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Map of New Jersey showing major roads and cities. New Jersey has 38,131 miles (61,366 km) of roads managed by state, county, and municipal governments and toll road authorities. [7] The major roadways fall under the jurisdiction of the New Jersey Department of Transportation (NJDOT), which operates the state highway system. State-owned highways ...
The County Route system is defined by two types in New Jersey. First, 500 Series County Routes, also called state secondary routes (to the state highway), are county highways numbered in a statewide system with three-digit numbers that begin with 5. These roads form a second network of routes that supplement the facilitation of the State Routes ...
There are ten Interstate Highways in New Jersey, including four primary routes and six auxiliary routes. The longest of these is Interstate 95 (I-95), which runs for 89.22 miles (143.59 km) from Florence Township to Fort Lee .
McCarter Highway in Newark — — CR 507: 28.37: 45.66 Harrison Avenue on the Kearny-Harrison town line: US 202 at New York state line in Mahwah — — CR 508: 16.14: 25.97 Mount Pleasant Avenue in Livingston: Belleville Turnpike in Kearny — — CR 508 Alt. 0.41: 0.66 Private drive in Kearny: Private drive in Kearny — —
A statewide system of major county highways is numbered by the NJDOT in the 500-599 range; these are known as 500 Series County Routes. All counties but two – Bergen and Monmouth – number their other county routes beginning at 600. County routes in Bergen County range from 2 to 134; those in Monmouth County range from 1 to 57.
Number Length (mi) Length (km) Southern or western terminus Northern or eastern terminus Formed Removed Notes US 1 Bus. 2.73: 4.39 US 1 in Trenton: US 1 in Lawrence Township
Bergen County's system dates to the 1920s, [3] and the current system has few changes from its first implementation. There were two implementations of longer-distance routes. In the late 1930s, a group of three roads in Bergen County received the numbers 200, 201, and 203.
NJDOT operates, develops, and maintains the State's public road system, including Interstate, State and Federal highways, with a total of 2,316.69 miles of NJDOT-owned and operated roads (as of July 2015). [4] Most major highways including Interstate, U.S. and NJ State routes within New Jersey are under NJDOT jurisdiction, except toll routes ...