Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
In 1956, the Westchester Planning Department proposed a "Stamford - Bedford Village Road" between Connecticut Route 104 and Connecticut Route 137. [4] This was never built. In 1959, Connecticut's government spent $2.2 million on widening High Ridge Road, a segment of Route 137, from two lanes to four lanes.
Route 137 in Stamford: Long Ridge Road at the New York state line 1935: current Route 105 — — — — — 1963 Now Route 190: Route 106 — — Route 58 near Easton: Route 59 near Easton — 1963 Center Street; decommissioned in exchange for creating the current Route 106 Route 106: 14.37: 23.13 I-95/US 1 in Stamford: Route 53 in Wilton ...
Tunnel Road (SR 533) in Vernon: Bolton Road (SR 541) in Vernon: Ferguson Road — — SR 543: 0.38: 0.61 Route 314 in Wethersfield: Maple Avenue at Wethersfield–Hartford town line Berlin Turnpike — — SR 545: 0.15: 0.24 Route 66 in Middletown: Route 9 / Route 17 in Middletown: Washington Street — — SR 549: 1.14: 1.83 US 6 in Farmington ...
I-95 follows the Connecticut Turnpike from the New York state line eastward for 88 miles (142 km). This portion of the highway passes through the most heavily urbanized section of Connecticut along the shoreline between Greenwich and New Haven, with daily traffic volumes of around 150,000 vehicles throughout the entire 48-mile (77 km) length between the New York state line and the junction ...
The road was initially maintained by the Merritt Parkway Commission, though in 1959, this was absorbed into CDOT and renamed the Merritt Partway Committee. [ 26 ] In the late 1960s, the segment of roadway from Stamford to Greenwich was reconstructed in order to make the roadway straighter.
Old North Stamford Road at Rippowam River in northern Stamford [31]: 2 41°06′54″N 73°32′42″W / 41.115°N 73.545°W / 41.115; -73.545 ( Turn-of-River A lenticular pony truss bridge built by the Berlin Iron Bridge Company in 1892, using a design patented by William O. Douglas in 1878 for a lens-type truss bridge .
Stamford (/ ˈ s t æ m f ər d /) is a city in Fairfield County, Connecticut, United States, 34 miles (55 kilometers) outside of New York City. It is the sixth-most populous city in New England. Stamford is also the largest city in the Western Connecticut Planning Region, and Connecticut's second-most populous city, behind Bridgeport.
Stamford (population 40,067 in 1920), was known as the "Lock City", as the home of the Yale and Towne Lock Manufacturing Company. [16] [28] [29] [30] Bridgeport, nicknamed "Park City" had in 1930 over 500 factories within its borders.