fbpx
Wikipedia

Concurrency (road)

A concurrency in a road network is an instance of one physical roadway bearing two or more different route numbers.[1] When two roadways share the same right-of-way, it is sometimes called a common section or commons.[2] Other terminology for a concurrency includes overlap,[3] coincidence,[4] duplex (two concurrent routes), triplex (three concurrent routes), multiplex (any number of concurrent routes),[5] dual routing or triple routing.[6][7]

An extreme example: I-40, I-85 Business, US 29, US 70, US 220, and US 421 ran concurrently in Greensboro, North Carolina. US 220 and US 421 were rerouted from this concurrency in 2008.

Concurrent numbering can become very common in jurisdictions that allow it. Where multiple routes must pass between a single mountain crossing or over a bridge, or through a major city, it is often economically and practically advantageous for them all to be accommodated on a single physical roadway. In some jurisdictions, however, concurrent numbering is avoided by posting only one route number on highway signs; these routes disappear at the start of the concurrency and reappear when it ends. However, any route that becomes unsigned in the middle of the concurrency will still be signed on most maps and road atlases.

Overview

Most concurrencies are simply a combination of at least two route numbers on the same physical roadway. This is often practically advantageous as well as economically advantageous; it may be better for two route numbers to be combined into one along rivers or through mountain valleys. Some countries allow for concurrencies to occur, however, others specifically do not allow it to happen. In those nations which do permit concurrencies, it can become very common. In these countries, there are a variety of concurrences which can occur.

An example of this is the concurrency of Interstate 70 (I-70) and I-76 on the Pennsylvania Turnpike in western Pennsylvania. I-70 merges with the Pennsylvania Turnpike so the route number can ultimately continue east into Maryland; instead of having a second physical highway built to carry the route, it is combined with the Pennsylvania Turnpike and the I-76 designation.[8] A triple Interstate concurrency is found in Wisconsin along the five-mile (8.0 km) section of I-41, I-43, and I-894 in Milwaukee, Wisconsin.[9] The concurrency of I-41 and I-43 on this roadway is an example of a wrong-way concurrency.

The longest Interstate highway concurrency is I-80 and I-90 for 265 miles (426 km) across Indiana and Ohio.[10]

There are at least two examples of eight-way concurrencies. The first example is in Indianapolis, between exits 46 and 47 of the 53-mile (85 km) I-465 beltway, where the highway is concurrent with U.S. Route 31 (US 31), US 36, US 40, US 52, US 421, State Road 37 (SR 37), and SR 67.[11] Once I-69 is extended south of Indianapolis, this segment will have a nine-way concurrency. The second example is in downtown Athens, Georgia, between exits 4 and 8 of Georgia State Route 10 Loop, where the highway is concurrent with US 29, US 78, US 129, US 441, State Route 8 (SR 8), SR 15, and SR 422.[12]

Regional examples

North America

 
The Queen Elizabeth Way concurrent with Highway 403 in Ontario

In the United States, concurrencies are simply marked by placing signs for both routes on the same or adjacent posts. The federal Manual on Uniform Traffic Control Devices prescribes that when mounting these adjacent signs together that the numbers will be arranged vertically or horizontally in order of precedence. The order to be used is Interstate Highways, U.S. Highways, state highways, and finally county roads, and within each class by increasing numerical value.[13]

Several states do not officially have any concurrencies, instead officially ending routes on each side of one.[a] There are several circumstances where unusual concurrencies exist along state borders. One example occurs along the OklahomaArkansas state line. At the northern end of this border Oklahoma State Highway 20 runs concurrently with Arkansas Highway 43 and the two highways run north–south along the boundary.[15]

 
A section of Ontario Highway 400 runs concurrent with a branch of the Trans-Canada Highway

Concurrencies are also found in Canada. British Columbia Highway 5 continues east for 12 kilometres (7.5 mi) concurrently with Highway 1 and Highway 97, through Kamloops. This stretch of road, which carries Highway 97 south and Highway 5 north on the same roadway (and vice versa), is the only wrong-way concurrency in British Columbia. Concurrencies are also very common in Quebec. Most notably, the Samuel-de-Champlain Bridge features a concurrency with three Autoroutes: A-10, A-15, and A-20. Another example is A-55, which runs concurrently with A-10, A-20, and A-40, all of which are major highways.

In Ontario, the Queen Elizabeth Way and Highway 403 run concurrently between Burlington and Oakville, forming the province's only concurrency between two 400-series highways.[16] The concurrency was not in the original plan which intended for both the QEW and Highway 403 to run parallel to each other, as the Hamilton–Brantford and Mississauga sections of Highway 403 were initially planned to be linked up along a corridor (later planned to be tolled) now occupied by Highway 407. To avoid forcing drivers to pay tolls to use a section of a continuous Highway 403, the new link was designated as a western extension of the tolled Highway 407, with the Mississauga section of Highway 403 planned to be renumbered as Highway 410. The renumbering to 410 never came to pass,[17] and consequently Highway 403 was signed concurrently along the Queen Elizabeth Way in 2002, remedying the discontinuity. Nonetheless, many surface street signs referring to that section of freeway with the QEW/Highway 403 concurrency still only use the highway's original designation of QEW, although the MTO has updated route markers on the QEW to reflect the concurrency.[18]

At the national level, the Trans-Canada Highway, which does not bear a uniform number in the eastern provinces, follows various provincial highways. In the Atlantic Provinces the main designated TCH route either follows a single numbered route across each province (an exception being the switching of the designation between Nova Scotia Highways 104 and 105), or has branches that are signed exclusively as TCH routes. In Ontario and Quebec, The TCH follows a series of provincial highways, and also has branches that follow sections of others that have concurrencies with it, signed with TCH shields alongside the provincial number.

Europe

 
Concurrency of the city beltway, a European road, and three first-class roads in Hradec Králové, Czech Republic
 
Concurrency of several cycling routes in Písek, Czech Republic

In the United Kingdom, routes do not run concurrently with others. Where this would normally occur, the roadway takes the number of only one of the routes (usually, but not always, the most important route), while the other routes are considered to have a gap and are signed in brackets (the equivalent of "to" signs in North America). An example is the meeting of the M60 and the M62 northwest of Manchester: the motorways coincide for the seven miles (11 km) between junctions 12 and 18 but the motorway between those points is only designated as the M60 (although in this case the same junction numbers would also apply to the M62). European route numbers as designated by UNECE may have concurrencies (for instance E15 and E30 around Greater London), but since the E-route numbers are unsigned and unused in the UK, the existence of these concurrencies is purely theoretical.

In Sweden and Denmark, the most important highways use only the European route numbers that have cardinal directions. In Sweden the European route E6 and E20 run concurrently for 280 kilometres (170 mi). In Denmark the E47 and E55 run concurrently for 157 kilometres (98 mi). There are more shorter concurrencies. There are two stretches in Sweden and Denmark where three European routes run concurrently; these are E6, E20 and E22 in Sweden, and E20, E47, and E55 in Denmark. Along all these concurrencies, all route numbers are posted with signs.[19]

In the Czech Republic, the European route numbers are only additional, and they are always concurrent with the state route numbering, usually highways or first-class roads. In the state numbering system, concurrences exist only in first-class and second-class roads; third class roads do not have them. The local term for such concurrences is peáž (from the French word péage). In the road register, one of the roads is considered the main ("source") road and the others as the péaging (guest) roads. The official road map enables a maximum of five concurrent routes of the intrastate numbering system.[20] Cycling routes and hiking routes are often concurrent.

The Middle East

In Israel, two freeways, the Trans-Israel Highway (Highway 6), and Highway 1 run concurrently just east of Ben Shemen Interchange. The concurrency is officially designated "Daniel Interchange", providing half of the possible interchange directions. It is a one-mile (1.6 km) segment consisting of eight lanes providing high-speed access between the two highways. Access from Highway 1 west to Highway 6 south and Highway 6 north to Highway 1 east is provided via Route 431, while access between Highway 1 east to Highway 6 north and Highway 6 south to Highway 1 west are provided at Ben Shemen Interchange. The other movements are provided through the concurrency.[21]

Wrong-way concurrencies

 
This westbound highway in southwestern Virginia simultaneously carries I-77 and I-81 in opposite directions. The wrong-way concurrency is also reflected in US 52 and US 11, which are concurrent with I-77 and I-81, respectively.
 
An example of a wrong-way concurrency in Oklahoma City, Oklahoma; the wrong-way concurrency is highlighted in red.

Since highways in the United States and Canada are usually signed with assigned cardinal directions based on their primary orientation, it is possible for a stretch of roadway shared between two highways to be signed with conflicting, even opposite, cardinal directions in a wrong-way concurrency. For example, near Wytheville, Virginia, there is a concurrency between Interstate 77 (which runs primarily north–south, as it is signed) and Interstate 81 (which runs primarily northeast–southwest, but is also signed north–south). Because of the way they intersect, the section of Interstate where they overlap has the two roads signed for opposite directions, leading to the town's nickname of "Which-Way-Ville".[22] One might simultaneously be on I-77 northbound and I-81 southbound, while actually traveling due westbound.[23] An unusual example of a three-directional concurrency occurs southeast of Rhinelander, Wisconsin, where US 8 westbound (the actual compass direction) converges with southbound Wisconsin Highway 17 and northbound Wisconsin Highway 47.

Effect on exit numbers

Often when two routes with exit numbers overlap, one of the routes has its exit numbers dominate over the other and can sometimes result in having two exits of the same number, albeit far from each other along the same highway. An example of this is from the concurrency of I-94 and US 127 near Jackson, Michigan. The concurrent section of freeway has an exit with M-106, which is numbered exit 139 using I-94's mileage-based numbers. US 127 also has another exit 139 with the southern end of the US 127 business loop in Mount Pleasant, Michigan. (US 127's mile markers in Michigan reflect the cumulative distance north of the Ohio state line; the numbers resume north of the I-94 overlap and reflect the distance accumulated on that concurrency.)[24]

However, there are also instances where the dominant exit number range is far more than the secondary route's highest exit number, for example the concurrency of I-75 and I-85 in Atlanta, Georgia — where I-75 is dominant — the exit numbers range from 242 to 251, while I-85's highest independent mile marker in Georgia is 179.[25]

Consolidation plans

 
US 1/9 concurrency signed on one shield

Some brief concurrencies in the past have been eliminated by reassigning the designations along the roadways. This can involve scaling back the terminus of one designation to the end of a concurrent section. At the same time, there could be an extension of another highway designation that is used to replace the newly shortened designation with another one.

Between states, US 27 in Michigan previously ran concurrently with I-69 from the Michigan–Indiana state line to the Lansing, Michigan, area. From there it turned northwards to its terminus at Grayling. In 1999, the Michigan and Indiana departments of transportation petitioned the American Association of State Highway and Transportation Officials for permission to truncate US 27 at Fort Wayne, Indiana.[26] In 2002, Michigan removed the US 27 designation from I-69 and extended the US 127 designation from Lansing to Grayling.[27] MDOT's stated reason for the modification was to "reduce confusion along the US 27/US 127 corridor".[28] After US 27's signage was removed, the highway north of the Lansing area was renumbered US 127, and the US 27 designation was removed from I-69.[28]

Some consolidation schemes involve the use of incorporating two single-digit numbers onto one marker, as along the US 1/9 concurrency in northern New Jersey.[29] In the mid-20th century, California had numerous concurrencies, but the California Legislature removed most of them in a comprehensive reform of highway numbering in 1964.[30]

See also

Notes

  1. ^ Arkansas's highways exist in many officially designated "sections" rather than form concurrencies. Arkansas Highway 131 exists in five sections as an example.[14]

References

  1. ^ Esri (March 4, 2014). "Realigning Concurrent Routes". ArcGIS Help 10.2 & 10.2.1. Esri. Retrieved April 8, 2014.
  2. ^ "Freeway Flaws: Fixing Them May Take Decades". Star Tribune. Minneapolis. June 3, 2005. common sections ... 2 freeways share a single right-of-way
  3. ^ Esri (December 19, 2012). "Realigning Overlapping Routes". ArcGIS Resource Center. Esri. Retrieved April 8, 2014.
  4. ^ Office of Highway System Engineering (August 1995). (PDF). California Department of Transportation. Route 3. Archived from the original (PDF) on March 16, 2007. Retrieved March 7, 2012. Coincident with Rte 299
  5. ^ Reichard, Timothy. "Guide to Highway Multiplexes". Central PA/MD Roads. Retrieved April 8, 2014.
  6. ^ Kanillopoolos, John J. (October 19, 1982). "Dual and Triple Routing on State Trunklines". Letter to Trunkline Numbering Committee. Lansing: Michigan Department of Transportation. Retrieved June 3, 2019 – via Wikisource.
  7. ^ Kanillopoolos, John J. (March 17, 1983). "Dual and Triple Routing on State Trunklines". Letter to Trunkline Numbering Committee. Lansing: Michigan Department of Transportation. Retrieved June 3, 2019 – via Wikisource.
  8. ^ Pennsylvania Department of Transportation Geographic Information Section (2010). Tourism & Transportation Map (Map). Scale not given. Harrisburg: Pennsylvania Department of Transportation. §§ E10–L11.
  9. ^ Srubas, Paul (April 9, 2015). "It's Officially Interstate 41 Now in Wisconsin". Green Bay Press-Gazette. Retrieved May 27, 2015.
  10. ^ Federal Highway Administration (December 31, 2013). "Table 1: Main Routes of the Dwight D. Eisenhower National System of Interstate and Defense Highways as of December 31, 2013". Route Log and Finder List. Federal Highway Administration. Retrieved April 8, 2014.
  11. ^ Indiana Department of Transportation (2007). Indiana Transportation Map (Map) (2007–08 ed.). Scale not given. Indianapolis: Indiana Department of Transportation. Indianapolis inset.
  12. ^ Georgia Department of Transportation (2021). General Highway Map, Clarke County, Georgia (PDF) (Map). 1:31,680.
  13. ^ Federal Highway Administration (2009). "Chapter 2D. Guide Signs: Conventional Roads, §2D.29: Route Sign Assemblies" (PDF). Manual on Uniform Traffic Control Devices (Revisions 1&2, 2009 ed.). Washington, DC: Federal Highway Administration. p. 148. ISBN 9781615835171. Retrieved December 20, 2014.
  14. ^ Planning and Research Division (April 2010). (Database). Arkansas State Highway and Transportation Department. Archived from the original (ZIP) on July 7, 2011. Retrieved April 11, 2011.
  15. ^ Arkansas State Highway and Transportation Department Planning and Research Division (2010). State Highway Map (Map). 1:950,400. Little Rock: Arkansas State Highway and Transportation Department. § A1.
  16. ^ Ministry of Transportation of Ontario Geomatics Office (2010). Official Road Map / Carte Routière (Map) (2010–11 ed.). 1:250,000 (in English and French). Toronto: Ministry of Transportation of Ontario. § R25.
  17. ^ Mitchell, Bob (April 6, 1995). "Rae Announces 407 Extension". Toronto Star. p. BR03.
  18. ^ . Milestones. Ontario Good Roads Association. 2 (1): 26, 31. February 2002. Archived from the original on April 26, 2012. Retrieved January 2, 2012.
  19. ^ Check Google Streetview at 55°33′00″N 13°03′06″E / 55.5500993°N 13.0517037°E / 55.5500993; 13.0517037, 55°34′48″N 12°15′42″E / 55.5800398°N 12.2615534°E / 55.5800398; 12.2615534 and neighboring locations[full citation needed]
  20. ^ (in Czech). Directorate of Roads and Highways. Archived from the original on 2015-05-18. Retrieved 2015-05-17.[full citation needed]
  21. ^ עורכת אחראית אלנה בלינקי; Elena Belinki (2014). [Atlas HaZahav 2014] (in Hebrew) (9th ed.). מפה הוצאה לאור [Mapa Publishing]. ISBN 978-965-521-136-8. Archived from the original on 2014-07-14. Retrieved 2014-06-08.
  22. ^ "Which-way-Ville Making Sense of Wytheville". Appalachia Magazine. December 2, 2017.
  23. ^ Virginia Department of Transportation (2012). Official State Transportation Map (Map) (2012–14 ed.). c. 1:832,680. Richmond: Virginia Department of Transportation. §§ F6–G6.
  24. ^ Michigan Department of Transportation (2013). Pure Michigan: State Transportation Map (Map). c. 1:975,000. Lansing: Michigan Department of Transportation. §§ J10, M11. OCLC 42778335, 861227559.
  25. ^ Georgia Department of Transportation (2011). Official Highway and Transportation Map (PDF) (Map) (2011–2012 ed.). Scale not given. Atlanta: Georgia Department of Transportation. Main map, §§ B1, I2; Atlanta inset, § E5. OCLC 770217845.
  26. ^ Special Committee on U.S. Route Numbering (April 17, 1999). (PDF) (Report). Washington, DC: American Association of State Highway and Transportation Officials. Archived from the original (PDF) on October 16, 2017. Retrieved May 24, 2008.
  27. ^ Ranzenberger, Mark (April 27, 2008). "US 127 Signs Getting Updated". The Morning Sun. Mount Pleasant, MI. pp. 1A, 6A. OCLC 22378715. Retrieved August 23, 2012 – via NewsBank.
  28. ^ a b Debnar, Kari & Bott, Mark (January 14, 2002). "US 27 Designation Soon To Be Deleted from Michigan Highways" (PDF) (Press release). Michigan Department of Transportation.
  29. ^ New Jersey Department of Transportation. Signage for US 1/9, NJ 21, US 22, and I-78 (Highway guide sign). Newark, NJ: New Jersey Department of Transportation. Retrieved December 5, 2009.
  30. ^ "Route Renumbering: New Green Markers Will Replaces Old Shields" (PDF). California Highways and Public Works. 43 (1–2): 11–14. March–April 1964. ISSN 0008-1159. Retrieved March 8, 2012.

External links

  Media related to Concurrency at Wikimedia Commons

concurrency, road, concurrency, road, network, instance, physical, roadway, bearing, more, different, route, numbers, when, roadways, share, same, right, sometimes, called, common, section, commons, other, terminology, concurrency, includes, overlap, coinciden. A concurrency in a road network is an instance of one physical roadway bearing two or more different route numbers 1 When two roadways share the same right of way it is sometimes called a common section or commons 2 Other terminology for a concurrency includes overlap 3 coincidence 4 duplex two concurrent routes triplex three concurrent routes multiplex any number of concurrent routes 5 dual routing or triple routing 6 7 An extreme example I 40 I 85 Business US 29 US 70 US 220 and US 421 ran concurrently in Greensboro North Carolina US 220 and US 421 were rerouted from this concurrency in 2008 Concurrent numbering can become very common in jurisdictions that allow it Where multiple routes must pass between a single mountain crossing or over a bridge or through a major city it is often economically and practically advantageous for them all to be accommodated on a single physical roadway In some jurisdictions however concurrent numbering is avoided by posting only one route number on highway signs these routes disappear at the start of the concurrency and reappear when it ends However any route that becomes unsigned in the middle of the concurrency will still be signed on most maps and road atlases Contents 1 Overview 2 Regional examples 2 1 North America 2 2 Europe 2 3 The Middle East 3 Wrong way concurrencies 4 Effect on exit numbers 5 Consolidation plans 6 See also 7 Notes 8 References 9 External linksOverview EditMost concurrencies are simply a combination of at least two route numbers on the same physical roadway This is often practically advantageous as well as economically advantageous it may be better for two route numbers to be combined into one along rivers or through mountain valleys Some countries allow for concurrencies to occur however others specifically do not allow it to happen In those nations which do permit concurrencies it can become very common In these countries there are a variety of concurrences which can occur An example of this is the concurrency of Interstate 70 I 70 and I 76 on the Pennsylvania Turnpike in western Pennsylvania I 70 merges with the Pennsylvania Turnpike so the route number can ultimately continue east into Maryland instead of having a second physical highway built to carry the route it is combined with the Pennsylvania Turnpike and the I 76 designation 8 A triple Interstate concurrency is found in Wisconsin along the five mile 8 0 km section of I 41 I 43 and I 894 in Milwaukee Wisconsin 9 The concurrency of I 41 and I 43 on this roadway is an example of a wrong way concurrency The longest Interstate highway concurrency is I 80 and I 90 for 265 miles 426 km across Indiana and Ohio 10 There are at least two examples of eight way concurrencies The first example is in Indianapolis between exits 46 and 47 of the 53 mile 85 km I 465 beltway where the highway is concurrent with U S Route 31 US 31 US 36 US 40 US 52 US 421 State Road 37 SR 37 and SR 67 11 Once I 69 is extended south of Indianapolis this segment will have a nine way concurrency The second example is in downtown Athens Georgia between exits 4 and 8 of Georgia State Route 10 Loop where the highway is concurrent with US 29 US 78 US 129 US 441 State Route 8 SR 8 SR 15 and SR 422 12 Regional examples EditNorth America Edit The Queen Elizabeth Way concurrent with Highway 403 in Ontario In the United States concurrencies are simply marked by placing signs for both routes on the same or adjacent posts The federal Manual on Uniform Traffic Control Devices prescribes that when mounting these adjacent signs together that the numbers will be arranged vertically or horizontally in order of precedence The order to be used is Interstate Highways U S Highways state highways and finally county roads and within each class by increasing numerical value 13 Several states do not officially have any concurrencies instead officially ending routes on each side of one a There are several circumstances where unusual concurrencies exist along state borders One example occurs along the Oklahoma Arkansas state line At the northern end of this border Oklahoma State Highway 20 runs concurrently with Arkansas Highway 43 and the two highways run north south along the boundary 15 A section of Ontario Highway 400 runs concurrent with a branch of the Trans Canada Highway Concurrencies are also found in Canada British Columbia Highway 5 continues east for 12 kilometres 7 5 mi concurrently with Highway 1 and Highway 97 through Kamloops This stretch of road which carries Highway 97 south and Highway 5 north on the same roadway and vice versa is the only wrong way concurrency in British Columbia Concurrencies are also very common in Quebec Most notably the Samuel de Champlain Bridge features a concurrency with three Autoroutes A 10 A 15 and A 20 Another example is A 55 which runs concurrently with A 10 A 20 and A 40 all of which are major highways In Ontario the Queen Elizabeth Way and Highway 403 run concurrently between Burlington and Oakville forming the province s only concurrency between two 400 series highways 16 The concurrency was not in the original plan which intended for both the QEW and Highway 403 to run parallel to each other as the Hamilton Brantford and Mississauga sections of Highway 403 were initially planned to be linked up along a corridor later planned to be tolled now occupied by Highway 407 To avoid forcing drivers to pay tolls to use a section of a continuous Highway 403 the new link was designated as a western extension of the tolled Highway 407 with the Mississauga section of Highway 403 planned to be renumbered as Highway 410 The renumbering to 410 never came to pass 17 and consequently Highway 403 was signed concurrently along the Queen Elizabeth Way in 2002 remedying the discontinuity Nonetheless many surface street signs referring to that section of freeway with the QEW Highway 403 concurrency still only use the highway s original designation of QEW although the MTO has updated route markers on the QEW to reflect the concurrency 18 At the national level the Trans Canada Highway which does not bear a uniform number in the eastern provinces follows various provincial highways In the Atlantic Provinces the main designated TCH route either follows a single numbered route across each province an exception being the switching of the designation between Nova Scotia Highways 104 and 105 or has branches that are signed exclusively as TCH routes In Ontario and Quebec The TCH follows a series of provincial highways and also has branches that follow sections of others that have concurrencies with it signed with TCH shields alongside the provincial number Europe Edit Concurrency of the city beltway a European road and three first class roads in Hradec Kralove Czech Republic Concurrency of several cycling routes in Pisek Czech Republic In the United Kingdom routes do not run concurrently with others Where this would normally occur the roadway takes the number of only one of the routes usually but not always the most important route while the other routes are considered to have a gap and are signed in brackets the equivalent of to signs in North America An example is the meeting of the M60 and the M62 northwest of Manchester the motorways coincide for the seven miles 11 km between junctions 12 and 18 but the motorway between those points is only designated as the M60 although in this case the same junction numbers would also apply to the M62 European route numbers as designated by UNECE may have concurrencies for instance E15 and E30 around Greater London but since the E route numbers are unsigned and unused in the UK the existence of these concurrencies is purely theoretical In Sweden and Denmark the most important highways use only the European route numbers that have cardinal directions In Sweden the European route E6 and E20 run concurrently for 280 kilometres 170 mi In Denmark the E47 and E55 run concurrently for 157 kilometres 98 mi There are more shorter concurrencies There are two stretches in Sweden and Denmark where three European routes run concurrently these are E6 E20 and E22 in Sweden and E20 E47 and E55 in Denmark Along all these concurrencies all route numbers are posted with signs 19 In the Czech Republic the European route numbers are only additional and they are always concurrent with the state route numbering usually highways or first class roads In the state numbering system concurrences exist only in first class and second class roads third class roads do not have them The local term for such concurrences is peaz from the French word peage In the road register one of the roads is considered the main source road and the others as the peaging guest roads The official road map enables a maximum of five concurrent routes of the intrastate numbering system 20 Cycling routes and hiking routes are often concurrent The Middle East Edit In Israel two freeways the Trans Israel Highway Highway 6 and Highway 1 run concurrently just east of Ben Shemen Interchange The concurrency is officially designated Daniel Interchange providing half of the possible interchange directions It is a one mile 1 6 km segment consisting of eight lanes providing high speed access between the two highways Access from Highway 1 west to Highway 6 south and Highway 6 north to Highway 1 east is provided via Route 431 while access between Highway 1 east to Highway 6 north and Highway 6 south to Highway 1 west are provided at Ben Shemen Interchange The other movements are provided through the concurrency 21 Wrong way concurrencies Edit This westbound highway in southwestern Virginia simultaneously carries I 77 and I 81 in opposite directions The wrong way concurrency is also reflected in US 52 and US 11 which are concurrent with I 77 and I 81 respectively An example of a wrong way concurrency in Oklahoma City Oklahoma the wrong way concurrency is highlighted in red Since highways in the United States and Canada are usually signed with assigned cardinal directions based on their primary orientation it is possible for a stretch of roadway shared between two highways to be signed with conflicting even opposite cardinal directions in a wrong way concurrency For example near Wytheville Virginia there is a concurrency between Interstate 77 which runs primarily north south as it is signed and Interstate 81 which runs primarily northeast southwest but is also signed north south Because of the way they intersect the section of Interstate where they overlap has the two roads signed for opposite directions leading to the town s nickname of Which Way Ville 22 One might simultaneously be on I 77 northbound and I 81 southbound while actually traveling due westbound 23 An unusual example of a three directional concurrency occurs southeast of Rhinelander Wisconsin where US 8 westbound the actual compass direction converges with southbound Wisconsin Highway 17 and northbound Wisconsin Highway 47 Effect on exit numbers EditOften when two routes with exit numbers overlap one of the routes has its exit numbers dominate over the other and can sometimes result in having two exits of the same number albeit far from each other along the same highway An example of this is from the concurrency of I 94 and US 127 near Jackson Michigan The concurrent section of freeway has an exit with M 106 which is numbered exit 139 using I 94 s mileage based numbers US 127 also has another exit 139 with the southern end of the US 127 business loop in Mount Pleasant Michigan US 127 s mile markers in Michigan reflect the cumulative distance north of the Ohio state line the numbers resume north of the I 94 overlap and reflect the distance accumulated on that concurrency 24 However there are also instances where the dominant exit number range is far more than the secondary route s highest exit number for example the concurrency of I 75 and I 85 in Atlanta Georgia where I 75 is dominant the exit numbers range from 242 to 251 while I 85 s highest independent mile marker in Georgia is 179 25 Consolidation plans Edit US 1 9 concurrency signed on one shield Some brief concurrencies in the past have been eliminated by reassigning the designations along the roadways This can involve scaling back the terminus of one designation to the end of a concurrent section At the same time there could be an extension of another highway designation that is used to replace the newly shortened designation with another one Between states US 27 in Michigan previously ran concurrently with I 69 from the Michigan Indiana state line to the Lansing Michigan area From there it turned northwards to its terminus at Grayling In 1999 the Michigan and Indiana departments of transportation petitioned the American Association of State Highway and Transportation Officials for permission to truncate US 27 at Fort Wayne Indiana 26 In 2002 Michigan removed the US 27 designation from I 69 and extended the US 127 designation from Lansing to Grayling 27 MDOT s stated reason for the modification was to reduce confusion along the US 27 US 127 corridor 28 After US 27 s signage was removed the highway north of the Lansing area was renumbered US 127 and the US 27 designation was removed from I 69 28 Some consolidation schemes involve the use of incorporating two single digit numbers onto one marker as along the US 1 9 concurrency in northern New Jersey 29 In the mid 20th century California had numerous concurrencies but the California Legislature removed most of them in a comprehensive reform of highway numbering in 1964 30 See also Edit Roads portal U S Roads portalNotes Edit Arkansas s highways exist in many officially designated sections rather than form concurrencies Arkansas Highway 131 exists in five sections as an example 14 References Edit Esri March 4 2014 Realigning Concurrent Routes ArcGIS Help 10 2 amp 10 2 1 Esri Retrieved April 8 2014 Freeway Flaws Fixing Them May Take Decades Star Tribune Minneapolis June 3 2005 common sections 2 freeways share a single right of way Esri December 19 2012 Realigning Overlapping Routes ArcGIS Resource Center Esri Retrieved April 8 2014 Office of Highway System Engineering August 1995 State Highway Routes Selected Information 1994 with 1995 Revisions PDF California Department of Transportation Route 3 Archived from the original PDF on March 16 2007 Retrieved March 7 2012 Coincident with Rte 299 Reichard Timothy Guide to Highway Multiplexes Central PA MD Roads Retrieved April 8 2014 Kanillopoolos John J October 19 1982 Dual and Triple Routing on State Trunklines Letter to Trunkline Numbering Committee Lansing Michigan Department of Transportation Retrieved June 3 2019 via Wikisource Kanillopoolos John J March 17 1983 Dual and Triple Routing on State Trunklines Letter to Trunkline Numbering Committee Lansing Michigan Department of Transportation Retrieved June 3 2019 via Wikisource Pennsylvania Department of Transportation Geographic Information Section 2010 Tourism amp Transportation Map Map Scale not given Harrisburg Pennsylvania Department of Transportation E10 L11 Srubas Paul April 9 2015 It s Officially Interstate 41 Now in Wisconsin Green Bay Press Gazette Retrieved May 27 2015 Federal Highway Administration December 31 2013 Table 1 Main Routes of the Dwight D Eisenhower National System of Interstate and Defense Highways as of December 31 2013 Route Log and Finder List Federal Highway Administration Retrieved April 8 2014 Indiana Department of Transportation 2007 Indiana Transportation Map Map 2007 08 ed Scale not given Indianapolis Indiana Department of Transportation Indianapolis inset Georgia Department of Transportation 2021 General Highway Map Clarke County Georgia PDF Map 1 31 680 Federal Highway Administration 2009 Chapter 2D Guide Signs Conventional Roads 2D 29 Route Sign Assemblies PDF Manual on Uniform Traffic Control Devices Revisions 1 amp 2 2009 ed Washington DC Federal Highway Administration p 148 ISBN 9781615835171 Retrieved December 20 2014 Planning and Research Division April 2010 State Highways 2009 Database Arkansas State Highway and Transportation Department Archived from the original ZIP on July 7 2011 Retrieved April 11 2011 Arkansas State Highway and Transportation Department Planning and Research Division 2010 State Highway Map Map 1 950 400 Little Rock Arkansas State Highway and Transportation Department A1 Ministry of Transportation of Ontario Geomatics Office 2010 Official Road Map Carte Routiere Map 2010 11 ed 1 250 000 in English and French Toronto Ministry of Transportation of Ontario R25 Mitchell Bob April 6 1995 Rae Announces 407 Extension Toronto Star p BR03 Signs of the Times Milestones Ontario Good Roads Association 2 1 26 31 February 2002 Archived from the original on April 26 2012 Retrieved January 2 2012 Check Google Streetview at 55 33 00 N 13 03 06 E 55 5500993 N 13 0517037 E 55 5500993 13 0517037 55 34 48 N 12 15 42 E 55 5800398 N 12 2615534 E 55 5800398 12 2615534 and neighboring locations full citation needed Cislo peazujici silnice explanatory notes to the road map Reditelstvi silnic a dalnic in Czech Directorate of Roads and Highways Archived from the original on 2015 05 18 Retrieved 2015 05 17 full citation needed עורכת אחראית אלנה בלינקי Elena Belinki 2014 2014 אטלס הזהב Atlas HaZahav 2014 in Hebrew 9th ed מפה הוצאה לאור Mapa Publishing ISBN 978 965 521 136 8 Archived from the original on 2014 07 14 Retrieved 2014 06 08 Which way Ville Making Sense of Wytheville Appalachia Magazine December 2 2017 Virginia Department of Transportation 2012 Official State Transportation Map Map 2012 14 ed c 1 832 680 Richmond Virginia Department of Transportation F6 G6 Michigan Department of Transportation 2013 Pure Michigan State Transportation Map Map c 1 975 000 Lansing Michigan Department of Transportation J10 M11 OCLC 42778335 861227559 Georgia Department of Transportation 2011 Official Highway and Transportation Map PDF Map 2011 2012 ed Scale not given Atlanta Georgia Department of Transportation Main map B1 I2 Atlanta inset E5 OCLC 770217845 Special Committee on U S Route Numbering April 17 1999 Report of the Special Committee on U S Route Numbering to the Standing Committee on Highways PDF Report Washington DC American Association of State Highway and Transportation Officials Archived from the original PDF on October 16 2017 Retrieved May 24 2008 Ranzenberger Mark April 27 2008 US 127 Signs Getting Updated The Morning Sun Mount Pleasant MI pp 1A 6A OCLC 22378715 Retrieved August 23 2012 via NewsBank a b Debnar Kari amp Bott Mark January 14 2002 US 27 Designation Soon To Be Deleted from Michigan Highways PDF Press release Michigan Department of Transportation New Jersey Department of Transportation Signage for US 1 9 NJ 21 US 22 and I 78 Highway guide sign Newark NJ New Jersey Department of Transportation Retrieved December 5 2009 Route Renumbering New Green Markers Will Replaces Old Shields PDF California Highways and Public Works 43 1 2 11 14 March April 1964 ISSN 0008 1159 Retrieved March 8 2012 External links Edit Media related to Concurrency at Wikimedia Commons Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Concurrency road amp oldid 1124186659, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.