Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The Oregon Department of Transportation closed all lanes of I-84 between Baker City’s Exit 302 and Ontario’s Exit 374 at about 11 a.m., with officials saying they expect it to remain closed ...
Twenty to 30 cars were involved in a pileup Thursday on Interstate 84 in Multnomah County, Oregon. It happened amid whiteout conditions.
A crash involving more than 100 vehicles in Portland, Ore., during “whiteout conditions” closed Interstate 84 on Thursday. Cars, semitrucks and other vehicles were piled up along the snow ...
Interstate 84 is the longest freeway in Oregon, at over 375 miles (604 km) in length, and is the only Interstate to traverse the state from west to east. [2] The highway connects the Portland metropolitan area to the Columbia River Gorge, the northeastern Columbia Plateau, and part of the Snake River Valley. [3]
From Troutdale, the Mount Hood Scenic Byway starts at the end of the Historic Columbia River Highway where the Troutdale Bridge crosses the Sandy River.For the first twenty miles (32 km) of the route, it follows a southwestern path along city streets: west on Glenn Otto Park Road into downtown Troutdale, connecting with Halsey Street, south along 238th Street (which veers to become 242nd ...
US 30 runs mostly along I-84 in Oregon east of Portland, diverting to short segments of the old surface route to act as a business or scenic route for I-84: Historic Columbia River Highway No. 100 for one mile (1.6 km) through Cascade Locks (also designated the Cascade Locks Highway) Mount Hood Highway No. 26 for three miles (4.8 km) through ...
A couple dozen wildfires burned in Oregon and Washington earlier this week, closing Interstate 84 east of the Tri-Cities and sending enough smoke over the Tri-Cities that the air quality was rated ...
It connects Interstate 84/U.S. Route 30 on the Oregon side with Washington State Route 14. [2] The bridge is the second oldest existing road bridge across the Columbia River between Washington and Oregon. It was built by the Oregon-Washington Bridge Company and opened on December 9, 1924. The original name was the Waucoma Interstate Bridge.