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The I-84 Hartford Project [29] is a Connecticut Department of Transportation (CTDOT) project to address structural deficiencies within the I-84 corridor approximately between Flatbush Avenue (exit 45) and the I-91 interchange in Hartford, including a 3,200-foot (980 m) elevated section known as the Aetna Viaduct. Since it became apparent in the ...
I-84 has two current and two former auxiliary routes. I-384 is a spur of I-84 in Manchester, Connecticut. I-684 connects I-84 in Brewster, New York, with I-287 in Harrison, New York. I-284 was a planned but never built expressway relocation of US 5 to bypass East Hartford, Connecticut, along the eastern shore of the Connecticut River.
After the 1983 truck crash at the Stratford toll plaza, toll opponents pressured the State of Connecticut to remove tolls from the turnpike [9] in 1985. Three years later, these same opponents successfully lobbied the Connecticut General Assembly to pass legislation abolishing tolls on all of Connecticut's highways (with the exception of two ...
I-95 - Connecticut state line I-95 - Massachusetts state line $2.50~$17.75 [71] Tolls for tractor or truck trailers defined in 23 C.F.R 658.5, pulling trailer(s) (Class 8-13). No toll for passenger vehicles, motorcycles, buses, and light trucks (Class 1-7). [72] All-electronic toll; allowed E-ZPass and Toll by Plate I-195: 4.3 6.9 I-95 - Providence
Interstate 84 (I-84) is a part of the Interstate Highway System that runs from Dunmore, Pennsylvania, to Sturbridge, Massachusetts, in the eastern United States.In New York, I-84 extends 71.46 miles (115.00 km) from the Pennsylvania state line at Port Jervis to the Connecticut state line east of Brewster.
In 1958, the highway north of the Charter Oak Bridge was cosigned as I-84, as part of the interstate highway's planned route through Connecticut. In 1968, the I-84 designation was moved to a proposed highway from Hartford to Providence , and the then-cosigned portion with Route 15 was renumbered to I-86 .
Re-designated as I-84 in 1968. Completed sections around Manchester and Willimantic re-designated as I-384 and US 6, respectively, in 1984 when East Hartford-Providence I-84 extension was cancelled I-84: 97.90: 157.55 I-84 at the New York state line: I-84 at the Massachusetts state line 1969: current
Since May 31, 1996, the segment of I-384 "running from the junction of Interstate Route 84 in Manchester in a general easterly direction to Route 6 in Bolton" has been officially known as the State Trooper Russell A. Bagshaw Highway, in memory of a Connecticut State Police trooper who was killed in the line of duty in 1991. [2]