Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
In 2003, Virginia Department of Transportation Commissioner Philip A. Shucet stated that "[s]ingle drivers could pay $1 to $4 to get off of the congested regular lanes." [ 26 ] By 2009, transportation planners in Washington estimated the projected rush-hour toll need to be $1.60 a mile. [ 27 ]
Since 2004, the Hampton Roads region has been searching for funding to complete major projects such as the addition of a new Midtown Tunnel and the extension of the Martin Luther King Freeway in Portsmouth, the addition of a third harbor crossing between the Southside and the Peninsula, and widening I-64 on both sides of the water, projects that would cost a combined total of $3.8 billion USD. [1]
The state highway system of the U.S. state of Virginia is a network of roads maintained by the Virginia Department of Transportation (VDOT). As of 2006, the VDOT maintains 57,867 miles (93,128 km) of state highways, [1] making it the third-largest system in the United States. [2]
According to the Virginia Department of Transportation, traffic on I-64 West in Hampton will be shifted onto the eastbound Hampton River Bridge to allow for construction on the westbound bridge ...
Plans to widen Interstate 64 to make way for express toll lanes places Hampton at ground zero for the construction. With that in mind, representatives from the Virginia Department of ...
State Route 409 was the designation for the 3.08-mile (4.96 km) segment of Providence Road in Virginia Beach between Military Highway and Kempsville Road from 1981 to 2011. Providence Road had been designated Secondary State Route 602 before the 1963 consolidation of Princess Anne County and Virginia Beach.
Virginia Department of Transportation The Elizabeth River Tunnels Project , a series of transportation projects in the South Hampton Roads region of Virginia , comprises the rehabilitation of the Downtown and existing Midtown Tunnels, the construction of a new parallel Midtown Tunnel, and the extension of the MLK Freeway / U.S. 58 to I-264 .
US 1 at the District of Columbia line 1926: current US 11: 339.41: 546.23 US 11E & US 11W in Bristol: US 11 at the West Virginia state line 1926: current US 11 is split into US 11E and US 11W from the Tennessee state line to Bristol US 11E: 0.58: 0.93 US 11E at the Tennessee state line: US 11 in Bristol: 1929: current US 11W: 1.12: 1.80