Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The Pennsylvania Turnpike, sometimes shortened to Penna Turnpike or PA Turnpike, is a controlled-access toll road which is operated by the Pennsylvania Turnpike Commission (PTC) in Pennsylvania. It runs for 360 miles (580 km) across the state, connecting Pittsburgh and Philadelphia , and passes through four tunnels as it crosses the Appalachian ...
Interstate 180 (I-180) is a spur highway in Pennsylvania that connects Williamsport to I-80 near Milton.The length of the highway is 28.84 miles (46.41 km). It was also the designation of present-day I-176 between Morgantown and Reading, when the Pennsylvania Turnpike carried the "I-80S" designation in the 1960s.
It is one of seven tunnels completed for the Pennsylvania Turnpike, and one of four still in use today. The Kittatinny Mountain Tunnel is 4,727 feet (1,441 m) in length, [ 1 ] and is located 600 feet (180 m) west of the Blue Mountain Tunnel , separated by the Gunter Valley.
Pennsylvania Route 115 (PA 115) is a 35.7-mile-long (57.5 km) north–south state highway in eastern Pennsylvania. It stretches from U.S. Route 209 (US 209) in Brodheadsville , Monroe County , northwest to Interstate 81 (I-81) and PA 309 near Wilkes-Barre in Luzerne County .
In 1978 an expressway from PA 31 to the PA 66 interchange was completed, which finished the current 11-mile (18 km) expressway from Pennsville to the Pennsylvania Turnpike. In 1993, an expressway from the southern end of the Uniontown bypass to Big Six Road in Georges Township was built parallel to US 119.
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]
Pennsylvania Route 66 Alternate (PA 66 Alt.) is an 11-mile-long (18 km) alternate route through Westmoreland County and Armstrong County, Pennsylvania. It leaves its parent route in Washington Township and travels through the center of Oklahoma and Vandergrift , while the mainline route bypasses residential neighborhoods along the riverfront.
The James E. Ross Highway in western Pennsylvania, cosigned with Interstate 376. The Amos K. Hutchinson Bypass in western Pennsylvania, signed as Pennsylvania Route 66. The Mon/Fayette Expressway in western Pennsylvania, signed as Pennsylvania Route 43. The Southern Beltway in western Pennsylvania, signed as Pennsylvania Route 576.