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New York State Route 27

New York State Route 27 (NY 27) is a 120.58-mile (194.05 km) long state highway that runs east–west from Interstate 278 (I-278) in the New York City borough of Brooklyn to Montauk Point State Park on Long Island, New York. Its two most prominent components are Sunrise Highway and Montauk Highway, the latter of which includes the Montauk Point State Parkway. NY 27 acts as the primary east–west highway on southern Long Island east of the interchange with the Heckscher State Parkway in Islip Terrace. The entire route in Suffolk, Nassau, and Queens counties were designated by the New York State Senate as the POW/MIA Memorial Highway. The highway gives access to every town on the South Shore. NY 27 is the easternmost state route in the state of New York.

New York State Route 27

NY 27 highlighted in red, service roads NY 906C and NY 906D in blue, and former routings maintained as reference routes in pink
Route information
Maintained by NYSDOT, NYCDOT and Suffolk County
Length120.58 mi[1] (194.05 km)
Existedmid-1920s[2][3]–present
Major junctions
West end I-278 in Greenwood Heights
Major intersections Belt Parkway in Howard Beach
I-678 / NY 878 in South Ozone Park
Belt Parkway in Laurelton
Meadowbrook State Parkway in Freeport
Wantagh State Parkway in Wantagh
NY 135 in Seaford
Robert Moses Causeway in West Islip
Heckscher State Parkway in Islip Terrace
NY 24 in Hampton Bays
East endMontauk Point State Park in Montauk
Location
CountryUnited States
StateNew York
CountiesKings, Queens, Nassau, Suffolk
Highway system

NY 27 has service roads that parallel the highway continuously from North Lindenhurst to Patchogue, and intermittently to the east into Southampton. They are officially designated, but not signed, as New York State Route 906C eastbound and New York State Route 906D westbound.

Route description

Prospect Expressway and Linden Boulevard

NY 27 begins at exit 24 of I-278 (the Gowanus Expressway) in the borough of Brooklyn in New York City. For the first stretch through Brooklyn, NY 27 runs along the Prospect Expressway — a sunken six-lane freeway through the Park Slope and Windsor Terrace neighborhoods — providing interchanges with Fourth Avenue, Seventh Avenue, and 11th Avenue. At exit 5, eastbound NY 27 leaves the Prospect Expressway, which then interchanges with Ocean and Fort Hamilton Parkways before ending a short distance to the south at exit 6 and Church Avenue.[4] Eastbound NY 27 follows East 5th Street to Caton Avenue; westbound NY 27 leaves Caton Avenue at Coney Island Avenue, then follows Church Avenue to the Prospect Expressway.[5]

 
The Prospect Expressway at exit 3 as seen from Prospect Park West in Brooklyn

NY 27 runs along Caton Avenue near the south end of Prospect Park. A short distance east, the street merges into Linden Boulevard, crossing eastward through Brooklyn on Linden. NY 27 passes east through East Flatbush and reaches a large intersection with Kings Highway and Remsen Avenue, where it expands into a six-lane boulevard through Brooklyn with frontage roads. East of East 96th Street, NY 27 intersects Rockaway Parkway and then travels under the BMT Canarsie Line, winding through New Lots before turning northeast. After crossing under a nearby subway yard, the boulevard passes through the City Line neighborhood. Near the junction with Ruby Street, NY 27 enters the borough of Queens, but retains the Linden Boulevard name.[4]

Conduit Avenue

Continuing northeast through Queens, NY 27 and Linden Boulevard enter Ozone Park and reach an interchange with Conduit Avenue, where Linden Boulevard ends. NY 27 then continues eastward along the divided Conduit Avenues. This portion of the route becomes a controlled access highway, coterminous with the western portion of Nassau Expressway (NY 878) starting at Cross Bay Boulevard until Aqueduct Road.[6] (When constructed, the portion from Linden Boulevard until what is now Aqueduct Road, was designated Sunrise Highway. This is not to be confused with present Sunrise Highway, which is at the other end of Queens. Sunrise became Conduit at 111th Street, which no longer exists, but is approximately where Aqueduct Road currently crosses over Route 27.)[7][8]

When the Nassau Expressway splits off, NY 27 continues east along Conduit Avenue and remains a frontage road for multiple exits of the Belt Parkway. The route interchanges with I-678 (the Van Wyck Expressway) a short distance later.[4]

NY 27 remains a frontage road entering Springfield Gardens, crossing multiple exits of the Belt Parkway until entering Laurelton. In Laurelton, the Belt Parkway turns northward while NY 27 continues eastbound as South Conduit Avenue and westbound as Sunrise Highway, but stays a seven-lane divided boulevard (four eastbound and three westbound). The route crosses Francis Lewis Boulevard and south of the Rosedale Long Island Rail Road station; just east of Hook Creek Boulevard, NY 27 enters Nassau County and becomes the Sunrise Highway.[4]

Sunrise Highway

 
Aerial view eastward of Sunrise Highway in (from bottom) Wantagh, Seaford, and Massapequa in eastern Nassau County.
 
Sunrise Bridge over the Shinnecock Canal

Sunrise Highway begins as a six to eight-lane arterial highway in eastern Queens, directly paralleling the Atlantic and Babylon branches of the Long Island Rail Road. It heads east into Nassau County, passing through Valley Stream, Lynbrook, and Rockville Centre on its way to Merrick. There it connects to the Meadowbrook State Parkway by way of an interchange. NY 27 continues to Wantagh, where it has an interchange with the Wantagh State Parkway. One mile (1.6 km) later, the highway has an interchange with NY 135 in Seaford. In East Massapequa, NY 27 passes under the LIRR and ends its stretch through Nassau.

NY 27 then enters Suffolk County, where it veers to the northeast, bypassing Copiague. At the interchange with NY 109 in West Babylon, Sunrise Highway becomes a six-lane expressway with a two-lane service road on either side. The route then meets the Robert Moses Causeway near West Islip. In East Patchogue, New York, the highway is reduced to a four-lane expressway after passing the NY 112 exit.

Between County Route 16 (CR 16) in Brookhaven and CR 46 in Shirley, the median is lined with pine trees along South Haven County Park. The setting along these roads is similar to the one on the Southern State Parkway west of Belmont Lake State Park. The last exit with a state highway is near Hampton Bays, where it meets NY 24.

East of NY 24, Sunrise Highway crosses over the Shinnecock Canal and has one last eastbound exit before merging with CR 39. It changes names to North Highway, a four-lane undivided highway more commonly known as the Southampton Bypass. The highway continues east near toward village of Southampton before ending at an intersection with Montauk Highway. NY 27 turns east at that junction, following Montauk Highway toward Water Mill and points east.

Montauk Highway

 
NY 27 in Montauk Point State Park

The section of Montauk Highway over which NY 27 runs is two lanes wide, with the exception of the four-lane sections in the village of East Hampton. This section of NY 27 is concurrent with New York State Bicycle Route 27. NY 27 heads generally northeastward to East Hampton village where it becomes Woods Lane, and later, Main Street. It has an intersection with the southern end of NY 114 before entering downtown. After passing Newtown Lane and North Main Street, NY 27's name changes to Pantigo Road, as it passes an eponymous historic district, listed on the National Register of Historic Places.[9]

In the hamlet of Amagansett, NY 27's name changes back to Main Street, again returning to the Montauk Highway name. The road becomes Montauk Point State Parkway as it enters Hither Hills State Park in Napeague. The parkway, a Robert Moses-designed highway, carries NY 27 to its eastern terminus at Montauk Point State Park, on the east side of Montauk. The final 10 miles (16 kilometers) of NY 27 is known as Montauk Point State Parkway.

History

Designation and early realignments

NY 27's designation was assigned in the mid-1920s to a road extending from the New York City line to Amagansett.[2][3] It began at the point where Merrick Road exited Queens and entered Nassau County. It mostly followed Merrick Road and Montauk Highway east to Amagansett. From East Patchogue to Brookhaven, NY 27 followed South Country Road, passing through the downtown section of the village of Bellport.[3][10] The NY 27 designation was extended eastward along Montauk Highway to Montauk Point by 1930.[11]

On February 24, 1930, South Country Road was added to the Suffolk County highway system as CR 36.[12] NY 27 was subsequently realigned to follow Montauk Highway between East Patchogue and Brookhaven.[13]

NY 27 was realigned west of Oakdale c. 1931 to follow Sunrise Boulevard, a new highway parallel to Merrick Road, and then Montauk Highway, between the New York City line and Massapequa connecting several local roads from Massapequa to Montauk Highway at Oakdale. The former routing of NY 27 from Massapequa to Oakdale became NY 27A, connecting to NY 27 in Massapequa by way of County Line Road.[14][15]

Sunrise Boulevard was extended eastward to Oakdale c. 1934 as a realignment of NY 27.[16][17] One portion of NY 27's former route between NY 27A in Massapequa and the Suffolk County line is known as Old Sunrise Highway, and remains state-maintained to this day as NY 900D, an unsigned reference route.[18]

Sunrise Highway was built over the Brooklyn Waterworks aqueduct, past the south side of Aqueduct Racetrack.[19]

New York City

In December 1934, the route was extended westward into New York City. NY 27 followed Sunrise Highway, Linden Boulevard, and Flatbush Avenue through Queens and Brooklyn to the Manhattan Bridge, where it continued into Manhattan along Canal Street to a terminus at 6th Avenue (then-U.S. Route 1A and later NY 1A).[20]

The route was realigned slightly in the early 1940s to follow Atlantic and Washington Avenues, Eastern Parkway, Buffalo Avenue, and Rockaway Avenue between Flatbush Avenue and Linden Boulevard.[21][22] NY 27 was again altered in the mid-1960s to continue west on Linden Boulevard, Caton Avenue, and Church Avenue to the south end of the Prospect Expressway. There, the route turned north, following the freeway to its end at the Gowanus Expressway (then-NY 27A), where NY 27A now ends.[23][24] The Prospect Expressway was planned by Robert Moses, and was constructed during the 1950s.

Prior to 1970, NY 27A continued north to the Holland Tunnel in Manhattan by way of the Gowanus Expressway, the Brooklyn–Battery Tunnel, and the West Side Elevated Highway.[23] On January 1, 1970, NY 27A was truncated eastward to its current western terminus in Massapequa while NY 27 was extended northward along NY 27A's former route to the Holland Tunnel, where it ends at I-78 and NY 9A.[25]

By 1973, NY 27 was cut back to its interchange with the Gowanus Expressway while I-478 was assigned to both the Battery Tunnel and all of the West Side Elevated Highway south of the Lincoln Tunnel.[26][27]

Long Island

Robert Moses developed plans for an elevated expressway featuring 10 to 12 lanes along Sunrise Highway through Nassau County. This expressway would have provided a truck link for the South Shore of Long Island but the downtown villages along the route effectively put a stop to the idea.[28]

 
Sunrise Highway becomes a limited-access highway at NY 109.

The portion of Sunrise Highway between North Lindenhurst and the town of Southampton was gradually upgraded to a limited-access highway. At the east end of NY 27 the highway abruptly became a three-lane highway east of the Shinnecock Canal, at the point where NY 27 is concurrent with CR 39. This area was known as the "Shinnecock Squeeze" as traffic on the two-lane eastbound NY 27 was "squeezed" into a single lane.

In 2006 and 2007 Suffolk County and Southampton officials began using traffic cones to adjust the lanes to accommodate peak travel in what was called the "traffic cone program".[29]

At the end of summer 2007, another eastbound lane was added, heading eastward to North Sea Road. The construction snarled traffic on CR 39. The Long Island Rail Road added three trains each way between Speonk and East Hampton during the construction.[30] In April 2008, the three-lane segment from North Sea Road to Flying Point Road was reconfigured from one eastbound and two westbound lanes to two eastbound and one westbound lane. The merge from two lanes to one in the eastbound direction is now assisted by a signalized intersection at Flying Point Road, where eastbound NY 27 traffic makes a left turn onto Montauk Highway.[31] This widening project eliminates the "Shinnecock Squeeze."[32]

Eastward extension

The first proposals for an extension east of the Shinnecock Canal were made in the 1950s. In 1969, the New York Legislature approved a $160 million plan for the extension. It was a limited-access route, flanked by bicycle and equestrian trails. The eastbound and westbound roadways were to be separated by wide wooded medians. For the most part, the road was to run a mile or two north of existing NY 27, thus avoiding the populated centers through which it now passes. The extended Sunrise Highway would have had interchanges with CR 38 (North Sea Road) and CR 39 (County Road), CR 79 (Bridgehampton–Sag Harbor Road), NY 114 (East Hampton–Sag Harbor Turnpike), CR 40 (Three Mile Harbor Road), and CR 45 (Amagansett–Springs Road) before merging back into the existing Montauk Highway. The exits would have been sequentially numbered from 67 to 72. The plan failed, and Governor Hugh Carey canceled it in 1975. Other suggestions have included building a limited-access road on either side of Long Island Rail Road's Montauk Branch.

Older interchanges

As Sunrise Highway was upgraded during the 1970s and 1980s many interchanges were redesigned and replaced. The original interchange with the Robert Moses Causeway in West Islip had two parkway-style arch bridges over two lanes of NY 27. When the service roads were built in Western Islip Township between 1969 and 1972, parkway-style bridges were added for them as well. The interchanges at Fifth Ave and Brentwood Road in Bay Shore had parkway-style arch bridges and cloverleaves. When the service roads were added, the parkway-style bridges were removed and replaced with the modern structures that exist today and the original cloverleaves were modified to align with the new service roads.

As with interchanges to the west, Islip Avenue (NY 111) and Carleton Avenue (CR 17) in Islip Terrace originally had parkway-style bridges crossing over Sunrise Highway. However, only Islip Ave had a partial cloverleaf on the west side of the bridge. The eastern side of the bridge used side streets for access, as did both sides of the Carleton Ave bridge. This section of Sunrise Highway wasn't divided. Since 1983, both areas have more modern bridges over the service roads, and the old cross streets connect to those service roads or other side roads instead. Islip Avenue connects to NY 27 at exit 45 while Carleton Avenue meets the Sunrise Highway at exit 46.[33]

Proposed interchanges and crossings

Besides the replacement of interchanges in Western Suffolk County, Sunrise Highway has had proposed interchanges and crossings that were either never built or were built according to alternate design specifications.

In the North Lindenhurst area, plans to construct a cloverleaf interchange with CR 2 (Straight Path) in Copiague have existed for some time. In recent years, planners have realized that such an interchange would be too close to the cloverleafs with CR 47 (Great Neck Road) to the west and CR 3 (Wellwood Road) to the east. To further complicate matters, a widened CR 28 was extended to Sunrise Highway near the Straight Path intersection in the late-1980s. To date, no interchange has been built for this area.

The Oakdale Merge is a convergence of Sunrise Highway and Montauk Highway between Great River and Oakdale abutting the southern edge of Connetquot River State Park. The Montauk Highway predates the Sunrise Highway in the area. When Sunrise Highway was extended east of Amityville in 1940, it terminated at Montauk Highway's entrance to Connetquot River State Park.[34]

In 1953, Sunrise Highway was extended to East Patchogue; a 0.5 mi (0.80 km) overlap of NY 27 and NY 27A was created, with at-grade intersections connecting the highways.[35] A segment of this alignment remains south of the eastern interchange.[36]

NY 27A was truncated east of the overlap in 1972.[12] Plans to upgrade the interchange have existed since its creation.

During the early-1960s, the Suffolk County Department of Public Works considered designating a county highway to connect Nicolls Road in Lake Grove through the Long Island MacArthur Airport, then on to the east end of the merge. As recently as 1981, the New York State Department of Transportation planned to add service roads and a proper interchange at both ends of the merge.[37] Pressure from environmental groups seeking to avoid damaging the parkland stalled construction. NYSDOT eventually reconstructed Sunrise Highway in eastern Islip township into a freeway during the 1990s, resulting in the present configuration.

The entrance to Connetquot River Park remained as an at-grade intersection, accessible only from the westbound lane. Former segments of Montauk Highway now exist on both sides of the interchange, and sections of both roads were converted into fishing areas owned by the New York State Department of Environmental Conservation.[36] Numerous accidents occurred at the east end of the merge, resulting in its reconstruction in 1999. A new off-ramp to the service road for Pond Road was built, resulting in renumbering of exit 47 to exit 46A.[38]

While none of the interchanges north of Patchogue were built until 1988 to 1993, the New York State Department of Transportation (NYSDOT) had known the need for them and had planned them decades before their eventual construction. As an example, Waverly Avenue (CR 19) was originally proposed as a cloverleaf interchange. Today, exit 52 with CR 19 is a diamond interchange instead.[39][40] North Ocean Avenue (CR 83) was originally proposed to be accessible via connecting ramps to side streets including Austin Street along the eastbound lane and Sinn Street along the westbound lane. Today, exit 53A is a half-diamond interchange while Austin Street and Howard Street are now dead-end streets, and Sinn Street never reached North Ocean Avenue.

Maple Avenue had crossed the median on NY 27 between North Ocean Avenue and NY 112 until 1975. This road could also have been used as a connecting ramp to both roads. Today, the north section only intersects the westbound service road, while the south section was converted into a dead-end street north of Austin Street. NY 112 was originally proposed to be accessible via connecting ramps to side streets such as Franklin Street along the eastbound lane and an extension of Sinn Street along the westbound lane.[39]

Sinn Street was acquired by NYSDOT east of NY 112 in the early-1960s, and was gradually abandoned.[40] Today, exit 53 is a diamond interchange, and Sinn Street, Austin Street, and Franklin Street are now dead-end streets. Originally there were proposals to connect Washington Avenue and Phyllis Drive via ramps to side streets such as Franklin Street along the eastbound lane, and to an extension of Sinn Street along the westbound lane.

Phyllis Drive was once part of NY 27 until Sunrise Highway was extended to Eastport in 1957.[40] Today, both roads are only accessible via the service roads. Some residents are waiting for a potential pedestrian bridge connecting the two ends of Washington Avenue.[citation needed]

West of the Carmans River near Southaven County Park in South Haven, there was a plan to combine the eastbound service road with Montauk Highway, similar to the Oakdale Merge.

NY 27A

 

NY 27A (17.31 miles or 27.86 kilometres) is an alternate route of NY 27 across southern Long Island from Massapequa Park to Oakdale, accessing Babylon and Islip.[1] It was designated NY 27A c. 1931.[14][15]

Major intersections

CountyLocationmi[1]kmExitDestinationsNotes
BrooklynGreenwood Heights0.000.00- 
 
I-278 east (Brooklyn-Queens Expressway) to I-478 (Hugh L. Carey Tunnel) – Queens, Bronx, Manhattan
Western terminus; exit 24 (I-278)
0.010.0161Hamilton AvenueWestbound exit only; to Hugh L. Carey Tunnel
South Slope0.240.392  3rd Avenue / 4th Avenue to I-278 west (Brooklyn-Queens Expressway) – Staten IslandEastbound entrance and westbound exit
0.610.9837th Avenue / 8th AvenueEastbound entrance and westbound exit
Windsor Terrace0.911.464 
 
 
NY 27 Truck east (10th Avenue) / 11th Avenue
Eastbound exit and westbound entrance
1.452.335 
 
NY 27 east / Fort Hamilton Parkway
NY 27 leaves the expressway eastbound
Kensington1.762.836Church Avenue / Ocean Parkway south – Coney IslandAt-grade intersection with no left turns; NY 27 joins the expressway westbound
East end of freeway section
QueensHoward Beach-Conduit Avenue west to Atlantic AvenuePartial interchange with no eastbound access; site of formerly proposed Bushwick Expressway
-Cross Bay Boulevard – Riis ParkInterchange
9.0314.53NY 27 transitions to Belt Parkway service roads
-  Belt Parkway – Verrazano Bridge, Eastern Long IslandSame-directional interchange only; exit 17W on Belt Parkway
South Ozone Park- 
 
 
 
  NY 878 east (Nassau Expressway) to I-678 (Van Wyck Expressway) – Kennedy Airport
Westbound exit only; exits 18B-19 on Belt Parkway; western terminus of NY 878
-  Lefferts Boulevard – Aqueduct Racetrack, Long-Term ParkingEastbound exit and westbound at-grade intersection
11.5118.52-   I-678 (Van Wyck Expressway) – Kennedy Airport, Whitestone Bridge, BronxWestbound exit and entrance; exit 1 on I-678
-  150th Street – Kennedy AirportEastbound interchange and westbound at-grade intersection
-  JFK Expressway south – Kennedy AirportWestbound exit and eastbound entrance
Laurelton14.7123.67- 
 
Belt Parkway west – Verrazano Bridge
Exit 23B on Belt Parkway; NY 27 leaves Belt Parkway service roads
NassauRockville CentreMerrick RoadInterchange with directional access (eastbound to eastbound and westbound to westbound) only
Freeport23.8938.45  Meadowbrook State Parkway – Mineola, Jones BeachExit M8 on Meadowbrook Parkway
Wantagh26.7343.02  Wantagh State Parkway – Westbury, Jones BeachExit W5 on Wantagh Parkway
Seaford27.9344.95 
 
NY 135 north (Seaford–Oyster Bay Expressway) – Syosset
Exit 2 on NY 135
Massapequa28.8346.40  NY 107 (Hicksville Road)
East Massapequa31.0449.95 
 
NY 27A east (Old Sunrise Highway)
Western terminus of NY 27A
SuffolkAmityville32.0751.61  NY 110 – Amityville, HuntingtonInterchange
CopiagueNorth Amityville line32.9453.01  CR 47 (Great Neck Road) – Copiague, FarmingdaleInterchange
North Lindenhurst34.1754.99  CR 3 (Wellwood Avenue) – Lindenhurst, MelvilleInterchange
West end of freeway section
North LindenhurstWest Babylon line35.3256.8437  NY 109 (Babylon-Farmingdale Road) – Babylon, Farmingdale
West Babylon36.4558.6638Little East Neck Road / Belmont Avenue
36.9359.4339Hubbards Path
North BabylonWest Islip line38.2661.5740  NY 231 (Babylon-Northport Expressway) – Babylon, Huntington
West IslipBay Shore line39.7563.9741  Robert Moses Causeway – Robert Moses Park, Sunken Meadow ParkExit RM1 on Robert Moses Causeway
Brightwaters42Manor LaneWestbound exit and eastbound entrance
Bay Shore41.1366.1943  CR 13 (Fifth Avenue) – Bay Shore, Brentwood
42.4068.2444Brentwood Road – Brentwood, Bay Shore
Community of Islip44.0670.9145  NY 111 (Islip Avenue) – Islip, Smithtown
East IslipIslip Terrace line45.7473.6146   Heckscher State Parkway / CR 17 / Connetquot Avenue – East Islip, Heckscher Park, New YorkNo westbound signage for CR 17; exit 44 on Heckscher Parkway
45.7973.69Suffolk County Water AuthorityUnnumbered westbound exit
Great RiverNorth Great River line46.5474.90Connetquot State ParkUnnumbered westbound exit
47.4176.3046A 
 
 
 
NY 27A west / CR 85 east (Montauk Highway) – Oakdale, Great River
Eastbound exit only; eastern terminus of NY 27A
OakdaleBohemia line47Pond Road southEastbound exit only
47AOakdale–Bohemia Road – Bohemia, OakdaleEastbound exit and westbound entrance
OakdaleBohemia
Sayville tripoint
50.1680.7248Locust Avenue – Bohemia, Oakdale
SayvilleBohemia line51.0682.1749   CR 93 (Lakeland Avenue) / Johnson Avenue – Ronkonkoma, Sayville, MacArthur AirportNo signage for Johnson Avenue westbound
50A  Johnson Avenue – Sayville, Bohemia, MacArthur AirportWestbound exit only; formerly CR 112
SayvilleBohemia
Holbrook tripoint
50Lincoln Avenue – Ronkonkoma, SayvilleNo westbound entrance
BayportHolbrook line52.4484.3951  
 
  CR 97 / NY 454 west – Blue Point, Stony Brook, Commack, MacArthur Airport
No eastbound access to NY 454; eastern terminus of NY 454
North Patchogue54.0787.0252  CR 19 (Waverly Avenue) – Holbrook, Patchogue
54.8288.2252A  CR 83 (North Ocean Avenue) – Farmingville, PatchogueEastbound exit and westbound entrance; southern terminus of CR 83
North PatchogueEast Patchogue line55.3189.0153  NY 112 – Port Jefferson, PatchogueNo eastbound signage for CR 83
East Patchogue56.7291.2854  Hospital Road – PatchogueServes Brookhaven Memorial Hospital
East PatchogueNorth Bellport line57.4892.5155  CR 101 – Patchogue, Yaphank
North Bellport58.4294.0256Station Road – Bellport, Yaphank
BrookhavenNorth Bellport
Yaphank tripoint
60.4797.3257   CR 16 (Horseblock Road) / CR 21 (Yaphank Avenue) – Brookhaven, YaphankSigned as exits 57N (north / west) and 57S (south / east)
Shirley62.65100.8358  CR 46 (William Floyd Parkway) – Shirley, Wading RiverSigned exits as 58N (north) and 58S (south)
Center MorichesManorville line66.35106.7859Wading River Road – Wading River, Center MorichesFormerly CR 25
67.28108.2860Railroad Avenue – Center Moriches, ManorvilleWestbound exit and eastbound entrance
East MorichesManorville
Eastport tripoint
69.60112.0161  CR 51 – East Moriches, Riverhead, EastportEastbound exit and westbound entrance; other movements via exit 62
EastportNorthampton line70.96114.2062  CR 111 – ManorvilleOriginally planned as a cloverleaf interchange with collector/distributor roads
WesthamptonNorthampton
Flanders tripoint
75.47121.4663  CR 31 – Westhampton Beach, RiverheadSigned as exits 63N (north) and 63S (south); serves Francis S. Gabreski Airport
East QuogueFlanders line76.95123.8464  CR 104 – Quogue, East Quogue, RiverheadSigned as exits 64N (north) and 64S (south); formerly NY 113
Hampton Bays81.15130.6065  NY 24 – Hampton Bays, RiverheadSigned as exits 65N (north) and 65S (south)
82.94133.4866  North Road (CR 39) – Shinnecock HillsQuarter-cloverleaf interchanges
Shinnecock Hills- 
 
CR 39 west (North Road) – Hampton Bays
Westbound exit only; western terminus of concurrency with CR 39
East end of freeway section
Tuckahoe 
 
CR 52 north – North Sea, Sag Harbor
Southern terminus of CR 52
Village of Southampton 
 
CR 38 north (North Sea Road) – North Sea, Southampton
Southern terminus of CR 38; eastern terminus of CR 39 and western terminus of CR 39A
89.68144.33Montauk Highway / Flying Point Road – SouthamptonEastern terminus of CR 39A
Bridgehampton 
 
CR 79 north – Sag Harbor, Shelter Island
Southern terminus of CR 79
Village of East Hampton100.17161.21 
 
NY 114 north – Sag Harbor, Shelter Island
Southern terminus of NY 114
Montauk120.58194.05Montauk Point State ParkEastern terminus; loop around parking lot
1.000 mi = 1.609 km; 1.000 km = 0.621 mi

See also

References

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  2. ^ a b "New York's Main Highways Designated by Numbers". The New York Times. December 21, 1924. p. XX9. Retrieved July 18, 2010.
  3. ^ a b c Official Map Showing State Highways and other important roads (Map). Cartography by Rand McNally and Company. State of New York Department of Public Works. 1926.
  4. ^ a b c d Microsoft; Nokia (February 24, 2013). "overview map of NY 27 (Prospect Expressway to Nassau County border)" (Map). Bing Maps. Microsoft. Retrieved February 24, 2013.
  5. ^ Google (May 30, 2021). "Route 27 Sign, Coney Island Avenue" (Map). Google Maps. Google. Retrieved May 30, 2021.
  6. ^ "Engineering Division - Office of Technical Services - Inventory Listing - 2017". New York State Department of Trannsportation. 10 and 11 (Nassau/Suffolk and Brooklyn/Queens). 2017.
  7. ^ "Shell street guide of Brooklyn - Queens". New York Public Library - NYPL Map Warper. Shell Oil. 1940. Map#35525. Retrieved 2020-04-01.
  8. ^ PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF NEW YORK on relation of ARVERNE BAY CONSTRUCTION COMPANY, Relator-Respondent against HARRIS H MURDOOK as Chairman BERNARD A SAVAGE CHARLES M BLUM and JOHN J MCELLIGOTT Fire Chief as members and together constituting the Board of Standards and Appeals of The City of York Defendants-Appellants and DENTAVE REALTY CORPORATION Intervenor-Appellant. New York Supreme Court Appellate Division Second Department. 1934. pp. 2, 22, 201–202, 378, 394, 449, 457, 465, 495, 474. ISBN 9780224618175 – via Google Books - miscatalogues as Skinner, Burrhus Frederic, "Verbal Behavior" (1957, Appleton-Century-Crofts).
  9. ^ "National Register Information System". National Register of Historic Places. National Park Service. April 15, 2008.
  10. ^ Rand McNally Auto Road Atlas – New York and Vicinity (Map). Rand McNally and Company. 1926. p. 86. Retrieved January 28, 2010.
  11. ^ Dickinson, Leon A. (January 12, 1930). "New Signs for State Highways". The New York Times. p. 136. Retrieved July 18, 2010.
  12. ^ a b Suffolk County Department of Public Works. "County Road System – County of Suffolk, New York" (PDF). Retrieved May 24, 2009.
  13. ^ Texaco Road Map – New York (Map). Cartography by Rand McNally and Company. Texas Oil Company. 1932.
  14. ^ a b Road Map of New York (Map). Cartography by General Drafting. Standard Oil Company of New York. 1930.
  15. ^ a b New York (Map). Cartography by H.M. Gousha Company. Kendall Refining Company. 1931.
  16. ^ Texaco Road Map – New York (Map). Cartography by Rand McNally and Company. Texas Oil Company. 1933.
  17. ^ Road Map of New York (Map). Cartography by Rand McNally and Company. Texas Oil Company. 1934.
  18. ^ New York State Department of Transportation (January 2012). Official Description of Highway Touring Routes, Bicycling Touring Routes, Scenic Byways, & Commemorative/Memorial Designations in New York State (PDF). Retrieved February 16, 2012.
  19. ^ "Excavating And Pipe Laying Apparatus In Use On The Brooklyn Aqueduct". Scientific American. January 3, 1891.
  20. ^ "Mark Ways in the City". The New York Times. December 16, 1934. p. XX12. Retrieved July 18, 2010.
  21. ^ Map of New York (Map). Cartography by H.M. Gousha Company. Shell Oil Company. 1940.
  22. ^ New York with Pictorial Guide (Map). Cartography by General Drafting. Esso. 1942.
  23. ^ a b New York and Metropolitan New York (Map). Cartography by Rand McNally and Company. Sinclair Oil Corporation. 1964.
  24. ^ Gousha Road Atlas (Map). Cartography by H.M. Gousha Company. H.M. Gousha Company. 1967. p. 56. Retrieved January 28, 2010.
  25. ^ State of New York Department of Transportation (January 1, 1970). Official Description of Touring Routes in New York State (PDF). Retrieved May 24, 2009.
  26. ^ New York (Map) (1973 ed.). Cartography by H.M. Gousha Company. Shell Oil Company. 1973.
  27. ^ Central Park Digital Raster Quadrangle (Map). 1:24,000. New York State Department of Transportation. 1975. Retrieved December 28, 2009.
  28. ^ Silver, Roy R. (March 20, 1966). "Nassau Villagers Fight Elevated Sunrise Highway". The New York Times. p. 57. Retrieved July 18, 2010.
  29. ^ "The summer traffic cone program on County Road 39". Long Island Business News. 13 July 2007.
  30. ^ "LIRR Adds Service On South Fork as Road Work on County Road 39 Begins". 1010 WINS. New York City. Associated Press. September 18, 2007.
  31. ^ Google (August 4, 2019). "NY-27" (Map). Google Maps. Google. Retrieved August 4, 2019.
  32. ^ Greenburg, Peter (2009). Don't Go There!: The Travel Detective's Essential Guide to the Must-Miss Places of the World. New York: Rodale Inc. p. 190. ISBN 978-1-60529-994-5. Retrieved May 7, 2013.
  33. ^ Bunch, William (March 7, 1986). "Another Delay for Sunrise Highway Work". Newsday. New York City. p. 25.
  34. ^ Suffolk County Road Atlas (Map). Hagstrom Map. 1941. Retrieved April 28, 2010.
  35. ^ Hagstrom's Atlas of Western Suffolk County, New York (1958, and other years)
  36. ^ a b Google (February 1, 2011). "Oakdale Merge" (Map). Google Maps. Google. Retrieved February 1, 2011.
  37. ^ Giorgianni, Anthony (December 31, 1981). "Oakdale Interchange Awaits Approval". Suffolk County News.
  38. ^ Perry, N.W. (January 26, 2004). "Interchange of the Week – NY 27 & NY 27A, Oakdale". Empire State Roads. Retrieved April 9, 2012.
  39. ^ a b Town of Brookhaven Zoning Map (Map). Town of Brookhaven, New York. August 21, 2000.
  40. ^ a b c Atlas of Suffolk County, New York (Map). Hagstrom Map. 1969.

External links

KML is from Wikidata
  • New York State Route 27 at Alps' Roads • New York Routes
  • The traffic circle at the eastern terminus of NY 27 at Montauk Point
  • NYC Roads article on NY 27
  • NY 27 (Greater New York Roads)
  • Oakdale Merge @ Empire State Roads.com
  • NYCroads.com – Prospect Expressway (NY 27)

york, state, route, sunrise, highway, redirects, here, sunrise, highway, diego, county, california, county, route, california, redirects, here, also, refer, york, 27th, congressional, district, mile, long, state, highway, that, runs, east, west, from, intersta. Sunrise Highway redirects here For the Sunrise Highway in San Diego County California see County Route S1 California NY 27 redirects here NY 27 may also refer to New York s 27th congressional district New York State Route 27 NY 27 is a 120 58 mile 194 05 km long state highway that runs east west from Interstate 278 I 278 in the New York City borough of Brooklyn to Montauk Point State Park on Long Island New York Its two most prominent components are Sunrise Highway and Montauk Highway the latter of which includes the Montauk Point State Parkway NY 27 acts as the primary east west highway on southern Long Island east of the interchange with the Heckscher State Parkway in Islip Terrace The entire route in Suffolk Nassau and Queens counties were designated by the New York State Senate as the POW MIA Memorial Highway The highway gives access to every town on the South Shore NY 27 is the easternmost state route in the state of New York New York State Route 27NY 27 highlighted in red service roads NY 906C and NY 906D in blue and former routings maintained as reference routes in pinkRoute informationMaintained by NYSDOT NYCDOT and Suffolk CountyLength120 58 mi 1 194 05 km Existedmid 1920s 2 3 presentMajor junctionsWest endI 278 in Greenwood HeightsMajor intersectionsBelt Parkway in Howard Beach I 678 NY 878 in South Ozone Park Belt Parkway in Laurelton Meadowbrook State Parkway in Freeport Wantagh State Parkway in Wantagh NY 135 in Seaford Robert Moses Causeway in West Islip Heckscher State Parkway in Islip Terrace NY 24 in Hampton BaysEast endMontauk Point State Park in MontaukLocationCountryUnited StatesStateNew YorkCountiesKings Queens Nassau SuffolkHighway systemNew York HighwaysInterstate US State Reference Parkways NY 26B NY 27ANY 27 has service roads that parallel the highway continuously from North Lindenhurst to Patchogue and intermittently to the east into Southampton They are officially designated but not signed as New York State Route 906C eastbound and New York State Route 906D westbound Contents 1 Route description 1 1 Prospect Expressway and Linden Boulevard 1 2 Conduit Avenue 1 3 Sunrise Highway 1 4 Montauk Highway 2 History 2 1 Designation and early realignments 2 2 New York City 2 3 Long Island 2 3 1 Eastward extension 2 3 2 Older interchanges 2 3 3 Proposed interchanges and crossings 3 NY 27A 4 Major intersections 5 See also 6 References 7 External linksRoute description EditProspect Expressway and Linden Boulevard Edit Main article Linden Boulevard NY 27 begins at exit 24 of I 278 the Gowanus Expressway in the borough of Brooklyn in New York City For the first stretch through Brooklyn NY 27 runs along the Prospect Expressway a sunken six lane freeway through the Park Slope and Windsor Terrace neighborhoods providing interchanges with Fourth Avenue Seventh Avenue and 11th Avenue At exit 5 eastbound NY 27 leaves the Prospect Expressway which then interchanges with Ocean and Fort Hamilton Parkways before ending a short distance to the south at exit 6 and Church Avenue 4 Eastbound NY 27 follows East 5th Street to Caton Avenue westbound NY 27 leaves Caton Avenue at Coney Island Avenue then follows Church Avenue to the Prospect Expressway 5 The Prospect Expressway at exit 3 as seen from Prospect Park West in Brooklyn NY 27 runs along Caton Avenue near the south end of Prospect Park A short distance east the street merges into Linden Boulevard crossing eastward through Brooklyn on Linden NY 27 passes east through East Flatbush and reaches a large intersection with Kings Highway and Remsen Avenue where it expands into a six lane boulevard through Brooklyn with frontage roads East of East 96th Street NY 27 intersects Rockaway Parkway and then travels under the BMT Canarsie Line winding through New Lots before turning northeast After crossing under a nearby subway yard the boulevard passes through the City Line neighborhood Near the junction with Ruby Street NY 27 enters the borough of Queens but retains the Linden Boulevard name 4 Conduit Avenue Edit Main article Conduit Avenue Continuing northeast through Queens NY 27 and Linden Boulevard enter Ozone Park and reach an interchange with Conduit Avenue where Linden Boulevard ends NY 27 then continues eastward along the divided Conduit Avenues This portion of the route becomes a controlled access highway coterminous with the western portion of Nassau Expressway NY 878 starting at Cross Bay Boulevard until Aqueduct Road 6 When constructed the portion from Linden Boulevard until what is now Aqueduct Road was designated Sunrise Highway This is not to be confused with present Sunrise Highway which is at the other end of Queens Sunrise became Conduit at 111th Street which no longer exists but is approximately where Aqueduct Road currently crosses over Route 27 7 8 When the Nassau Expressway splits off NY 27 continues east along Conduit Avenue and remains a frontage road for multiple exits of the Belt Parkway The route interchanges with I 678 the Van Wyck Expressway a short distance later 4 NY 27 remains a frontage road entering Springfield Gardens crossing multiple exits of the Belt Parkway until entering Laurelton In Laurelton the Belt Parkway turns northward while NY 27 continues eastbound as South Conduit Avenue and westbound as Sunrise Highway but stays a seven lane divided boulevard four eastbound and three westbound The route crosses Francis Lewis Boulevard and south of the Rosedale Long Island Rail Road station just east of Hook Creek Boulevard NY 27 enters Nassau County and becomes the Sunrise Highway 4 Sunrise Highway Edit Aerial view eastward of Sunrise Highway in from bottom Wantagh Seaford and Massapequa in eastern Nassau County Sunrise Bridge over the Shinnecock Canal Sunrise Highway begins as a six to eight lane arterial highway in eastern Queens directly paralleling the Atlantic and Babylon branches of the Long Island Rail Road It heads east into Nassau County passing through Valley Stream Lynbrook and Rockville Centre on its way to Merrick There it connects to the Meadowbrook State Parkway by way of an interchange NY 27 continues to Wantagh where it has an interchange with the Wantagh State Parkway One mile 1 6 km later the highway has an interchange with NY 135 in Seaford In East Massapequa NY 27 passes under the LIRR and ends its stretch through Nassau NY 27 then enters Suffolk County where it veers to the northeast bypassing Copiague At the interchange with NY 109 in West Babylon Sunrise Highway becomes a six lane expressway with a two lane service road on either side The route then meets the Robert Moses Causeway near West Islip In East Patchogue New York the highway is reduced to a four lane expressway after passing the NY 112 exit Between County Route 16 CR 16 in Brookhaven and CR 46 in Shirley the median is lined with pine trees along South Haven County Park The setting along these roads is similar to the one on the Southern State Parkway west of Belmont Lake State Park The last exit with a state highway is near Hampton Bays where it meets NY 24 East of NY 24 Sunrise Highway crosses over the Shinnecock Canal and has one last eastbound exit before merging with CR 39 It changes names to North Highway a four lane undivided highway more commonly known as the Southampton Bypass The highway continues east near toward village of Southampton before ending at an intersection with Montauk Highway NY 27 turns east at that junction following Montauk Highway toward Water Mill and points east Montauk Highway Edit Main article Montauk Highway NY 27 in Montauk Point State Park The section of Montauk Highway over which NY 27 runs is two lanes wide with the exception of the four lane sections in the village of East Hampton This section of NY 27 is concurrent with New York State Bicycle Route 27 NY 27 heads generally northeastward to East Hampton village where it becomes Woods Lane and later Main Street It has an intersection with the southern end of NY 114 before entering downtown After passing Newtown Lane and North Main Street NY 27 s name changes to Pantigo Road as it passes an eponymous historic district listed on the National Register of Historic Places 9 In the hamlet of Amagansett NY 27 s name changes back to Main Street again returning to the Montauk Highway name The road becomes Montauk Point State Parkway as it enters Hither Hills State Park in Napeague The parkway a Robert Moses designed highway carries NY 27 to its eastern terminus at Montauk Point State Park on the east side of Montauk The final 10 miles 16 kilometers of NY 27 is known as Montauk Point State Parkway History EditDesignation and early realignments Edit NY 27 s designation was assigned in the mid 1920s to a road extending from the New York City line to Amagansett 2 3 It began at the point where Merrick Road exited Queens and entered Nassau County It mostly followed Merrick Road and Montauk Highway east to Amagansett From East Patchogue to Brookhaven NY 27 followed South Country Road passing through the downtown section of the village of Bellport 3 10 The NY 27 designation was extended eastward along Montauk Highway to Montauk Point by 1930 11 On February 24 1930 South Country Road was added to the Suffolk County highway system as CR 36 12 NY 27 was subsequently realigned to follow Montauk Highway between East Patchogue and Brookhaven 13 NY 27 was realigned west of Oakdale c 1931 to follow Sunrise Boulevard a new highway parallel to Merrick Road and then Montauk Highway between the New York City line and Massapequa connecting several local roads from Massapequa to Montauk Highway at Oakdale The former routing of NY 27 from Massapequa to Oakdale became NY 27A connecting to NY 27 in Massapequa by way of County Line Road 14 15 Sunrise Boulevard was extended eastward to Oakdale c 1934 as a realignment of NY 27 16 17 One portion of NY 27 s former route between NY 27A in Massapequa and the Suffolk County line is known as Old Sunrise Highway and remains state maintained to this day as NY 900D an unsigned reference route 18 Sunrise Highway was built over the Brooklyn Waterworks aqueduct past the south side of Aqueduct Racetrack 19 New York City Edit In December 1934 the route was extended westward into New York City NY 27 followed Sunrise Highway Linden Boulevard and Flatbush Avenue through Queens and Brooklyn to the Manhattan Bridge where it continued into Manhattan along Canal Street to a terminus at 6th Avenue then U S Route 1A and later NY 1A 20 The route was realigned slightly in the early 1940s to follow Atlantic and Washington Avenues Eastern Parkway Buffalo Avenue and Rockaway Avenue between Flatbush Avenue and Linden Boulevard 21 22 NY 27 was again altered in the mid 1960s to continue west on Linden Boulevard Caton Avenue and Church Avenue to the south end of the Prospect Expressway There the route turned north following the freeway to its end at the Gowanus Expressway then NY 27A where NY 27A now ends 23 24 The Prospect Expressway was planned by Robert Moses and was constructed during the 1950s Prior to 1970 NY 27A continued north to the Holland Tunnel in Manhattan by way of the Gowanus Expressway the Brooklyn Battery Tunnel and the West Side Elevated Highway 23 On January 1 1970 NY 27A was truncated eastward to its current western terminus in Massapequa while NY 27 was extended northward along NY 27A s former route to the Holland Tunnel where it ends at I 78 and NY 9A 25 By 1973 NY 27 was cut back to its interchange with the Gowanus Expressway while I 478 was assigned to both the Battery Tunnel and all of the West Side Elevated Highway south of the Lincoln Tunnel 26 27 Long Island Edit This section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed January 2010 Learn how and when to remove this template message Robert Moses developed plans for an elevated expressway featuring 10 to 12 lanes along Sunrise Highway through Nassau County This expressway would have provided a truck link for the South Shore of Long Island but the downtown villages along the route effectively put a stop to the idea 28 Sunrise Highway becomes a limited access highway at NY 109 The portion of Sunrise Highway between North Lindenhurst and the town of Southampton was gradually upgraded to a limited access highway At the east end of NY 27 the highway abruptly became a three lane highway east of the Shinnecock Canal at the point where NY 27 is concurrent with CR 39 This area was known as the Shinnecock Squeeze as traffic on the two lane eastbound NY 27 was squeezed into a single lane In 2006 and 2007 Suffolk County and Southampton officials began using traffic cones to adjust the lanes to accommodate peak travel in what was called the traffic cone program 29 At the end of summer 2007 another eastbound lane was added heading eastward to North Sea Road The construction snarled traffic on CR 39 The Long Island Rail Road added three trains each way between Speonk and East Hampton during the construction 30 In April 2008 the three lane segment from North Sea Road to Flying Point Road was reconfigured from one eastbound and two westbound lanes to two eastbound and one westbound lane The merge from two lanes to one in the eastbound direction is now assisted by a signalized intersection at Flying Point Road where eastbound NY 27 traffic makes a left turn onto Montauk Highway 31 This widening project eliminates the Shinnecock Squeeze 32 Eastward extension Edit The first proposals for an extension east of the Shinnecock Canal were made in the 1950s In 1969 the New York Legislature approved a 160 million plan for the extension It was a limited access route flanked by bicycle and equestrian trails The eastbound and westbound roadways were to be separated by wide wooded medians For the most part the road was to run a mile or two north of existing NY 27 thus avoiding the populated centers through which it now passes The extended Sunrise Highway would have had interchanges with CR 38 North Sea Road and CR 39 County Road CR 79 Bridgehampton Sag Harbor Road NY 114 East Hampton Sag Harbor Turnpike CR 40 Three Mile Harbor Road and CR 45 Amagansett Springs Road before merging back into the existing Montauk Highway The exits would have been sequentially numbered from 67 to 72 The plan failed and Governor Hugh Carey canceled it in 1975 Other suggestions have included building a limited access road on either side of Long Island Rail Road s Montauk Branch Older interchanges Edit As Sunrise Highway was upgraded during the 1970s and 1980s many interchanges were redesigned and replaced The original interchange with the Robert Moses Causeway in West Islip had two parkway style arch bridges over two lanes of NY 27 When the service roads were built in Western Islip Township between 1969 and 1972 parkway style bridges were added for them as well The interchanges at Fifth Ave and Brentwood Road in Bay Shore had parkway style arch bridges and cloverleaves When the service roads were added the parkway style bridges were removed and replaced with the modern structures that exist today and the original cloverleaves were modified to align with the new service roads As with interchanges to the west Islip Avenue NY 111 and Carleton Avenue CR 17 in Islip Terrace originally had parkway style bridges crossing over Sunrise Highway However only Islip Ave had a partial cloverleaf on the west side of the bridge The eastern side of the bridge used side streets for access as did both sides of the Carleton Ave bridge This section of Sunrise Highway wasn t divided Since 1983 both areas have more modern bridges over the service roads and the old cross streets connect to those service roads or other side roads instead Islip Avenue connects to NY 27 at exit 45 while Carleton Avenue meets the Sunrise Highway at exit 46 33 Proposed interchanges and crossings Edit Besides the replacement of interchanges in Western Suffolk County Sunrise Highway has had proposed interchanges and crossings that were either never built or were built according to alternate design specifications In the North Lindenhurst area plans to construct a cloverleaf interchange with CR 2 Straight Path in Copiague have existed for some time In recent years planners have realized that such an interchange would be too close to the cloverleafs with CR 47 Great Neck Road to the west and CR 3 Wellwood Road to the east To further complicate matters a widened CR 28 was extended to Sunrise Highway near the Straight Path intersection in the late 1980s To date no interchange has been built for this area The Oakdale Merge is a convergence of Sunrise Highway and Montauk Highway between Great River and Oakdale abutting the southern edge of Connetquot River State Park The Montauk Highway predates the Sunrise Highway in the area When Sunrise Highway was extended east of Amityville in 1940 it terminated at Montauk Highway s entrance to Connetquot River State Park 34 In 1953 Sunrise Highway was extended to East Patchogue a 0 5 mi 0 80 km overlap of NY 27 and NY 27A was created with at grade intersections connecting the highways 35 A segment of this alignment remains south of the eastern interchange 36 NY 27A was truncated east of the overlap in 1972 12 Plans to upgrade the interchange have existed since its creation During the early 1960s the Suffolk County Department of Public Works considered designating a county highway to connect Nicolls Road in Lake Grove through the Long Island MacArthur Airport then on to the east end of the merge As recently as 1981 the New York State Department of Transportation planned to add service roads and a proper interchange at both ends of the merge 37 Pressure from environmental groups seeking to avoid damaging the parkland stalled construction NYSDOT eventually reconstructed Sunrise Highway in eastern Islip township into a freeway during the 1990s resulting in the present configuration The entrance to Connetquot River Park remained as an at grade intersection accessible only from the westbound lane Former segments of Montauk Highway now exist on both sides of the interchange and sections of both roads were converted into fishing areas owned by the New York State Department of Environmental Conservation 36 Numerous accidents occurred at the east end of the merge resulting in its reconstruction in 1999 A new off ramp to the service road for Pond Road was built resulting in renumbering of exit 47 to exit 46A 38 While none of the interchanges north of Patchogue were built until 1988 to 1993 the New York State Department of Transportation NYSDOT had known the need for them and had planned them decades before their eventual construction As an example Waverly Avenue CR 19 was originally proposed as a cloverleaf interchange Today exit 52 with CR 19 is a diamond interchange instead 39 40 North Ocean Avenue CR 83 was originally proposed to be accessible via connecting ramps to side streets including Austin Street along the eastbound lane and Sinn Street along the westbound lane Today exit 53A is a half diamond interchange while Austin Street and Howard Street are now dead end streets and Sinn Street never reached North Ocean Avenue Maple Avenue had crossed the median on NY 27 between North Ocean Avenue and NY 112 until 1975 This road could also have been used as a connecting ramp to both roads Today the north section only intersects the westbound service road while the south section was converted into a dead end street north of Austin Street NY 112 was originally proposed to be accessible via connecting ramps to side streets such as Franklin Street along the eastbound lane and an extension of Sinn Street along the westbound lane 39 Sinn Street was acquired by NYSDOT east of NY 112 in the early 1960s and was gradually abandoned 40 Today exit 53 is a diamond interchange and Sinn Street Austin Street and Franklin Street are now dead end streets Originally there were proposals to connect Washington Avenue and Phyllis Drive via ramps to side streets such as Franklin Street along the eastbound lane and to an extension of Sinn Street along the westbound lane Phyllis Drive was once part of NY 27 until Sunrise Highway was extended to Eastport in 1957 40 Today both roads are only accessible via the service roads Some residents are waiting for a potential pedestrian bridge connecting the two ends of Washington Avenue citation needed West of the Carmans River near Southaven County Park in South Haven there was a plan to combine the eastbound service road with Montauk Highway similar to the Oakdale Merge NY 27A EditThis section needs expansion You can help by adding to it June 2015 NY 27A 17 31 miles or 27 86 kilometres is an alternate route of NY 27 across southern Long Island from Massapequa Park to Oakdale accessing Babylon and Islip 1 It was designated NY 27A c 1931 14 15 Major intersections EditFor a more complete junction list of NY 27 east of Southampton see Montauk Highway This section contains a table that is missing mileposts for one or more junctions Please help by adding the missing mileposts CountyLocationmi 1 kmExitDestinationsNotesBrooklynGreenwood Heights0 000 00 I 278 east Brooklyn Queens Expressway to I 478 Hugh L Carey Tunnel Queens Bronx ManhattanWestern terminus exit 24 I 278 0 010 0161Hamilton AvenueWestbound exit only to Hugh L Carey TunnelSouth Slope0 240 392 3rd Avenue 4th Avenue to I 278 west Brooklyn Queens Expressway Staten IslandEastbound entrance and westbound exit0 610 9837th Avenue 8th AvenueEastbound entrance and westbound exitWindsor Terrace0 911 464 NY 27 Truck east 10th Avenue 11th AvenueEastbound exit and westbound entrance1 452 335 NY 27 east Fort Hamilton ParkwayNY 27 leaves the expressway eastboundKensington1 762 836Church Avenue Ocean Parkway south Coney IslandAt grade intersection with no left turns NY 27 joins the expressway westboundEast end of freeway sectionQueensHoward Beach Conduit Avenue west to Atlantic AvenuePartial interchange with no eastbound access site of formerly proposed Bushwick Expressway Cross Bay Boulevard Riis ParkInterchange9 0314 53NY 27 transitions to Belt Parkway service roads Belt Parkway Verrazano Bridge Eastern Long IslandSame directional interchange only exit 17W on Belt ParkwaySouth Ozone Park NY 878 east Nassau Expressway to I 678 Van Wyck Expressway Kennedy AirportWestbound exit only exits 18B 19 on Belt Parkway western terminus of NY 878 Lefferts Boulevard Aqueduct Racetrack Long Term ParkingEastbound exit and westbound at grade intersection11 5118 52 I 678 Van Wyck Expressway Kennedy Airport Whitestone Bridge BronxWestbound exit and entrance exit 1 on I 678 150th Street Kennedy AirportEastbound interchange and westbound at grade intersection JFK Expressway south Kennedy AirportWestbound exit and eastbound entranceLaurelton14 7123 67 Belt Parkway west Verrazano BridgeExit 23B on Belt Parkway NY 27 leaves Belt Parkway service roadsNassauRockville CentreMerrick RoadInterchange with directional access eastbound to eastbound and westbound to westbound onlyFreeport23 8938 45 Meadowbrook State Parkway Mineola Jones BeachExit M8 on Meadowbrook ParkwayWantagh26 7343 02 Wantagh State Parkway Westbury Jones BeachExit W5 on Wantagh ParkwaySeaford27 9344 95 NY 135 north Seaford Oyster Bay Expressway SyossetExit 2 on NY 135Massapequa28 8346 40 NY 107 Hicksville Road East Massapequa31 0449 95 NY 27A east Old Sunrise Highway Western terminus of NY 27ASuffolkAmityville32 0751 61 NY 110 Amityville HuntingtonInterchangeCopiague North Amityville line32 9453 01 CR 47 Great Neck Road Copiague FarmingdaleInterchangeNorth Lindenhurst34 1754 99 CR 3 Wellwood Avenue Lindenhurst MelvilleInterchangeWest end of freeway sectionNorth Lindenhurst West Babylon line35 3256 8437 NY 109 Babylon Farmingdale Road Babylon FarmingdaleWest Babylon36 4558 6638Little East Neck Road Belmont Avenue36 9359 4339Hubbards PathNorth Babylon West Islip line38 2661 5740 NY 231 Babylon Northport Expressway Babylon HuntingtonWest Islip Bay Shore line39 7563 9741 Robert Moses Causeway Robert Moses Park Sunken Meadow ParkExit RM1 on Robert Moses CausewayBrightwaters42Manor LaneWestbound exit and eastbound entranceBay Shore41 1366 1943 CR 13 Fifth Avenue Bay Shore Brentwood42 4068 2444Brentwood Road Brentwood Bay ShoreCommunity of Islip44 0670 9145 NY 111 Islip Avenue Islip SmithtownEast Islip Islip Terrace line45 7473 6146 Heckscher State Parkway CR 17 Connetquot Avenue East Islip Heckscher Park New YorkNo westbound signage for CR 17 exit 44 on Heckscher Parkway45 7973 69 Suffolk County Water AuthorityUnnumbered westbound exitGreat River North Great River line46 5474 90 Connetquot State ParkUnnumbered westbound exit47 4176 3046A NY 27A west CR 85 east Montauk Highway Oakdale Great RiverEastbound exit only eastern terminus of NY 27AOakdale Bohemia line47Pond Road southEastbound exit only47AOakdale Bohemia Road Bohemia OakdaleEastbound exit and westbound entranceOakdale Bohemia Sayville tripoint50 1680 7248Locust Avenue Bohemia OakdaleSayville Bohemia line51 0682 1749 CR 93 Lakeland Avenue Johnson Avenue Ronkonkoma Sayville MacArthur AirportNo signage for Johnson Avenue westbound50A Johnson Avenue Sayville Bohemia MacArthur AirportWestbound exit only formerly CR 112Sayville Bohemia Holbrook tripoint50Lincoln Avenue Ronkonkoma SayvilleNo westbound entranceBayport Holbrook line52 4484 3951 CR 97 NY 454 west Blue Point Stony Brook Commack MacArthur AirportNo eastbound access to NY 454 eastern terminus of NY 454North Patchogue54 0787 0252 CR 19 Waverly Avenue Holbrook Patchogue54 8288 2252A CR 83 North Ocean Avenue Farmingville PatchogueEastbound exit and westbound entrance southern terminus of CR 83North Patchogue East Patchogue line55 3189 0153 NY 112 Port Jefferson PatchogueNo eastbound signage for CR 83East Patchogue56 7291 2854 Hospital Road PatchogueServes Brookhaven Memorial HospitalEast Patchogue North Bellport line57 4892 5155 CR 101 Patchogue YaphankNorth Bellport58 4294 0256Station Road Bellport YaphankBrookhaven North Bellport Yaphank tripoint60 4797 3257 CR 16 Horseblock Road CR 21 Yaphank Avenue Brookhaven YaphankSigned as exits 57N north west and 57S south east Shirley62 65100 8358 CR 46 William Floyd Parkway Shirley Wading RiverSigned exits as 58N north and 58S south Center Moriches Manorville line66 35106 7859Wading River Road Wading River Center MorichesFormerly CR 2567 28108 2860Railroad Avenue Center Moriches ManorvilleWestbound exit and eastbound entranceEast Moriches Manorville Eastport tripoint69 60112 0161 CR 51 East Moriches Riverhead EastportEastbound exit and westbound entrance other movements via exit 62Eastport Northampton line70 96114 2062 CR 111 ManorvilleOriginally planned as a cloverleaf interchange with collector distributor roadsWesthampton Northampton Flanders tripoint75 47121 4663 CR 31 Westhampton Beach RiverheadSigned as exits 63N north and 63S south serves Francis S Gabreski AirportEast Quogue Flanders line76 95123 8464 CR 104 Quogue East Quogue RiverheadSigned as exits 64N north and 64S south formerly NY 113Hampton Bays81 15130 6065 NY 24 Hampton Bays RiverheadSigned as exits 65N north and 65S south 82 94133 4866 North Road CR 39 Shinnecock HillsQuarter cloverleaf interchangesShinnecock Hills CR 39 west North Road Hampton BaysWestbound exit only western terminus of concurrency with CR 39East end of freeway sectionTuckahoe CR 52 north North Sea Sag HarborSouthern terminus of CR 52Village of Southampton CR 38 north North Sea Road North Sea SouthamptonSouthern terminus of CR 38 eastern terminus of CR 39 and western terminus of CR 39A89 68144 33Montauk Highway Flying Point Road SouthamptonEastern terminus of CR 39ABridgehampton CR 79 north Sag Harbor Shelter IslandSouthern terminus of CR 79Village of East Hampton100 17161 21 NY 114 north Sag Harbor Shelter IslandSouthern terminus of NY 114Montauk120 58194 05Montauk Point State ParkEastern terminus loop around parking lot1 000 mi 1 609 km 1 000 km 0 621 mi Concurrency terminus Incomplete access Route transition UnopenedSee also EditPortal U S roadsReferences Edit a b c 2008 Traffic Data Report for New York State PDF New York State Department of Transportation June 16 2009 pp 160 162 Retrieved January 28 2010 a b New York s Main Highways Designated by Numbers The New York Times December 21 1924 p XX9 Retrieved July 18 2010 a b c Official Map Showing State Highways and other important roads Map Cartography by Rand McNally and Company State of New York Department of Public Works 1926 a b c d Microsoft Nokia February 24 2013 overview map of NY 27 Prospect Expressway to Nassau County border Map Bing Maps Microsoft Retrieved February 24 2013 Google May 30 2021 Route 27 Sign Coney Island Avenue Map Google Maps Google Retrieved May 30 2021 Engineering Division Office of Technical Services Inventory Listing 2017 New York State Department of Trannsportation 10 and 11 Nassau Suffolk and Brooklyn Queens 2017 Shell street guide of Brooklyn Queens New York Public Library NYPL Map Warper Shell Oil 1940 Map 35525 Retrieved 2020 04 01 PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF NEW YORK on relation of ARVERNE BAY CONSTRUCTION COMPANY Relator Respondent against HARRIS H MURDOOK as Chairman BERNARD A SAVAGE CHARLES M BLUM and JOHN J MCELLIGOTT Fire Chief as members and together constituting the Board of Standards and Appeals of The City of York Defendants Appellants and DENTAVE REALTY CORPORATION Intervenor Appellant New York Supreme Court Appellate Division Second Department 1934 pp 2 22 201 202 378 394 449 457 465 495 474 ISBN 9780224618175 via Google Books miscatalogues as Skinner Burrhus Frederic Verbal Behavior 1957 Appleton Century Crofts National Register Information System National Register of Historic Places National Park Service April 15 2008 Rand McNally Auto Road Atlas New York and Vicinity Map Rand McNally and Company 1926 p 86 Retrieved January 28 2010 Dickinson Leon A January 12 1930 New Signs for State Highways The New York Times p 136 Retrieved July 18 2010 a b Suffolk County Department of Public Works County Road System County of Suffolk New York PDF Retrieved May 24 2009 Texaco Road Map New York Map Cartography by Rand McNally and Company Texas Oil Company 1932 a b Road Map of New York Map Cartography by General Drafting Standard Oil Company of New York 1930 a b New York Map Cartography by H M Gousha Company Kendall Refining Company 1931 Texaco Road Map New York Map Cartography by Rand McNally and Company Texas Oil Company 1933 Road Map of New York Map Cartography by Rand McNally and Company Texas Oil Company 1934 New York State Department of Transportation January 2012 Official Description of Highway Touring Routes Bicycling Touring Routes Scenic Byways amp Commemorative Memorial Designations in New York State PDF Retrieved February 16 2012 Excavating And Pipe Laying Apparatus In Use On The Brooklyn Aqueduct Scientific American January 3 1891 Mark Ways in the City The New York Times December 16 1934 p XX12 Retrieved July 18 2010 Map of New York Map Cartography by H M Gousha Company Shell Oil Company 1940 New York with Pictorial Guide Map Cartography by General Drafting Esso 1942 a b New York and Metropolitan New York Map Cartography by Rand McNally and Company Sinclair Oil Corporation 1964 Gousha Road Atlas Map Cartography by H M Gousha Company H M Gousha Company 1967 p 56 Retrieved January 28 2010 State of New York Department of Transportation January 1 1970 Official Description of Touring Routes in New York State PDF Retrieved May 24 2009 New York Map 1973 ed Cartography by H M Gousha Company Shell Oil Company 1973 Central Park Digital Raster Quadrangle Map 1 24 000 New York State Department of Transportation 1975 Retrieved December 28 2009 Silver Roy R March 20 1966 Nassau Villagers Fight Elevated Sunrise Highway The New York Times p 57 Retrieved July 18 2010 The summer traffic cone program on County Road 39 Long Island Business News 13 July 2007 LIRR Adds Service On South Fork as Road Work on County Road 39 Begins 1010 WINS New York City Associated Press September 18 2007 Google August 4 2019 NY 27 Map Google Maps Google Retrieved August 4 2019 Greenburg Peter 2009 Don t Go There The Travel Detective s Essential Guide to the Must Miss Places of the World New York Rodale Inc p 190 ISBN 978 1 60529 994 5 Retrieved May 7 2013 Bunch William March 7 1986 Another Delay for Sunrise Highway Work Newsday New York City p 25 Suffolk County Road Atlas Map Hagstrom Map 1941 Retrieved April 28 2010 Hagstrom s Atlas of Western Suffolk County New York 1958 and other years a b Google February 1 2011 Oakdale Merge Map Google Maps Google Retrieved February 1 2011 Giorgianni Anthony December 31 1981 Oakdale Interchange Awaits Approval Suffolk County News Perry N W January 26 2004 Interchange of the Week NY 27 amp NY 27A Oakdale Empire State Roads Retrieved April 9 2012 a b Town of Brookhaven Zoning Map Map Town of Brookhaven New York August 21 2000 a b c Atlas of Suffolk County New York Map Hagstrom Map 1969 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to New York State Route 27 KML file edit help Template Attached KML New York State Route 27KML is from Wikidata New York State Route 27 at Alps Roads New York Routes The traffic circle at the eastern terminus of NY 27 at Montauk Point NYC Roads article on NY 27 NY 27 Greater New York Roads Oakdale Merge Empire State Roads com NYCroads com Prospect Expressway NY 27 NYSDOT Gowanus Project Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title New York State Route 27 amp oldid 1142840761, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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