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Interstate 90 in New York

Interstate 90 (I-90) is a part of the Interstate Highway System that runs from Seattle, Washington, to Boston, Massachusetts. In the US state of New York, I-90 extends 385.48 miles (620.37 km) from the Pennsylvania state line at Ripley to the Massachusetts state line at Canaan, and is the second-longest highway in the state after New York State Route 17 (NY 17). Although most of the route is part of the tolled New York State Thruway, two non-tolled sections exist along I-90 (the first, situated outside of Buffalo, is included in the Thruway system; the second, situated in the Capital District, is not part of the Thruway system and links Albany and its eastern suburbs). Within New York, I-90 has a complete set of auxiliary Interstates, which means that there are Interstates numbered I-190 through I-990 in the state, with no gaps in between. For most of its length in New York, I-90 runs parallel to the former Erie Canal route, NY 5, US Route 20 (US 20) and the CSX Transportation railroad mainline that traverses the state.

Interstate 90

Map of New York with I-90 highlighted in red
Route information
Maintained by NYSTA and NYSDOT
Length385.48 mi[1] (620.37 km)
ExistedAugust 14, 1957[2]–present
NHSEntire route
Major junctions
West end I-90 at the Pennsylvania state line in Ripley
Major intersections
East end
Location
CountryUnited States
StateNew York
CountiesChautauqua, Erie, Genesee, Monroe, Ontario, Seneca, Cayuga, Onondaga, Madison, Oneida, Herkimer, Montgomery, Schenectady, Albany, Rensselaer, Columbia
Highway system

I-90 was assigned in 1957 as part of the establishment of the Interstate Highway System. In New York, it was overlaid on the preexisting New York State Thruway from Pennsylvania to Albany, from where it would have continued to Massachusetts on a new freeway that bypassed the Berkshire Connector to the north. Ultimately, the freeway was built from the Thruway mainline in Albany to the Berkshire Connector in Schodack, and I-90 was assigned to the segment of the connector east of the proposed freeway. The Albany–Schodack freeway was completed in stages during the 1960s and 1970s and fully open by 1977.

Route description edit

New York State Thruway edit

West of Albany, I-90 in New York is designated along the mainline of the New York State Thruway. The Thruway begins at the Pennsylvania state line in Chautauqua County, following the shore of Lake Erie northeast and passes through the town of Cheektowaga, a large suburb of Buffalo directly east of the city. Two auxiliary routes, I-190 (leading to Niagara Falls and connecting into Canada as Ontario Highway 405) and I-290 (a northerly bypass of Buffalo) connect with I-90 here. Both auxiliary routes provide access between I-90 and Canada's largest city, Toronto. East of Erie County, the Thruway turns east and passes through the suburbs of several major cities in Upstate New York, generally following the path of the Erie Canal. It passes south of Rochester and north of Syracuse, which are served by three auxiliary Interstate Highways: I-490 and I-390 connect to Rochester, while I-690 leads to Syracuse.[3] The speed limit, enforced by the New York State Police, is 65 mph (105 km/h) along most of this stretch.[4]

 
Approaching exit 54 on I-90 westbound in West Seneca

East of Syracuse, the Thruway follows the Erie Canal and, later, the Mohawk River into the Mohawk Valley toward Utica, where I-90 skirts the northern edge of downtown and meets I-790, a short route leading into the city's center. Farther east, the freeway indirectly serves the canal and riverside cities of Little Falls (via NY 169) and Amsterdam (NY 30) on its way to Schenectady, where I-890 splits from the Thruway and serves as the connection to the city center. It rejoins I-90 in Albany County, where I-90 leaves the mainline of the Thruway at exit 24 in Albany, which is signed for I-87 north and I-90 east. Here, the route designation of the Thruway changes from I-90 east to I-87 south. Traffic intending to continue on I-90 or reach I-87 north must exit the Thruway here. Exit numbers and mile markers for I-90 reset after exiting.[3]

Albany and Rensselaer counties edit

 
Guilderland Service Area

The Albany–Schodack section of I-90—the only portion of I-90 in New York that is not part of the Thruway system—begins concurrent with I-87 and heads southeast from Thruway exit 24. Now a toll-free highway, I-90 and I-87 continue to exits 1N and 1S, which are for I-87 and NY 910F, respectively. Located off exit 1S and NY 910F, an unsigned spur of the Northway leading to Western Avenue (US 20), is Crossgates Mall in Guilderland. I-90 proceeds eastward, meeting Washington Avenue at an interchange connecting to the University of Albany, SUNY, a state university, eastbound and Fuller Road (CR 156) westbound.[citation needed]

Exits 3 and 4, located 0.6 miles (0.97 km) apart in an area bounded by Washington and Central (NY 5) avenues, lead to the W. Averell Harriman State Office Building Campus and the New York State Police Academy (exit 3) and to the Crosstown Arterial (NY 85 at exit 4). I-90 subsequently crosses over NY 5 and passes north of Westgate Plaza as it connects to Everett Road (CR 155). The freeway continues along the northern edge of Albany to exit 5A,[citation needed] a large trumpet interchange originally built to serve I-687.[5] After that project was canceled, it was repurposed as an exit for Corporate Woods Boulevard. East of exit 5A, I-90 passes by slightly more residential areas ahead of a stack interchange with US 9 one mile (1.6 km) north of downtown Albany. Albany Memorial Hospital is located just north of the exit on US 9.[citation needed]

 
The stack interchange between I-90 and US 9 in Albany as seen from I-90 eastbound

Not far to the east of US 9 is a second stack interchange, connecting I-90 to I-787 in the industrial northeasternmost section of the city of Albany. At this point, I-90 turns to the southeast and follows the Patroon Island Bridge over the Hudson River and into Rensselaer County. Across the river, I-90 becomes the Rensselaer County Veterans Memorial Highway and passes through much less developed areas. In its first 1.5 miles (2.4 km) in the county, the freeway meets Washington Avenue at the northern edge of the city of Rensselaer and the west end of NY 43 in the town of North Greenbush, southwest of US 4 and Defreestville. South of NY 43, I-90 and US 4 follow parallel routings into East Greenbush, where I-90 directly connects to US 4 at exit 9.[citation needed]

I-90 heads southeastward across an undeveloped, forested section of the county, crossing over NY 151 and entering the town of Schodack, where it meets Miller Road, a connector between I-90 and the concurrent routes of US 9 and US 20. The freeway and the overlapping US Routes follow similar routings to Schodack Center, at which point I-90 finally connects to US 9 and US 20 at exits 11E and 11W. I-90 heads due south from this point, passing over NY 150 and paralleling US 9, which splits from US 20 at Schodack Center. The routes cross paths again at exit 12 just north of where I-90 rejoins the Thruway system at exit B1 of the Berkshire Connector.[citation needed]

Berkshire Connector edit

I-90 heads southeast on the connector, meeting the north end of the Taconic State Parkway in the Columbia County town of Chatham at exit B2 and NY 22 at exit B3 in the town of Canaan one mile (1.6 km) from the Massachusetts state line. The Berkshire Connector ends at the state line; however, I-90 continues southeast into Massachusetts as the Massachusetts Turnpike.[3]

History edit

 
Overhead signage for exit 24 in Albany, where I-90 leaves the Thruway mainline to serve downtown Albany
 
The Berkshire Connector (I-90) near exit B2 in Chatham

The east–west corridor I-90 follows across New York has always been major, followed by the Genesee Trail (1790s), Erie Canal (1825), New York Central Railroad (1853), and later the Yellowstone Trail (1912), which became US 20 and NY 5.[original research?] It was planned as part of a nationwide toll road system as early as 1938.[6] Exactly which cities would be served changed over the years, but it was the state of New York that made the decision in 1942, when they passed a law for the construction of a New York CityAlbanyBuffaloPennsylvania "thruway". This highway, passing Utica, Syracuse, and Rochester on its path between Albany and Buffalo, would provide construction jobs in the post-World War II period.[7] The Berkshire Thruway, a branch east from near Albany to Massachusetts, was authorized in 1944, completing the east–west route across the state.[8] However, construction, which began in 1946, proceeded very slowly, with only one four-mile (6.4 km) portion open by 1950, when a law created the New York State Thruway Authority (NYSTA) to operate the route as a toll road. Construction then progressed much more rapidly, especially after 1954, when the authority was allowed to issue bonds not backed by the state (thus having higher interest rates).[9] The roadway was completed between Buffalo and Albany in 1954,[10] to New York City in 1956,[11] to Pennsylvania in 1957,[12] and to Massachusetts in 1959.[13]

In the meantime, the National Interstate and Defense Highways Act was enacted in 1956, promising a toll-free network of Interstate Highways throughout the nation. The Bureau of Public Roads (BPR) commissioner soon announced that the toll road met all federal Interstate Highway standards,[14] and, on August 14, 1957, most of the mainline of the Thruway was incorporated into the system as part of I-87 and I-90. Most of the connecting Massachusetts Turnpike was also included, but a more northerly alignment, avoiding the Berkshire Thruway, was proposed by the states of New York and Massachusetts for I-90 through Albany past Pittsfield to East Lee, Massachusetts.[2][15] This alignment would be about 30 percent shorter than the all-toll alignment and would provide relief to the four-lane Castleton Bridge on the Berkshire Thruway, which had been built narrower than the rest of the system because of the planned parallel alternate.[16] The BPR objected to the duplication, which would cost over $90 million (equivalent to $773 million in 2023[17]), and refused to approve this alignment.[18] The eventual route ran southeast from Albany to the Berkshire Thruway at the Nassau interchange, providing Albany with an alternate route and additional bridge but not offering any savings in distance and creating a "toll trap" for drivers accessing the Taconic State Parkway from Albany.[19]

Construction on the route of I-90 through Albany began c. 1963, with both ends at existing Thruway interchanges: exit 24, which crossed the Adirondack Northway (I-87) at a cloverleaf interchange and connected to Washington Avenue in western Albany, and exit B1, which connected to US 9 near Nassau.[20][21] Work on the freeway began at the Northway and progressed southeasterly to the Berkshire Connector in Rensselaer County. The portion between the Northway and Everett Road was opened to traffic in the mid-1960s[22][23] while the piece extending from Everett Road to US 4 east of Rensselaer was completed in the early 1970s.[24][25] The last section of the highway was completed to US 9 and US 20 in Schodack Center c. 1974[26][27] and finished by 1977.[28] The Northway cloverleaf was rebuilt in the late 1980s.[29][30]

In 1999, the New York State Department of Transportation (NYSDOT), the Federal Highway Administration (FHWA), and NYSTA discussed redesignating the Berkshire Connector as I-90 and redesignating the non-toll part of I-90 from Thruway exit 24 to exit B1 on the connector as I-88. The section of the Thruway between exits 25 and 24 would then be codesignated as both I-90 and I-88. This was never implemented.[31]

Exit list edit

The mileposts below for the non-Thruway section follow actual signage, where mile 0.00 is located at exit 24 of the Thruway.

All exits in New York use sequential numbering.[32][33]

CountyLocation[33]mi[34][33]kmExitDestinationsNotes
ChautauquaRipley496.00798.23 
 
I-90 west – Erie
 
 
New York Thruway begins
Continuation into Pennsylvania; western terminus of New York Thruway
494.92796.5061Shortman Road (NY 950D) – RipleyTo US 20, NY 5, and NY 76
488.50786.16Ripley Toll Gantry (western end of closed toll system)
Town of Westfield485.00780.5360  NY 394 – Westfield, Mayville
Town of Dunkirk467.74752.7559  NY 60 – Dunkirk, Fredonia
Hanover455.54733.1258   US 20 / NY 5 – Silver Creek, Irving
ErieEvans446.60718.73Angola Service Area
444.87715.9557AEden, Angola
Town of Hamburg436.22702.0357  NY 75 – Hamburg, East AuroraRamp access at NY 75 converted from trumpet interchange to at-grade intersection in 2018[35][36]
432.45695.9656   US 62 / NY 179 (Mile Strip Road) – Blasdell, Orchard Park
Lackawanna431.15693.87Lackawanna Toll Gantry (eastern end of closed toll system)
West Seneca429.47691.1655 
 
US 219 south / Ridge Road – Lackawanna, West Seneca
No eastbound access to US 219; Ridge Road not signed eastbound; northern terminus of US 219
427.94688.7054  
 
NY 16 / NY 400 south – West Seneca, East Aurora
Northern terminus of NY 400
Cheektowaga426.17685.8553 
 
I-190 north – Downtown Buffalo, Canada, Niagara Falls
Southern terminus of I-190
424.92683.8452AWilliam Street
423.19681.0652Walden Avenue – Cheektowaga, BuffaloSigned as exits 52E (east) and 52W (west)
421.57678.4551   NY 33 – Buffalo, Buffalo Niagara International AirportSigned as exits 51E (east) and 51W (west)
420.93677.4250ACleveland DriveEastbound exit and westbound entrance
CheektowagaAmherst
town line
420.34676.4750 
 
I-290 west – Niagara Falls
Eastern terminus of I-290
Amherst418.15672.95Williamsville Toll Gantry (western end of closed toll system)
CheektowagaAmherst
town line
417.27671.5349   NY 78 – Depew, Buffalo Niagara International Airport
Lancaster411.60662.41Clarence Service Area (westbound)
GeneseePembroke401.72646.5148A  NY 77 – Pembroke, Medina
397.00638.91Pembroke Service Area (eastbound)
Town of Batavia390.13627.8548  NY 98 – Batavia
Town of Le Roy379.10610.10Toll Gantry (E-ZPass or Toll by Mail)
378.56609.2347 
 
  I-490 east / NY 19 – Le Roy, Rochester
Western terminus of I-490
375.20603.83Ontario Service Area (westbound)
MonroeChili368.80593.53Toll Gantry (E-ZPass or Toll by Mail)
Henrietta365.30587.89Scottsville Service Area (eastbound)
362.44583.2946  I-390 – Rochester, Corning
Town of Pittsford358.10576.31Toll Gantry (E-ZPass or Toll by Mail)
OntarioTown of Victor  NY 96Replaced by exit 45 c. 1970[37]
350.99564.8645 
 
I-490 west – Rochester, Victor
Victor not signed westbound; eastern terminus of I-490; to NY 96
349.20561.98Seneca Service Area (westbound)
348.00560.05Toll Gantry (E-ZPass or Toll by Mail)
Farmington347.13558.6544 
 
NY 332 south – Canandaigua, Victor
Northern terminus of NY 332
Town of Manchester340.70548.30Toll Gantry (E-ZPass or Toll by Mail)
340.15547.4243  NY 21 – Manchester, Palmyra
336.90542.19Clifton Springs Service Area (eastbound)
Town of Phelps327.10526.4242  NY 14 – Geneva, LyonsTo NY 318
SenecaJunius323.60520.78Junius Ponds Service Area (westbound)
Tyre320.41515.6541  NY 414 – Waterloo, Clyde
CayugaMontezuma310.10499.06Port Byron Service Area (eastbound)
Brutus304.19489.5540  NY 34 – Weedsport, AuburnTo NY 31
OnondagaVan Buren294.60474.11Toll Gantry (E-ZPass or Toll by Mail)
291.30468.80Warners Service Area (westbound)
289.53465.9539 
 
 
 
I-690 east / NY 690 north – Syracuse, Fulton
Western terminus and exit 1 on I-690; southern terminus of NY 690
288.80464.78Toll Gantry (E-ZPass or Toll by Mail)
Salina285.95460.1938  CR 57 – Liverpool, Syracuse
283.79456.7237Electronics Parkway – Liverpool, Syracuse
283.40456.09Toll Gantry (E-ZPass or Toll by Mail)
282.93455.3336   I-81 – Watertown, Binghamton, Syracuse AirportExit 25A on I-81; future business loop of I-81; to US 11
281.30452.71Toll Gantry (E-ZPass or Toll by Mail)
DeWitt279.40449.65DeWitt Service Area (eastbound)
278.93448.8935   NY 298 / NY 635 – Syracuse, East Syracuse
277.50446.59Toll Gantry (E-ZPass or Toll by Mail)
276.58445.1134A  I-481 – Syracuse, Oswego, ChittenangoExit 6 on I-481; future I-81
Town of Manlius276.10444.34Toll Gantry (E-ZPass or Toll by Mail)
MadisonSullivan266.20428.41Chittenango Service Area (westbound)
Canastota261.50420.8434  NY 13 – Canastota, Chittenango
OneidaVerona252.71406.7033  NY 365 – Verona, Oneida
Westmoreland244.00392.68Oneida Service Area (eastbound)
243.37391.6732  NY 233 – Westmoreland, Rome
Utica232.85374.7431 
 
   I-790 west / NY 8 / NY 12 – Utica, Rome
Eastern terminus of I-790
HerkimerSchuyler227.00365.32Schuyler Service Area (westbound)
Village of Herkimer219.70353.5730  NY 28 – Herkimer, Mohawk
Danube210.62338.9629A  NY 169 – Little Falls, Dolgeville
209.90337.80Indian Castle-Iroquois Service Area
MontgomeryTown of Canajoharie194.10312.3729   NY 10 / NY 5S – Canajoharie, Sharon SpringsTo NY 80
RootMohawk Valley Welcome Center (westbound)
Fultonville182.17293.1728  NY 30A – Fultonville, FondaAlso serves Fulton County Airport
FloridaAmsterdam line173.59279.3727  NY 30 – Amsterdam
Florida171.80276.49Mohawk Service Area (eastbound)
168.20270.69Pattersonville Service Area (westbound)
SchenectadyRotterdam162.22261.0726 
 
 
 
 
 
I-890 east to NY 5 / NY 5S – Schenectady, Scotia
Western terminus and exit 1B on I-890; access to NY 5 via NY 890
161.00259.10Toll Gantry (E-ZPass or Toll by Mail)
158.82255.6025A 
 
  I-88 west / NY 7 – Schenectady, Binghamton
Eastern terminus of I-88
157.80253.95Toll Gantry (E-ZPass or Toll by Mail)
AlbanyGuilderland153.83247.5725 
 
   I-890 west / NY 7 / NY 146 – Schenectady
Eastern terminus of I-890
152.80245.91Guilderland Service Area (eastbound)
AlbanyGuilderland line149.60240.76Toll Gantry (eastern end of closed toll system)
148.15
0.00
238.42
0.00
24 
 
 
 
I-87 south / New York Thruway south to Mass Pike east – New York City
Eastern end of Thruway concurrency; western end of I-87 concurrency; exit number not signed westbound
1 
 
 
 
  I-87 north to US 20 (Western Avenue) – Albany International Airport, Montreal, Saratoga
Access to US 20 via NY 910F; signed as exits 1S (US 20) and 1N (I-87); eastern end of I-87 concurrency
AlbanyGuilderland
Colonie tripoint
0.801.292  CR 156 (Fuller Road) / NY 910D (Washington Avenue) – UAlbanySigned for Fuller Road westbound, Washington Avenue eastbound
Albany1.852.983State Offices
2.193.524 
 
NY 85 west – Slingerlands, Voorheesville
Eastern terminus of NY 85
3.195.135  CR 155 (Everett Road)To NY 5
3.806.125ACorporate Woods BoulevardFormerly planned for I-687
5.108.216  US 9 / Henry Johnson Boulevard – Loudonville, Arbor Hill
6.169.916A  I-787 – Troy, AlbanyExit 5 on I-787; also serves MVP Arena and Albany–Rensselaer station
Hudson River6.4110.32Patroon Island Bridge
RensselaerRensselaer6.9211.147Washington Avenue – RensselaerEastbound exit and westbound entrance; other movements via exit 8
North Greenbush7.7312.448 
 
NY 43 east – Defreestville
Western terminus of NY 43
East Greenbush9.4715.249  US 4 – East Greenbush, RensselaerTo NY 151
Schodack13.1021.0810  CR 54 (Miller Road) – Schodack Center, East Greenbush
14.5123.3511   US 9 / US 20 – East Greenbush, NassauSigned as exits 11W (north/west) and 11E (south/east) eastbound; to NY 150
19.5731.4912  US 9 – Hudson, Castleton-on-HudsonTo NY 203 & NY 66
19.9932.17Exit B1 Toll Gantry (western end of closed toll system)
20.3932.81B1 
 
 
 
Berkshire Connector west to I-87 / New York Thruway – New York City, Buffalo
Western end of Berkshire Connector concurrency
ColumbiaChatham15.0924.29B2 
 
 
 
Taconic State Parkway south to NY 295 – Chatham, East Chatham, Canaan
Northern terminus of Taconic State Parkway
Canaan18.129.1Canaan Toll Gantry (eastern end of closed toll system)
23.2737.45B3  NY 22 – Austerlitz, New Lebanon, West Stockbridge, StockbridgeTo Route 102 & Route 41
24.2839.07 
 
I-90 east / Mass Pike east – Boston
 
 
Berkshire Connector ends
Continuation into Massachusetts; eastern terminus of Berkshire Connector
1.000 mi = 1.609 km; 1.000 km = 0.621 mi

Auxiliary routes edit

  • I-190 runs from I-90/NY Thruway along the Niagara Thruway/Expressway to its terminus at the Canadian border on the Lewiston–Queenston Bridge.
  • I-290 runs from I-190 to I-90, and provides the fastest road link between Toronto and the Northeastern United States.
  • I-390 runs from the Southern Tier Expressway (I-86/NY 17), travels 76 miles to Rochester and ends at I-490.
  • I-490 serves the city of Rochester, and comprises part of the Inner Loop.
  • I-590 serves the city of Rochester, and connects I-390 and I-490.
  • I-690 serves the city of Syracuse and it s downtown.
  • I-790 serves the city of Utica, and is concurrent with NY 5 during its whole 2.41 miles (3.88 kilometers)
  • I-890 serves the city of Schenectady, and serves its downtown.
  • I-990 is the highest number interstate in the whole system.

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ 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 September 19, 2022.
  2. ^ a b Official route numbering for the National System of Interstate and Defense Highways (Map). American Association of State Highway Officials. August 14, 1957.
  3. ^ a b c New York State Map (Map). Cartography by Map Works. I Love New York. 2009.
  4. ^ . Archived from the original on August 15, 2016. Retrieved June 30, 2016.
  5. ^ "History". Adirondack Northway Exit 3 Project. New York State Department of Transportation. Retrieved June 11, 2010.
  6. ^ Location of Routes Selected for Study (Map). Bureau of Public Roads. 1938.
  7. ^ Statement by Assemblyman Moffat and Senator Hampton Relative to the Establishment of a State Thruway System, March 13, 1942, New York Legislative Document, 1942, v. 15 no. 80–82, p. 153
  8. ^ "The New York State Thruway: The Beginning". . New York State Thruway Authority. 2002. Archived from the original on October 29, 2010. Retrieved November 18, 2010.
  9. ^ Kaszynski, William (2000). The American Highway: The History and Culture of Roads in the United States. McFarland & Company. pp. 141–142. ISBN 0-7864-0822-7.
  10. ^ Weaver, Warren Jr. (October 27, 1954). "More of Thruway Opened by Dewey". The New York Times. p. 31.
  11. ^ Ingraham, Joseph C. (August 27, 1956). "Thruway Opening Final Link Friday". The New York Times. p. 21.
  12. ^ "The Thruway Becomes the Longest Toll Road". The New York Times. December 15, 1957. p. 159.
  13. ^ Ingraham, Joseph C. (May 24, 1959). "Boston to Chicago". The New York Times. p. XX1.
  14. ^ Pierce, Bret (September 19, 1956). "Thruway Called a Model Project". The New York Times. p. 39.
  15. ^ "Traffic Engineering for I90". Traffic Engineering. 28. Institute of Traffic Engineers. 1957.
  16. ^ Highway Cost Estimates: Hearings before a Subcommittee of the Committee on Public Works, 1958, p. 173
  17. ^ Johnston, Louis; Williamson, Samuel H. (2023). "What Was the U.S. GDP Then?". MeasuringWorth. Retrieved November 30, 2023. United States Gross Domestic Product deflator figures follow the MeasuringWorth series.
  18. ^ U.S. Congress, Miscellaneous Highway Legislation, 1961, p. 112
  19. ^ "Rockefeller Urged to Veto Road Link". The New York Times. March 30, 1964. p. 25.
  20. ^ New York with Sight-Seeing Guide (Map) (1962 ed.). Cartography by General Drafting. Esso. 1962.
  21. ^ New York Happy Motoring Guide (Map) (1963 ed.). Cartography by General Drafting. Esso. 1963.
  22. ^ New York (Map). Cartography by Rand McNally and Company. Mobil. 1965.
  23. ^ New York (Map) (1969–70 ed.). Cartography by General Drafting. Esso. 1968.
  24. ^ New York State Highways (Map). Cartography by Rand McNally and Company. State of New York Department of Commerce. 1969.
  25. ^ New York and New Jersey Tourgide Map (Map) (1972 ed.). Cartography by Rand McNally and Company. Gulf Oil Company. 1972.
  26. ^ New York (Map) (1973 ed.). Cartography by H.M. Gousha Company. Shell Oil Company. 1973.
  27. ^ New York and New Jersey Tourgide Map (Map). Cartography by Rand McNally and Company. Gulf Oil Company. 1974.
  28. ^ New York (Map) (1977–78 ed.). Cartography by General Drafting. Exxon. 1977.
  29. ^ Federal Highway Administration (2009). "Structure 1073530". National Bridge Inventory. United States Department of Transportation.
  30. ^ Federal Highway Administration (2009). "Structure 1073540". National Bridge Inventory. United States Department of Transportation.
  31. ^ Bergman Associates (February 13, 2008). (PDF). Capital District Transportation Committee and New York State Department of Transportation. p. 22. Archived from the original (PDF) on July 19, 2011. Retrieved December 25, 2009.
  32. ^ Google (October 2011). "Exit 24". Google Street View. Retrieved July 10, 2015. {{cite web}}: |author= has generic name (help)
  33. ^ a b c Office of Technical Services (2014). "Inventory Listing". New York State Department of Transportation Engineering Division. Retrieved July 10, 2015.
    • Albany County
    • Rensselaer County
  34. ^ "2011 Traffic Volume Report" (PDF). New York State Department of Transportation. September 25, 2012. pp. 148–149. Retrieved July 10, 2015.
  35. ^ (Press release). New York State Thruway Authority. May 14, 2018. Archived from the original on January 31, 2020. Retrieved September 16, 2019.
  36. ^ O'Brien, Barbara (April 28, 2017). "How the Thruway Authority Will Change Exit 57 in Hamburg". The Buffalo News. Retrieved September 16, 2019.
  37. ^ "Victor, New York". United States Geological Survey. 1966. Retrieved March 23, 2022.

External links edit

KML is from Wikidata
  • Interstate 90 at Alps' Roads • New York Routes • Upstate New York Roads


  Interstate 90
Previous state:
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New York Next state:
Massachusetts

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This article is about the section of Interstate 90 in New York For the entire route see Interstate 90 Interstate 90 I 90 is a part of the Interstate Highway System that runs from Seattle Washington to Boston Massachusetts In the US state of New York I 90 extends 385 48 miles 620 37 km from the Pennsylvania state line at Ripley to the Massachusetts state line at Canaan and is the second longest highway in the state after New York State Route 17 NY 17 Although most of the route is part of the tolled New York State Thruway two non tolled sections exist along I 90 the first situated outside of Buffalo is included in the Thruway system the second situated in the Capital District is not part of the Thruway system and links Albany and its eastern suburbs Within New York I 90 has a complete set of auxiliary Interstates which means that there are Interstates numbered I 190 through I 990 in the state with no gaps in between For most of its length in New York I 90 runs parallel to the former Erie Canal route NY 5 US Route 20 US 20 and the CSX Transportation railroad mainline that traverses the state Interstate 90Map of New York with I 90 highlighted in redRoute informationMaintained by NYSTA and NYSDOTLength385 48 mi 1 620 37 km ExistedAugust 14 1957 2 presentNHSEntire routeMajor junctionsWest endI 90 at the Pennsylvania state line in RipleyMajor intersectionsUS 219 in West Seneca I 190 in Buffalo I 290 in Buffalo I 390 NY 253 NY 15 in Henrietta I 81 near Syracuse I 88 NY 7 in Rotterdam I 87 New York Thruway NY 910F in Albany I 787 in Albany Berkshire Connector in Schodack Taconic State Parkway in ChathamEast endI 90 Mass Pike at the Massachusetts state line in CanaanLocationCountryUnited StatesStateNew YorkCountiesChautauqua Erie Genesee Monroe Ontario Seneca Cayuga Onondaga Madison Oneida Herkimer Montgomery Schenectady Albany Rensselaer ColumbiaHighway systemInterstate Highway System Main Auxiliary Suffixed Business Future New York Highways Interstate US State Reference Parkways NY 89A NY 90 I 90 was assigned in 1957 as part of the establishment of the Interstate Highway System In New York it was overlaid on the preexisting New York State Thruway from Pennsylvania to Albany from where it would have continued to Massachusetts on a new freeway that bypassed the Berkshire Connector to the north Ultimately the freeway was built from the Thruway mainline in Albany to the Berkshire Connector in Schodack and I 90 was assigned to the segment of the connector east of the proposed freeway The Albany Schodack freeway was completed in stages during the 1960s and 1970s and fully open by 1977 Contents 1 Route description 1 1 New York State Thruway 1 2 Albany and Rensselaer counties 1 3 Berkshire Connector 2 History 3 Exit list 4 Auxiliary routes 5 See also 6 References 7 External linksRoute description editNew York State Thruway edit Main article New York State Thruway mainline West of Albany I 90 in New York is designated along the mainline of the New York State Thruway The Thruway begins at the Pennsylvania state line in Chautauqua County following the shore of Lake Erie northeast and passes through the town of Cheektowaga a large suburb of Buffalo directly east of the city Two auxiliary routes I 190 leading to Niagara Falls and connecting into Canada as Ontario Highway 405 and I 290 a northerly bypass of Buffalo connect with I 90 here Both auxiliary routes provide access between I 90 and Canada s largest city Toronto East of Erie County the Thruway turns east and passes through the suburbs of several major cities in Upstate New York generally following the path of the Erie Canal It passes south of Rochester and north of Syracuse which are served by three auxiliary Interstate Highways I 490 and I 390 connect to Rochester while I 690 leads to Syracuse 3 The speed limit enforced by the New York State Police is 65 mph 105 km h along most of this stretch 4 nbsp Approaching exit 54 on I 90 westbound in West Seneca East of Syracuse the Thruway follows the Erie Canal and later the Mohawk River into the Mohawk Valley toward Utica where I 90 skirts the northern edge of downtown and meets I 790 a short route leading into the city s center Farther east the freeway indirectly serves the canal and riverside cities of Little Falls via NY 169 and Amsterdam NY 30 on its way to Schenectady where I 890 splits from the Thruway and serves as the connection to the city center It rejoins I 90 in Albany County where I 90 leaves the mainline of the Thruway at exit 24 in Albany which is signed for I 87 north and I 90 east Here the route designation of the Thruway changes from I 90 east to I 87 south Traffic intending to continue on I 90 or reach I 87 north must exit the Thruway here Exit numbers and mile markers for I 90 reset after exiting 3 Albany and Rensselaer counties edit nbsp Guilderland Service Area The Albany Schodack section of I 90 the only portion of I 90 in New York that is not part of the Thruway system begins concurrent with I 87 and heads southeast from Thruway exit 24 Now a toll free highway I 90 and I 87 continue to exits 1N and 1S which are for I 87 and NY 910F respectively Located off exit 1S and NY 910F an unsigned spur of the Northway leading to Western Avenue US 20 is Crossgates Mall in Guilderland I 90 proceeds eastward meeting Washington Avenue at an interchange connecting to the University of Albany SUNY a state university eastbound and Fuller Road CR 156 westbound citation needed Exits 3 and 4 located 0 6 miles 0 97 km apart in an area bounded by Washington and Central NY 5 avenues lead to the W Averell Harriman State Office Building Campus and the New York State Police Academy exit 3 and to the Crosstown Arterial NY 85 at exit 4 I 90 subsequently crosses over NY 5 and passes north of Westgate Plaza as it connects to Everett Road CR 155 The freeway continues along the northern edge of Albany to exit 5A citation needed a large trumpet interchange originally built to serve I 687 5 After that project was canceled it was repurposed as an exit for Corporate Woods Boulevard East of exit 5A I 90 passes by slightly more residential areas ahead of a stack interchange with US 9 one mile 1 6 km north of downtown Albany Albany Memorial Hospital is located just north of the exit on US 9 citation needed nbsp The stack interchange between I 90 and US 9 in Albany as seen from I 90 eastbound Not far to the east of US 9 is a second stack interchange connecting I 90 to I 787 in the industrial northeasternmost section of the city of Albany At this point I 90 turns to the southeast and follows the Patroon Island Bridge over the Hudson River and into Rensselaer County Across the river I 90 becomes the Rensselaer County Veterans Memorial Highway and passes through much less developed areas In its first 1 5 miles 2 4 km in the county the freeway meets Washington Avenue at the northern edge of the city of Rensselaer and the west end of NY 43 in the town of North Greenbush southwest of US 4 and Defreestville South of NY 43 I 90 and US 4 follow parallel routings into East Greenbush where I 90 directly connects to US 4 at exit 9 citation needed I 90 heads southeastward across an undeveloped forested section of the county crossing over NY 151 and entering the town of Schodack where it meets Miller Road a connector between I 90 and the concurrent routes of US 9 and US 20 The freeway and the overlapping US Routes follow similar routings to Schodack Center at which point I 90 finally connects to US 9 and US 20 at exits 11E and 11W I 90 heads due south from this point passing over NY 150 and paralleling US 9 which splits from US 20 at Schodack Center The routes cross paths again at exit 12 just north of where I 90 rejoins the Thruway system at exit B1 of the Berkshire Connector citation needed Berkshire Connector edit Main article New York State Thruway Berkshire Connector I 90 heads southeast on the connector meeting the north end of the Taconic State Parkway in the Columbia County town of Chatham at exit B2 and NY 22 at exit B3 in the town of Canaan one mile 1 6 km from the Massachusetts state line The Berkshire Connector ends at the state line however I 90 continues southeast into Massachusetts as the Massachusetts Turnpike 3 History editMain article New York State Thruway nbsp Overhead signage for exit 24 in Albany where I 90 leaves the Thruway mainline to serve downtown Albany nbsp The Berkshire Connector I 90 near exit B2 in Chatham The east west corridor I 90 follows across New York has always been major followed by the Genesee Trail 1790s Erie Canal 1825 New York Central Railroad 1853 and later the Yellowstone Trail 1912 which became US 20 and NY 5 original research It was planned as part of a nationwide toll road system as early as 1938 6 Exactly which cities would be served changed over the years but it was the state of New York that made the decision in 1942 when they passed a law for the construction of a New York City Albany Buffalo Pennsylvania thruway This highway passing Utica Syracuse and Rochester on its path between Albany and Buffalo would provide construction jobs in the post World War II period 7 The Berkshire Thruway a branch east from near Albany to Massachusetts was authorized in 1944 completing the east west route across the state 8 However construction which began in 1946 proceeded very slowly with only one four mile 6 4 km portion open by 1950 when a law created the New York State Thruway Authority NYSTA to operate the route as a toll road Construction then progressed much more rapidly especially after 1954 when the authority was allowed to issue bonds not backed by the state thus having higher interest rates 9 The roadway was completed between Buffalo and Albany in 1954 10 to New York City in 1956 11 to Pennsylvania in 1957 12 and to Massachusetts in 1959 13 In the meantime the National Interstate and Defense Highways Act was enacted in 1956 promising a toll free network of Interstate Highways throughout the nation The Bureau of Public Roads BPR commissioner soon announced that the toll road met all federal Interstate Highway standards 14 and on August 14 1957 most of the mainline of the Thruway was incorporated into the system as part of I 87 and I 90 Most of the connecting Massachusetts Turnpike was also included but a more northerly alignment avoiding the Berkshire Thruway was proposed by the states of New York and Massachusetts for I 90 through Albany past Pittsfield to East Lee Massachusetts 2 15 This alignment would be about 30 percent shorter than the all toll alignment and would provide relief to the four lane Castleton Bridge on the Berkshire Thruway which had been built narrower than the rest of the system because of the planned parallel alternate 16 The BPR objected to the duplication which would cost over 90 million equivalent to 773 million in 2023 17 and refused to approve this alignment 18 The eventual route ran southeast from Albany to the Berkshire Thruway at the Nassau interchange providing Albany with an alternate route and additional bridge but not offering any savings in distance and creating a toll trap for drivers accessing the Taconic State Parkway from Albany 19 Construction on the route of I 90 through Albany began c 1963 with both ends at existing Thruway interchanges exit 24 which crossed the Adirondack Northway I 87 at a cloverleaf interchange and connected to Washington Avenue in western Albany and exit B1 which connected to US 9 near Nassau 20 21 Work on the freeway began at the Northway and progressed southeasterly to the Berkshire Connector in Rensselaer County The portion between the Northway and Everett Road was opened to traffic in the mid 1960s 22 23 while the piece extending from Everett Road to US 4 east of Rensselaer was completed in the early 1970s 24 25 The last section of the highway was completed to US 9 and US 20 in Schodack Center c 1974 26 27 and finished by 1977 28 The Northway cloverleaf was rebuilt in the late 1980s 29 30 In 1999 the New York State Department of Transportation NYSDOT the Federal Highway Administration FHWA and NYSTA discussed redesignating the Berkshire Connector as I 90 and redesignating the non toll part of I 90 from Thruway exit 24 to exit B1 on the connector as I 88 The section of the Thruway between exits 25 and 24 would then be codesignated as both I 90 and I 88 This was never implemented 31 Exit list editThe mileposts below for the non Thruway section follow actual signage where mile 0 00 is located at exit 24 of the Thruway All exits in New York use sequential numbering 32 33 CountyLocation 33 mi 34 33 kmExitDestinationsNotes ChautauquaRipley496 00798 23 nbsp nbsp I 90 west Erie nbsp nbsp New York Thruway beginsContinuation into Pennsylvania western terminus of New York Thruway 494 92796 5061Shortman Road NY 950D RipleyTo US 20 NY 5 and NY 76 488 50786 16Ripley Toll Gantry western end of closed toll system Town of Westfield485 00780 5360 nbsp NY 394 Westfield Mayville Town of Dunkirk467 74752 7559 nbsp NY 60 Dunkirk Fredonia Hanover455 54733 1258 nbsp nbsp US 20 NY 5 Silver Creek Irving ErieEvans446 60718 73Angola Service Area 444 87715 9557AEden Angola Town of Hamburg436 22702 0357 nbsp NY 75 Hamburg East AuroraRamp access at NY 75 converted from trumpet interchange to at grade intersection in 2018 35 36 432 45695 9656 nbsp nbsp US 62 NY 179 Mile Strip Road Blasdell Orchard Park Lackawanna431 15693 87Lackawanna Toll Gantry eastern end of closed toll system West Seneca429 47691 1655 nbsp nbsp US 219 south Ridge Road Lackawanna West SenecaNo eastbound access to US 219 Ridge Road not signed eastbound northern terminus of US 219 427 94688 7054 nbsp nbsp nbsp NY 16 NY 400 south West Seneca East AuroraNorthern terminus of NY 400 Cheektowaga426 17685 8553 nbsp nbsp I 190 north Downtown Buffalo Canada Niagara FallsSouthern terminus of I 190 424 92683 8452AWilliam Street 423 19681 0652Walden Avenue Cheektowaga BuffaloSigned as exits 52E east and 52W west 421 57678 4551 nbsp nbsp NY 33 Buffalo Buffalo Niagara International AirportSigned as exits 51E east and 51W west 420 93677 4250ACleveland DriveEastbound exit and westbound entrance Cheektowaga Amhersttown line420 34676 4750 nbsp nbsp I 290 west Niagara FallsEastern terminus of I 290 Amherst418 15672 95Williamsville Toll Gantry western end of closed toll system Cheektowaga Amhersttown line417 27671 5349 nbsp nbsp NY 78 Depew Buffalo Niagara International Airport Lancaster411 60662 41Clarence Service Area westbound GeneseePembroke401 72646 5148A nbsp NY 77 Pembroke Medina 397 00638 91Pembroke Service Area eastbound Town of Batavia390 13627 8548 nbsp NY 98 Batavia Town of Le Roy379 10610 10Toll Gantry E ZPass or Toll by Mail 378 56609 2347 nbsp nbsp nbsp I 490 east NY 19 Le Roy RochesterWestern terminus of I 490 375 20603 83Ontario Service Area westbound MonroeChili368 80593 53Toll Gantry E ZPass or Toll by Mail Henrietta365 30587 89Scottsville Service Area eastbound 362 44583 2946 nbsp I 390 Rochester Corning Town of Pittsford358 10576 31Toll Gantry E ZPass or Toll by Mail OntarioTown of Victor nbsp NY 96Replaced by exit 45 c 1970 37 350 99564 8645 nbsp nbsp I 490 west Rochester VictorVictor not signed westbound eastern terminus of I 490 to NY 96 349 20561 98Seneca Service Area westbound 348 00560 05Toll Gantry E ZPass or Toll by Mail Farmington347 13558 6544 nbsp nbsp NY 332 south Canandaigua VictorNorthern terminus of NY 332 Town of Manchester340 70548 30Toll Gantry E ZPass or Toll by Mail 340 15547 4243 nbsp NY 21 Manchester Palmyra 336 90542 19Clifton Springs Service Area eastbound Town of Phelps327 10526 4242 nbsp NY 14 Geneva LyonsTo NY 318 SenecaJunius323 60520 78Junius Ponds Service Area westbound Tyre320 41515 6541 nbsp NY 414 Waterloo Clyde CayugaMontezuma310 10499 06Port Byron Service Area eastbound Brutus304 19489 5540 nbsp NY 34 Weedsport AuburnTo NY 31 OnondagaVan Buren294 60474 11Toll Gantry E ZPass or Toll by Mail 291 30468 80Warners Service Area westbound 289 53465 9539 nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp I 690 east NY 690 north Syracuse FultonWestern terminus and exit 1 on I 690 southern terminus of NY 690 288 80464 78Toll Gantry E ZPass or Toll by Mail Salina285 95460 1938 nbsp CR 57 Liverpool Syracuse 283 79456 7237Electronics Parkway Liverpool Syracuse 283 40456 09Toll Gantry E ZPass or Toll by Mail 282 93455 3336 nbsp nbsp I 81 Watertown Binghamton Syracuse AirportExit 25A on I 81 future business loop of I 81 to US 11 281 30452 71Toll Gantry E ZPass or Toll by Mail DeWitt279 40449 65DeWitt Service Area eastbound 278 93448 8935 nbsp nbsp NY 298 NY 635 Syracuse East Syracuse 277 50446 59Toll Gantry E ZPass or Toll by Mail 276 58445 1134A nbsp I 481 Syracuse Oswego ChittenangoExit 6 on I 481 future I 81 Town of Manlius276 10444 34Toll Gantry E ZPass or Toll by Mail MadisonSullivan266 20428 41Chittenango Service Area westbound Canastota261 50420 8434 nbsp NY 13 Canastota Chittenango OneidaVerona252 71406 7033 nbsp NY 365 Verona Oneida Westmoreland244 00392 68Oneida Service Area eastbound 243 37391 6732 nbsp NY 233 Westmoreland Rome Utica232 85374 7431 nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp I 790 west NY 8 NY 12 Utica RomeEastern terminus of I 790 HerkimerSchuyler227 00365 32Schuyler Service Area westbound Village of Herkimer219 70353 5730 nbsp NY 28 Herkimer Mohawk Danube210 62338 9629A nbsp NY 169 Little Falls Dolgeville 209 90337 80Indian Castle Iroquois Service Area MontgomeryTown of Canajoharie194 10312 3729 nbsp nbsp NY 10 NY 5S Canajoharie Sharon SpringsTo NY 80 RootMohawk Valley Welcome Center westbound Fultonville182 17293 1728 nbsp NY 30A Fultonville FondaAlso serves Fulton County Airport Florida Amsterdam line173 59279 3727 nbsp NY 30 Amsterdam Florida171 80276 49Mohawk Service Area eastbound 168 20270 69Pattersonville Service Area westbound SchenectadyRotterdam162 22261 0726 nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp I 890 east to NY 5 NY 5S Schenectady ScotiaWestern terminus and exit 1B on I 890 access to NY 5 via NY 890 161 00259 10Toll Gantry E ZPass or Toll by Mail 158 82255 6025A nbsp nbsp nbsp I 88 west NY 7 Schenectady BinghamtonEastern terminus of I 88 157 80253 95Toll Gantry E ZPass or Toll by Mail AlbanyGuilderland153 83247 5725 nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp I 890 west NY 7 NY 146 SchenectadyEastern terminus of I 890 152 80245 91Guilderland Service Area eastbound Albany Guilderland line149 60240 76Toll Gantry eastern end of closed toll system 148 150 00238 420 0024 nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp I 87 south New York Thruway south to Mass Pike east New York CityEastern end of Thruway concurrency western end of I 87 concurrency exit number not signed westbound 1 nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp I 87 north to US 20 Western Avenue Albany International Airport Montreal SaratogaAccess to US 20 via NY 910F signed as exits 1S US 20 and 1N I 87 eastern end of I 87 concurrency Albany Guilderland Colonie tripoint0 801 292 nbsp CR 156 Fuller Road NY 910D Washington Avenue UAlbanySigned for Fuller Road westbound Washington Avenue eastbound Albany1 852 983State Offices 2 193 524 nbsp nbsp NY 85 west Slingerlands VoorheesvilleEastern terminus of NY 85 3 195 135 nbsp CR 155 Everett Road To NY 5 3 806 125ACorporate Woods BoulevardFormerly planned for I 687 5 108 216 nbsp US 9 Henry Johnson Boulevard Loudonville Arbor Hill 6 169 916A nbsp I 787 Troy AlbanyExit 5 on I 787 also serves MVP Arena and Albany Rensselaer station Hudson River6 4110 32Patroon Island Bridge RensselaerRensselaer6 9211 147Washington Avenue RensselaerEastbound exit and westbound entrance other movements via exit 8 North Greenbush7 7312 448 nbsp nbsp NY 43 east DefreestvilleWestern terminus of NY 43 East Greenbush9 4715 249 nbsp US 4 East Greenbush RensselaerTo NY 151 Schodack13 1021 0810 nbsp CR 54 Miller Road Schodack Center East Greenbush 14 5123 3511 nbsp nbsp US 9 US 20 East Greenbush NassauSigned as exits 11W north west and 11E south east eastbound to NY 150 19 5731 4912 nbsp US 9 Hudson Castleton on HudsonTo NY 203 amp NY 66 19 9932 17Exit B1 Toll Gantry western end of closed toll system 20 3932 81B1 nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp Berkshire Connector west to I 87 New York Thruway New York City BuffaloWestern end of Berkshire Connector concurrency ColumbiaChatham15 0924 29B2 nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp Taconic State Parkway south to NY 295 Chatham East Chatham CanaanNorthern terminus of Taconic State Parkway Canaan18 129 1Canaan Toll Gantry eastern end of closed toll system 23 2737 45B3 nbsp NY 22 Austerlitz New Lebanon West Stockbridge StockbridgeTo Route 102 amp Route 41 24 2839 07 nbsp nbsp I 90 east Mass Pike east Boston nbsp nbsp Berkshire Connector endsContinuation into Massachusetts eastern terminus of Berkshire Connector 1 000 mi 1 609 km 1 000 km 0 621 mi Concurrency terminus Electronic toll collection Closed former Incomplete accessAuxiliary routes editI 190 runs from I 90 NY Thruway along the Niagara Thruway Expressway to its terminus at the Canadian border on the Lewiston Queenston Bridge I 290 runs from I 190 to I 90 and provides the fastest road link between Toronto and the Northeastern United States I 390 runs from the Southern Tier Expressway I 86 NY 17 travels 76 miles to Rochester and ends at I 490 I 490 serves the city of Rochester and comprises part of the Inner Loop I 590 serves the city of Rochester and connects I 390 and I 490 I 690 serves the city of Syracuse and it s downtown I 790 serves the city of Utica and is concurrent with NY 5 during its whole 2 41 miles 3 88 kilometers I 890 serves the city of Schenectady and serves its downtown I 990 is the highest number interstate in the whole system See also edit nbsp U S roads portal nbsp New York state portal New York State ThruwayReferences edit 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 September 19 2022 a b Official route numbering for the National System of Interstate and Defense Highways Map American Association of State Highway Officials August 14 1957 a b c New York State Map Map Cartography by Map Works I Love New York 2009 History of NY Thruway 1991 2000 Archived from the original on August 15 2016 Retrieved June 30 2016 History Adirondack Northway Exit 3 Project New York State Department of Transportation Retrieved June 11 2010 Location of Routes Selected for Study Map Bureau of Public Roads 1938 Statement by Assemblyman Moffat and Senator Hampton Relative to the Establishment of a State Thruway System March 13 1942 New York Legislative Document 1942 v 15 no 80 82 p 153 The New York State Thruway The Beginning Thruway Chronology New York State Thruway Authority 2002 Archived from the original on October 29 2010 Retrieved November 18 2010 Kaszynski William 2000 The American Highway The History and Culture of Roads in the United States McFarland amp Company pp 141 142 ISBN 0 7864 0822 7 Weaver Warren Jr October 27 1954 More of Thruway Opened by Dewey The New York Times p 31 Ingraham Joseph C August 27 1956 Thruway Opening Final Link Friday The New York Times p 21 The Thruway Becomes the Longest Toll Road The New York Times December 15 1957 p 159 Ingraham Joseph C May 24 1959 Boston to Chicago The New York Times p XX1 Pierce Bret September 19 1956 Thruway Called a Model Project The New York Times p 39 Traffic Engineering for I90 Traffic Engineering 28 Institute of Traffic Engineers 1957 Highway Cost Estimates Hearings before a Subcommittee of the Committee on Public Works 1958 p 173 Johnston Louis Williamson Samuel H 2023 What Was the U S GDP Then MeasuringWorth Retrieved November 30 2023 United States Gross Domestic Product deflator figures follow the MeasuringWorth series U S Congress Miscellaneous Highway Legislation 1961 p 112 Rockefeller Urged to Veto Road Link The New York Times March 30 1964 p 25 New York with Sight Seeing Guide Map 1962 ed Cartography by General Drafting Esso 1962 New York Happy Motoring Guide Map 1963 ed Cartography by General Drafting Esso 1963 New York Map Cartography by Rand McNally and Company Mobil 1965 New York Map 1969 70 ed Cartography by General Drafting Esso 1968 New York State Highways Map Cartography by Rand McNally and Company State of New York Department of Commerce 1969 New York and New Jersey Tourgide Map Map 1972 ed Cartography by Rand McNally and Company Gulf Oil Company 1972 New York Map 1973 ed Cartography by H M Gousha Company Shell Oil Company 1973 New York and New Jersey Tourgide Map Map Cartography by Rand McNally and Company Gulf Oil Company 1974 New York Map 1977 78 ed Cartography by General Drafting Exxon 1977 Federal Highway Administration 2009 Structure 1073530 National Bridge Inventory United States Department of Transportation Federal Highway Administration 2009 Structure 1073540 National Bridge Inventory United States Department of Transportation Bergman Associates February 13 2008 Hudson River Crossing Study PDF Capital District Transportation Committee and New York State Department of Transportation p 22 Archived from the original PDF on July 19 2011 Retrieved December 25 2009 Google October 2011 Exit 24 Google Street View Retrieved July 10 2015 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a author has generic name help a b c Office of Technical Services 2014 Inventory Listing New York State Department of Transportation Engineering Division Retrieved July 10 2015 Albany County Rensselaer County 2011 Traffic Volume Report PDF New York State Department of Transportation September 25 2012 pp 148 149 Retrieved July 10 2015 Thruway Authority Announces Start of Bridge Removal Project in the Town of Hamburg Press release New York State Thruway Authority May 14 2018 Archived from the original on January 31 2020 Retrieved September 16 2019 O Brien Barbara April 28 2017 How the Thruway Authority Will Change Exit 57 in Hamburg The Buffalo News Retrieved September 16 2019 Victor New York United States Geological Survey 1966 Retrieved March 23 2022 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Interstate 90 in New York state KML file edit help Template Attached KML Interstate 90 in New YorkKML is from Wikidata Interstate 90 at Alps Roads New York Routes Upstate New York Roads nbsp Interstate 90 Previous state Pennsylvania New York Next state Massachusetts Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Interstate 90 in New York amp oldid 1220931465, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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