Middle Township. What is now Route 147 was an unimproved road back in 1927. [5] When the 500-series county routes were established in the 1950s, this road became a part of CR 585, a route that ran from Route 109 (then a part of US 9) in Lower Township north to US 30 and Route 157 in Absecon.
After a 1.99-mile (3.20 km) gap in the roadway, which consists of a former bridge over the Mullica River dismantled and moved to Virginia, bridges removed for wetlands mitigation in the marshes just north, and the orphaned roads in between (which are visible from the Garden State Parkway to the west), Route 167 resurfaces in Bass River Township ...
These towns in New Jersey come alive in spring World Atlas list includes small towns offering visitors sandy beaches, and visiting baby animals and an array of colorful Victorian-era homes that ...
Flooding was reported on a number of highways in the region including Route 3 in Clifton, the Garden State Parkway in East Orange, Route 23 in Butler and more, according to the New Jersey ...
In 1952, the New Jersey Highway Authority (NJHA) was created to facilitate the construction of the Garden State Parkway. [7] In October 1954, the NJHA received bids for constructing a 3,650-foot (1,110 m) bridge crossing the Great Egg Harbor Bay, beginning at Beesley's Point, as well as a 750-foot (230 m) bridge crossing Drag Channel.
The Governor Alfred E. Driscoll Bridge, (colloquially referred to as the Driscoll Bridge) is a bridge on the Garden State Parkway in the U.S. state of New Jersey, spanning the Raritan River near its mouth in Raritan Bay. The bridge connects the Middlesex County communities of Woodbridge Township on the north with Sayreville on the south.