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I-95 northbound on the New Jersey Turnpike in Robbinsville Township. Due to the cancelation of the Somerset Freeway in 1983, a gap existed on I-95 within New Jersey for roughly 35 years. [13] Northbound I-95 ended at US 1 in Lawrence Township where the road became I-295. [34]
Interstate 95 (I-95) is the main north–south Interstate Highway on the East Coast of the United States, [3] running from U.S. Route 1 (US 1) in Miami, Florida, north to the Houlton–Woodstock Border Crossing between Maine and the Canadian province of New Brunswick.
New Jersey Turnpike (I-95) southbound at the Route 33/Route 133 interchange in East Windsor Township. While continuing up to the Meadowlands, the crossings were harder because of the fertile marsh land of silt and mud. Near the shallow mud, the mud was filled with crushed stone, and the roadway was built above the water table.
The longest of these is Interstate 95 (I-95), which runs for 89.22 miles (143.59 km) from Florence Township to Fort Lee. The shortest Interstate in New Jersey is I-278, which runs for 2 miles (3.2 km) from Linden to Elizabeth before crossing into Staten Island, New York.
At the formation of the Interstate Highway System, I-95 was planned as a Florida-to-Maine superhighway passing through the Northeast Megalopolis.However, decades of disputes among local and regional governments and private landowners prevented or delayed the design and construction of this highway from the Trenton–Philadelphia area to northern New Jersey in the New Brunswick–Piscataway area.
The Basilone Memorial Bridge is a bridge on the New Jersey Turnpike in the U.S. state of New Jersey spanning the Raritan River.The bridge connects Edison on the north with New Brunswick on the south.
I-295 begins at I-95, I-495, US 202, and DE 141 near Newport, Delaware, and heads east over the Delaware River on the Delaware Memorial Bridge into New Jersey.The highway intersects the southern terminus of the New Jersey Turnpike and runs northeast through suburban areas of South Jersey parallel to the turnpike, providing a bypass of Philadelphia and Camden.
I-95 in Mansfield Township: 1951: current New Jersey Turnpike, 51.0-mile (82.1 km) portion south of exit 6 is unsigned Route 700 while remainder is I-95 Route 700N: 5.90: 9.50 I-95 / N.J. Turnpike in Newark: Exit 14C on the Newark Bay Extension in Jersey City: 1953: 1969 New Jersey Turnpike Newark Bay Extension, now I-78