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Interstate 84 (Pennsylvania–Massachusetts)

Interstate 84 (I-84) is an Interstate Highway in the Northeastern United States that extends from Dunmore, Pennsylvania, near Scranton at an interchange with I-81 east to Sturbridge, Massachusetts, at an interchange with the Massachusetts Turnpike (I-90). Among the major cities that the road passes through is Hartford, Connecticut, and the road provides a major portion of the primary route between New York City and Boston. Another highway named I-84 is located in the Northwestern United States.

Interstate 84

I-84 highlighted in red
Route information
Length232.71 mi[1] (374.51 km)
Existed1971 (1971)[2]–present
NHSEntire route
Major junctions
West end I-81 / I-380 / US 6 in Dunmore, PA
Major intersections
East end
I-90 Toll / Mass Pike in Sturbridge, MA
Location
CountryUnited States
StatesPennsylvania, New York, Connecticut, Massachusetts
Highway system

Route description edit

Lengths
  mi[1] km
PA 54.87 88.30
NY 71.79 115.53
CT 97.90 157.55
MA 8.15 13.12
Total 232.71 374.51

Pennsylvania edit

 
I-84 crossing from Wayne County into Pike County

I-84 starts in Pennsylvania at I-81 in Dunmore, a suburb east of Scranton. After two miles (3.2 km), I-84 interchanges with I-380, with I-380 going southeast through the Pocono Mountains and I-84 continuing almost due east into Wayne and Pike counties. Pennsylvania began replacing sequential exit numbers with mile-based numbers in 2001.

This section of Pennsylvania is very lightly populated, and there are no major settlements on or near I-84, although it offers access to popular outdoor recreation areas such as Lake Wallenpaupack and Promised Land State Park. Its right-of-way is very wide, with a large median strip between the two roadways as it passes through densely wooded country, except for the swampy areas in southern Wayne County. The only development along Pennsylvania's section of I-84 is where US Route 6 (US 6) and US 209 start to parallel closely and form a commercial strip just south of Matamoras, just west of the Delaware River. I-84 reaches its highest elevation in Pennsylvania and in the east just west of exit 8 at 1,800 feet (550 m).[3]

New York edit

 
Crossing the Newburgh–Beacon Bridge, eastbound

I-84 enters New York by crossing both the Delaware and Neversink rivers on a long bridge south of Port Jervis, the first large settlement near the highway. South of the road, at the confluence of the Delaware and Neversink rivers, is the Tri-States Monument, where New Jersey, New York, and Pennsylvania converge.[4] The first mile (1.6 km) of the road in New York runs along the New Jersey state line, then curves to the north to climb the Shawangunk Ridge and cross Orange County, where it intersects New York State Route 17 (NY 17; future I-86) and later the New York State Thruway (I-87). I-84 includes the Newburgh–Beacon Bridge across the Hudson River at Newburgh.

East of the bridge and the city of Beacon, I-84 continues to head east across Dutchess County, beginning to turn south in the mountainous areas east of the Taconic State Parkway and into Putnam County. At Brewster, where I-684 heads south toward New York City, the road resumes its eastern course into Connecticut, closely paralleled by US 6 and US 202. The New York State Department of Transportation (NYSDOT) completed the process of converting exits from sequential to mile-based numbering as part of a sign replacement project in 2021.

Connecticut edit

 
I-84 (looking eastbound) just before becoming an elevated viaduct to cross downtown Waterbury

The Interstate's first exit is at the state line, where it enters the city of Danbury. Here, it is designated the Yankee Expressway. Two miles (3.2 km) to the east, where US 7 comes in from the south near Danbury Fair to join I-84, it turns to the north. At the next exit, US 6 and US 202 join the highway.

The four-way concurrency ends after three miles (4.8 km), when US 7 and US 202 split off north toward New Milford. US 6 leaves the Interstate at the next exit, and I-84 continues east across the countryside. At exit 11, it turns to the northeast and descends to cross the Housatonic River on the Rochambeau Bridge, into New Haven County. It then climbs onto higher ground to the city of Waterbury, which it passes on an elevated viaduct with the eastbound and westbound lanes on different levels. Here, the Route 8 expressway intersects.

The eastern heading continues past Waterbury to Milldale, where I-691 splits off to the east. This section has many left-hand exits and entrances and sharp curves, which were built for a planned network of freeways. I-84 heads northeast toward New Britain and Hartford, the state capital and the largest community along its eastern length. After intersecting I-91, the road crosses the Connecticut River on the Bulkeley Bridge, the oldest on the Interstate System, then becomes the Wilbur Cross Highway and continues toward the northeast. I-84 services the greater student body commuting to the University of Connecticut through exit 68 located in rural Tolland.

The last exit in Connecticut is exit 74, an exit for Route 171. I-84 crosses the Massachusetts border in the town of Union.

Massachusetts edit

The Wilbur Cross Highway continues on I-84 after the highway crosses the state line. For a short distance (approximately 90 yards (82 m) eastbound and 200 yards (180 m) westbound), the Interstate passes through the town of Holland in Hampden County before crossing into Sturbridge in Worcester County for the remainder of its length. I-84 has only three exits in Massachusetts, before ending at I-90, the Massachusetts Turnpike. I-84 ends at exit 78 (formerly exit 9) of I-90, which is located in Sturbridge, 7.7 miles (12.4 km) into the state, making the Massachusetts section of the highway the shortest distance within any of the four states it traverses.

History edit

I-84 was originally to head east from Hartford, Connecticut, to Providence, Rhode Island.

The original route of I-84 would have used present-day I-384 to Bolton, Connecticut, then along a never-built section of freeway that would have connected to the US 6 bypass around Willimantic, Connecticut. Another never-built freeway section would have connected it to I-395 and extended I-84 onto State Road 695 (SR 695) in Connecticut, the easternmost portion of the Connecticut Turnpike in Plainfield, Connecticut. From there, it would have roughly followed US 6 through western Rhode Island to connect to the present-day US 6 freeway in Johnston. From there, a freeway from Olneyville Square to the I-95/I-195 interchange was briefly considered but abandoned in favor of what later became the Route 6-10 Connector.

Sections of I-84 in Connecticut were reconstructed and widened in the 1980s. The former I-86 portion from East Hartford to the Massachusetts state line was completely rebuilt from a narrow four-lane freeway to a much wider profile ranging from six lanes at the Massachusetts state line, expanding to eight lanes in Vernon, to 12 lanes with high-occupancy vehicle lanes (HOV lanes) in East Hartford. Another section through Danbury was widened from four lanes to six lanes in 1985 and 1986. Widening of the highway through Danbury was funded by Union Carbide as part of building its world headquarters in Danbury.[5]

Though the route was confirmed in Connecticut, many issues remained in Rhode Island, the biggest of which were major environmental concerns about how the freeway would affect the Scituate Reservoir, which is the main drinking water supply for Providence. In an attempt to ease environmental concerns, an alternate route was briefly studied in Rhode Island that would have connected I-84 to the present-day Route 37 freeway. This would have allowed construction of I-84 south of the Scituate Reservoir. Major community opposition caused this plan, as well as all plans for a Hartford–Providence expressway, to be scrapped in the 1980s.

In the 1992 long-range transportation plan released by the Rhode Island Department of Transportation, a freeway was added along the original route of I-84 that will connect to the SR 695 freeway on the Rhode Island–Connecticut border.

I-86 relation edit

 

Interstate 86

LocationEast Hartford, ConnecticutSturbridge, Massachusetts
Length38.97 mi (62.72 km)
Existed1968–1984
History
  • Redesignated as I-84 in 1984

The section of I-84 between East Hartford, Connecticut, (at the present-day junction with I-384) and Sturbridge, Massachusetts, (I-90) was signed in the late 1970s and early 1980s as I-86 (unrelated to present-day I-86 in New York and Pennsylvania). Signs stating "I-84 Ends, I-86 to Boston" (eastbound) and "I-86 Ends, I-84 to Hartford" (westbound) were posted where the change took place. Exit numbering on I-86 was that of the road's predecessor, Route 15, in a sequence beginning on New York's Hutchinson River Parkway. Exits were renumbered to correspond with the rest of I-84 in Connecticut when the road was redesignated in 1984. The present I-384 as well as the present US 6 bypass near Willimantic, both of which were a part of what was then I-84's planned easterly continuation, were also numbered I-84 prior to 1984 even though they lacked any direct connection to the rest of I-84 at that time. (Drivers had to use Silver Lane in East Hartford to travel between the two stretches of the highway.) These two sections were re-numbered I-384 and US 6 when what was then I-86 numbering reverted to I-84, with signs reading "I-84 is now I-384", "I-84 is now US 6", and "I-86 is now I-84" being erected on their respective segments.

Tolls edit

As I-84 was built with federal funds, there are generally no highway tolls. The exception is I-84's Hudson River crossing, the Newburgh–Beacon Bridge. Since the bridge is under the New York State Bridge Authority, it carries an eastbound-only toll of $2.15 for passenger vehicles (EZ Pass $1.65).[6]

Transfer to New York State Thruway Authority edit

From 1992 through 2006, I-84 in New York was a toll-free component of the New York State Thruway system. It was transferred by NYSDOT to the New York State Thruway Authority (NYSTA) in order to capitalize on that agency's steady revenue stream from upstate sources.

In 1992, maintenance responsibility for I-84 in New York was transferred to the NYSTA and the monies for that purpose came from existing tolls on I-190 in downtown Buffalo, more than 300 miles (480 km) away. On October 30, 2006, the NYSTA began the process of returning maintenance and operation responsibilities to NYSDOT and the tolls in Buffalo were discontinued. The I-190 tolls were considered to be one of the principal causes of highway congestion in Buffalo.[7] From 2006 to 2010, maintenance was performed by the NYSTA with funding provided by the state legislature. On October 11, 2010, NYSDOT resumed full control of I-84.[8]

Widening projects in Waterbury edit

A widening project along the congested stretch of I-84 through Waterbury and Cheshire, Connecticut, was beset by cost overruns, delays, and construction defects involving storm drains,[9] as state and federal officials have launched criminal investigations stemming from this project. This episode diminished local enthusiasm for a proposed $2-billion reconstruction of the "Mixmaster" interchange in downtown Waterbury between Route 8 and I-84.[10] Cost estimates for the Mixmaster replacement have increased to $3 billion.[11] Former Connecticut Attorney-General Richard Blumenthal began a lawsuit against the contractor and an engineering firm in response to threats from USDOT to withhold funds from the project.[12] On May 18, 2007, the Republican-American reported this area had defective light poles,[13] while Governor Jodi Rell released an audit report of the construction disaster.[14] A number of USDOT personnel were either fired or reprimanded following the scandal. Additionally,[when?] the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) and a federal grand jury investigated the now-defunct construction company and the same USDOT officials, although none of these investigations have yet to result in criminal charges.

Major intersections edit

Pennsylvania
   I-81 / US 6 in Dunmore
  I-380 in Roaring Brook Township
  US 6 near Milford
   US 6 / US 209 near Matamoras
New York
   US 6 / Route 23 in Port Jervis
   US 6 / NY 17M in Middletown
   I-86 / NY 17 in Middletown
 
 
   I-87 Toll / New York Thruway / NY 300 in Newburgh
   US 9W / NY 32 in Newburgh
  US 9 in Fishkill
  Taconic State Parkway in East Fishkill
     I-684 / NY 22 / US 6 / US 202 in Brewster
Connecticut
    US 6 / US 7 / US 202 in Danbury
  Route 8 in Waterbury
   I-691 / Route 322 in Southington
  Route 72 in New Britain
  US 6 in Farmington
  Route 9 in Farmington
   I-91 / US 44 in Hartford
    Route 2 / US 5 / US 44 in East Hartford
  Route 15 in East Hartford
  I-384 in Manchester
   US 6 / US 44 in Manchester
  I-291 in Manchester
Massachusetts
  US 20 in Sturbridge
  I-90 / Mass Pike in Sturbridge

[15]

Auxiliary routes edit

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. I-484 was slated to be built south of downtown Hartford, Connecticut, (connecting with I-91), but that highway was never completed.

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b Starks, Edward (January 27, 2022). "Table 1: Main Routes of the Dwight D. Eisenhower National System of Interstate and Defense Highways". FHWA Route Log and Finder List. Federal Highway Administration. Retrieved August 8, 2022.
  2. ^ "Interstate 84 (New York)". www.nycroads.com. Retrieved February 4, 2021.
  3. ^ "Elevation Finder". Freemaptools.com. Retrieved January 29, 2013.
  4. ^ Graff, Bill (Summer 2006). "Sentinels at the Northern Border" (PDF). Unearthing New Jersey. Vol. 2, no. 2. New Jersey Geological Survey.
  5. ^ "Do You Remember?". The News-Times. Danbury, CT. September 4, 2005. Retrieved October 4, 2014.
  6. ^ . New York State Bridge Authority. Archived from the original on April 24, 2015. Retrieved April 29, 2015.
  7. ^ Bonfatti, John F.; Precious, Tom (October 31, 2006). . The Buffalo News. Archived from the original on November 10, 2006. Retrieved August 8, 2022.
  8. ^ "New York State Department of Transportation to Maintain Interstate 84 Beginning October 11" (Press release). New York State Department of Transportation. October 8, 2010. Retrieved October 4, 2014.
  9. ^ "I-84 Job Plagued by Defective Drainage System". Construction Equipment Guide. October 18, 2006. Retrieved January 29, 2013.
  10. ^ . Hartford, CT: WFSB. September 25, 2006. Archived from the original on June 19, 2007.
  11. ^ http://www.rep-am.com/story.php?id=25598[dead link]
  12. ^ "United Technologies To Sponsor Sunken Garden Festival In Farmington". Hartford Courant. April 24, 2012. Archived from the original on January 21, 2013. Retrieved January 29, 2013.
  13. ^ http://www.rep-am.com/story.php?id=24247[dead link]
  14. ^ Office of the Governor. "Governor Rell: I-84 Consultant Releases Final Audit Report". State of Connecticut. Retrieved January 29, 2013.
  15. ^ Rand McNally (2014). The Road Atlas (Walmart ed.). Chicago: Rand McNally. pp. 23, 48, 69, 88. ISBN 978-0-528-00771-2.

External links edit

KML is from Wikidata
  •   Geographic data related to Interstate 84 (Pennsylvania–Massachusetts) at OpenStreetMap
  • I-84 in Connecticut @ Kurumi
  • bostonroads.com. Eastern Roads.
  • From Hartford to Providence

interstate, pennsylvania, massachusetts, interstate, oregon, idaho, utah, interstate, oregon, utah, interstate, interstate, highway, northeastern, united, states, that, extends, from, dunmore, pennsylvania, near, scranton, interchange, with, east, sturbridge, . For the Interstate 84 in Oregon Idaho and Utah see Interstate 84 Oregon Utah Interstate 84 I 84 is an Interstate Highway in the Northeastern United States that extends from Dunmore Pennsylvania near Scranton at an interchange with I 81 east to Sturbridge Massachusetts at an interchange with the Massachusetts Turnpike I 90 Among the major cities that the road passes through is Hartford Connecticut and the road provides a major portion of the primary route between New York City and Boston Another highway named I 84 is located in the Northwestern United States Interstate 84I 84 highlighted in redRoute informationLength232 71 mi 1 374 51 km Existed1971 1971 2 presentNHSEntire routeMajor junctionsWest endI 81 I 380 US 6 in Dunmore PAMajor intersectionsUS 6 US 209 in Matamoras PA I 86 NY 17 in Middletown NY I 87 Toll New York Thruway NY 300 NY 17K in Newburgh NY US 9 in Fishkill NY I 684 US 6 US 202 NY 22 in Brewster NY US 6 US 7 US 202 in Danbury CT I 691 Route 322 in Southington CT I 91 US 44 in Hartford CT US 5 US 44 Route 2 in East Hartford CT I 291 I 384 US 6 US 44 in Manchester CTEast endI 90 Toll Mass Pike in Sturbridge MALocationCountryUnited StatesStatesPennsylvania New York Connecticut MassachusettsHighway systemInterstate Highway SystemMain Auxiliary Suffixed Business Future Contents 1 Route description 1 1 Pennsylvania 1 2 New York 1 3 Connecticut 1 4 Massachusetts 2 History 2 1 I 86 relation 2 2 Tolls 2 2 1 Transfer to New York State Thruway Authority 2 3 Widening projects in Waterbury 3 Major intersections 4 Auxiliary routes 5 See also 6 References 7 External linksRoute description editLengths mi 1 kmPA 54 87 88 30NY 71 79 115 53CT 97 90 157 55MA 8 15 13 12Total 232 71 374 51Pennsylvania edit Main article Interstate 84 in Pennsylvania nbsp I 84 crossing from Wayne County into Pike CountyI 84 starts in Pennsylvania at I 81 in Dunmore a suburb east of Scranton After two miles 3 2 km I 84 interchanges with I 380 with I 380 going southeast through the Pocono Mountains and I 84 continuing almost due east into Wayne and Pike counties Pennsylvania began replacing sequential exit numbers with mile based numbers in 2001 This section of Pennsylvania is very lightly populated and there are no major settlements on or near I 84 although it offers access to popular outdoor recreation areas such as Lake Wallenpaupack and Promised Land State Park Its right of way is very wide with a large median strip between the two roadways as it passes through densely wooded country except for the swampy areas in southern Wayne County The only development along Pennsylvania s section of I 84 is where US Route 6 US 6 and US 209 start to parallel closely and form a commercial strip just south of Matamoras just west of the Delaware River I 84 reaches its highest elevation in Pennsylvania and in the east just west of exit 8 at 1 800 feet 550 m 3 New York edit Main article Interstate 84 in New York nbsp Crossing the Newburgh Beacon Bridge eastboundI 84 enters New York by crossing both the Delaware and Neversink rivers on a long bridge south of Port Jervis the first large settlement near the highway South of the road at the confluence of the Delaware and Neversink rivers is the Tri States Monument where New Jersey New York and Pennsylvania converge 4 The first mile 1 6 km of the road in New York runs along the New Jersey state line then curves to the north to climb the Shawangunk Ridge and cross Orange County where it intersects New York State Route 17 NY 17 future I 86 and later the New York State Thruway I 87 I 84 includes the Newburgh Beacon Bridge across the Hudson River at Newburgh East of the bridge and the city of Beacon I 84 continues to head east across Dutchess County beginning to turn south in the mountainous areas east of the Taconic State Parkway and into Putnam County At Brewster where I 684 heads south toward New York City the road resumes its eastern course into Connecticut closely paralleled by US 6 and US 202 The New York State Department of Transportation NYSDOT completed the process of converting exits from sequential to mile based numbering as part of a sign replacement project in 2021 Connecticut edit Main article Interstate 84 in Connecticut nbsp I 84 looking eastbound just before becoming an elevated viaduct to cross downtown WaterburyThe Interstate s first exit is at the state line where it enters the city of Danbury Here it is designated the Yankee Expressway Two miles 3 2 km to the east where US 7 comes in from the south near Danbury Fair to join I 84 it turns to the north At the next exit US 6 and US 202 join the highway The four way concurrency ends after three miles 4 8 km when US 7 and US 202 split off north toward New Milford US 6 leaves the Interstate at the next exit and I 84 continues east across the countryside At exit 11 it turns to the northeast and descends to cross the Housatonic River on the Rochambeau Bridge into New Haven County It then climbs onto higher ground to the city of Waterbury which it passes on an elevated viaduct with the eastbound and westbound lanes on different levels Here the Route 8 expressway intersects The eastern heading continues past Waterbury to Milldale where I 691 splits off to the east This section has many left hand exits and entrances and sharp curves which were built for a planned network of freeways I 84 heads northeast toward New Britain and Hartford the state capital and the largest community along its eastern length After intersecting I 91 the road crosses the Connecticut River on the Bulkeley Bridge the oldest on the Interstate System then becomes the Wilbur Cross Highway and continues toward the northeast I 84 services the greater student body commuting to the University of Connecticut through exit 68 located in rural Tolland The last exit in Connecticut is exit 74 an exit for Route 171 I 84 crosses the Massachusetts border in the town of Union Massachusetts edit Main article Interstate 84 in Massachusetts The Wilbur Cross Highway continues on I 84 after the highway crosses the state line For a short distance approximately 90 yards 82 m eastbound and 200 yards 180 m westbound the Interstate passes through the town of Holland in Hampden County before crossing into Sturbridge in Worcester County for the remainder of its length I 84 has only three exits in Massachusetts before ending at I 90 the Massachusetts Turnpike I 84 ends at exit 78 formerly exit 9 of I 90 which is located in Sturbridge 7 7 miles 12 4 km into the state making the Massachusetts section of the highway the shortest distance within any of the four states it traverses History editI 84 was originally to head east from Hartford Connecticut to Providence Rhode Island The original route of I 84 would have used present day I 384 to Bolton Connecticut then along a never built section of freeway that would have connected to the US 6 bypass around Willimantic Connecticut Another never built freeway section would have connected it to I 395 and extended I 84 onto State Road 695 SR 695 in Connecticut the easternmost portion of the Connecticut Turnpike in Plainfield Connecticut From there it would have roughly followed US 6 through western Rhode Island to connect to the present day US 6 freeway in Johnston From there a freeway from Olneyville Square to the I 95 I 195 interchange was briefly considered but abandoned in favor of what later became the Route 6 10 Connector Sections of I 84 in Connecticut were reconstructed and widened in the 1980s The former I 86 portion from East Hartford to the Massachusetts state line was completely rebuilt from a narrow four lane freeway to a much wider profile ranging from six lanes at the Massachusetts state line expanding to eight lanes in Vernon to 12 lanes with high occupancy vehicle lanes HOV lanes in East Hartford Another section through Danbury was widened from four lanes to six lanes in 1985 and 1986 Widening of the highway through Danbury was funded by Union Carbide as part of building its world headquarters in Danbury 5 Though the route was confirmed in Connecticut many issues remained in Rhode Island the biggest of which were major environmental concerns about how the freeway would affect the Scituate Reservoir which is the main drinking water supply for Providence In an attempt to ease environmental concerns an alternate route was briefly studied in Rhode Island that would have connected I 84 to the present day Route 37 freeway This would have allowed construction of I 84 south of the Scituate Reservoir Major community opposition caused this plan as well as all plans for a Hartford Providence expressway to be scrapped in the 1980s In the 1992 long range transportation plan released by the Rhode Island Department of Transportation a freeway was added along the original route of I 84 that will connect to the SR 695 freeway on the Rhode Island Connecticut border I 86 relation edit nbsp Interstate 86LocationEast Hartford Connecticut Sturbridge MassachusettsLength38 97 mi 62 72 km Existed1968 1984HistoryRedesignated as I 84 in 1984The section of I 84 between East Hartford Connecticut at the present day junction with I 384 and Sturbridge Massachusetts I 90 was signed in the late 1970s and early 1980s as I 86 unrelated to present day I 86 in New York and Pennsylvania Signs stating I 84 Ends I 86 to Boston eastbound and I 86 Ends I 84 to Hartford westbound were posted where the change took place Exit numbering on I 86 was that of the road s predecessor Route 15 in a sequence beginning on New York s Hutchinson River Parkway Exits were renumbered to correspond with the rest of I 84 in Connecticut when the road was redesignated in 1984 The present I 384 as well as the present US 6 bypass near Willimantic both of which were a part of what was then I 84 s planned easterly continuation were also numbered I 84 prior to 1984 even though they lacked any direct connection to the rest of I 84 at that time Drivers had to use Silver Lane in East Hartford to travel between the two stretches of the highway These two sections were re numbered I 384 and US 6 when what was then I 86 numbering reverted to I 84 with signs reading I 84 is now I 384 I 84 is now US 6 and I 86 is now I 84 being erected on their respective segments Tolls edit As I 84 was built with federal funds there are generally no highway tolls The exception is I 84 s Hudson River crossing the Newburgh Beacon Bridge Since the bridge is under the New York State Bridge Authority it carries an eastbound only toll of 2 15 for passenger vehicles EZ Pass 1 65 6 Transfer to New York State Thruway Authority edit From 1992 through 2006 I 84 in New York was a toll free component of the New York State Thruway system It was transferred by NYSDOT to the New York State Thruway Authority NYSTA in order to capitalize on that agency s steady revenue stream from upstate sources In 1992 maintenance responsibility for I 84 in New York was transferred to the NYSTA and the monies for that purpose came from existing tolls on I 190 in downtown Buffalo more than 300 miles 480 km away On October 30 2006 the NYSTA began the process of returning maintenance and operation responsibilities to NYSDOT and the tolls in Buffalo were discontinued The I 190 tolls were considered to be one of the principal causes of highway congestion in Buffalo 7 From 2006 to 2010 maintenance was performed by the NYSTA with funding provided by the state legislature On October 11 2010 NYSDOT resumed full control of I 84 8 Widening projects in Waterbury edit A widening project along the congested stretch of I 84 through Waterbury and Cheshire Connecticut was beset by cost overruns delays and construction defects involving storm drains 9 as state and federal officials have launched criminal investigations stemming from this project This episode diminished local enthusiasm for a proposed 2 billion reconstruction of the Mixmaster interchange in downtown Waterbury between Route 8 and I 84 10 Cost estimates for the Mixmaster replacement have increased to 3 billion 11 Former Connecticut Attorney General Richard Blumenthal began a lawsuit against the contractor and an engineering firm in response to threats from USDOT to withhold funds from the project 12 On May 18 2007 the Republican American reported this area had defective light poles 13 while Governor Jodi Rell released an audit report of the construction disaster 14 A number of USDOT personnel were either fired or reprimanded following the scandal Additionally when the Federal Bureau of Investigation FBI and a federal grand jury investigated the now defunct construction company and the same USDOT officials although none of these investigations have yet to result in criminal charges Major intersections editPennsylvania nbsp nbsp I 81 US 6 in Dunmore nbsp I 380 in Roaring Brook Township nbsp US 6 near Milford nbsp nbsp US 6 US 209 near Matamoras New York nbsp nbsp US 6 Route 23 in Port Jervis nbsp nbsp US 6 NY 17M in Middletown nbsp nbsp I 86 NY 17 in Middletown nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp I 87 Toll New York Thruway NY 300 in Newburgh nbsp nbsp US 9W NY 32 in Newburgh nbsp US 9 in Fishkill nbsp Taconic State Parkway in East Fishkill nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp I 684 NY 22 US 6 US 202 in Brewster Connecticut nbsp nbsp nbsp US 6 US 7 US 202 in Danbury nbsp Route 8 in Waterbury nbsp nbsp I 691 Route 322 in Southington nbsp Route 72 in New Britain nbsp US 6 in Farmington nbsp Route 9 in Farmington nbsp nbsp I 91 US 44 in Hartford nbsp nbsp nbsp Route 2 US 5 US 44 in East Hartford nbsp Route 15 in East Hartford nbsp I 384 in Manchester nbsp nbsp US 6 US 44 in Manchester nbsp I 291 in Manchester Massachusetts nbsp US 20 in Sturbridge nbsp I 90 Mass Pike in Sturbridge 15 Auxiliary routes editI 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 I 484 was slated to be built south of downtown Hartford Connecticut connecting with I 91 but that highway was never completed See also edit nbsp U S Roads portalBusiness routes of Interstate 84References edit a b Starks Edward January 27 2022 Table 1 Main Routes of the Dwight D Eisenhower National System of Interstate and Defense Highways FHWA Route Log and Finder List Federal Highway Administration Retrieved August 8 2022 Interstate 84 New York www nycroads com Retrieved February 4 2021 Elevation Finder Freemaptools com Retrieved January 29 2013 Graff Bill Summer 2006 Sentinels at the Northern Border PDF Unearthing New Jersey Vol 2 no 2 New Jersey Geological Survey Do You Remember The News Times Danbury CT September 4 2005 Retrieved October 4 2014 Toll Schedule EZ pass Info New York State Bridge Authority Archived from the original on April 24 2015 Retrieved April 29 2015 Bonfatti John F Precious Tom October 31 2006 Niagara Thruway users cheer as tolls go by the wayside The Buffalo News Archived from the original on November 10 2006 Retrieved August 8 2022 New York State Department of Transportation to Maintain Interstate 84 Beginning October 11 Press release New York State Department of Transportation October 8 2010 Retrieved October 4 2014 I 84 Job Plagued by Defective Drainage System Construction Equipment Guide October 18 2006 Retrieved January 29 2013 Interchange Construction Planned For 2021 Hartford CT WFSB September 25 2006 Archived from the original on June 19 2007 http www rep am com story php id 25598 dead link United Technologies To Sponsor Sunken Garden Festival In Farmington Hartford Courant April 24 2012 Archived from the original on January 21 2013 Retrieved January 29 2013 http www rep am com story php id 24247 dead link Office of the Governor Governor Rell I 84 Consultant Releases Final Audit Report State of Connecticut Retrieved January 29 2013 Rand McNally 2014 The Road Atlas Walmart ed Chicago Rand McNally pp 23 48 69 88 ISBN 978 0 528 00771 2 Rand McNally 2005 The Road Atlas 2005 Map Chicago Rand McNally full citation needed External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Interstate 84 Pennsylvania Massachusetts KML file edit help Template Attached KML Interstate 84 Pennsylvania Massachusetts KML is from Wikidata nbsp Geographic data related to Interstate 84 Pennsylvania Massachusetts at OpenStreetMap I 84 in Connecticut Kurumi bostonroads com Eastern Roads From Hartford to Providence Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Interstate 84 Pennsylvania Massachusetts amp oldid 1212514573 I 86 relation, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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