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Pennsylvania Turnpike

The Pennsylvania Turnpike (Penna Turnpike or PA Turnpike) is a toll highway operated by the Pennsylvania Turnpike Commission (PTC) in the U.S. state of Pennsylvania. A controlled-access highway, it runs for 360 miles (580 km) across the state. The turnpike's western terminus is at the Ohio state line in Lawrence County, where the road continues west as the Ohio Turnpike. The eastern terminus is at the New Jersey state line at the Delaware River–Turnpike Toll Bridge over the Delaware River in Bucks County, where the road continues east as the Pearl Harbor Memorial Extension of the New Jersey Turnpike.

Pennsylvania Turnpike

Pennsylvania Turnpike mainline highlighted in green
Route information
Maintained by PTC
Length360.09 mi[4] (579.51 km)
ExistedOctober 1, 1940[1][2]–present
HistoryCompleted on May 23, 1956[3]
Component
highways
RestrictionsNo hazardous goods allowed in the Allegheny Mountain, Tuscarora Mountain, Kittatinny Mountain, and Blue Mountain tunnels
Major junctions
West end
Major intersections
East end
Location
CountryUnited States
StatePennsylvania
CountiesLawrence, Beaver, Butler, Allegheny, Westmoreland, Somerset, Bedford, Fulton, Huntingdon, Franklin, Cumberland, York, Dauphin, Lebanon, Lancaster, Berks, Chester, Montgomery, Bucks
Highway system
PA 75I-76 PA 76
PA 274I-276 PA 276
I-279I-280 PA 280
Designated1990[5]

The highway runs east to west through the southern part of the state, connecting the Pittsburgh, Harrisburg, and Philadelphia areas. It crosses the Appalachian Mountains in central Pennsylvania, passing through four tunnels.

The turnpike is part of the Interstate Highway System; it is designated as part of Interstate 76 (I-76) between the Ohio state line and Valley Forge, I-70 (concurrent with I-76) between New Stanton and Breezewood, Interstate 276 (I-276) between Valley Forge and Bristol Township, and I-95 from Bristol Township to the New Jersey state line. The road uses an all-electronic tolling system; tolls can be paid using E-ZPass or toll by plate (which uses automatic license plate recognition). Historically, cash tolls were collected using a combination of the ticket system and a barrier toll system, but cash tolls were phased out between 2016 and 2020. Along the turnpike are 15 service plazas, providing food and fuel to travelers.

During the 1930s, the Pennsylvania Turnpike was designed to improve automobile transportation across the mountains of Pennsylvania, using seven tunnels built for the abandoned South Pennsylvania Railroad in the 1880s. The road opened in 1940 between Irwin and Carlisle. It was one of the earlier long-distance limited-access highways in the United States and served as a precedent for additional limited-access toll roads and the Interstate Highway System.

The Pennsylvania Turnpike was extended east to Valley Forge in 1950 and west to the Ohio state line in 1951. In 1954, the road was extended further east to the Delaware River, and construction began on the Northeast Extension of the turnpike. The mainline turnpike was finished in 1956 with the completion of the Delaware River Bridge. During the 1960s, an additional tube was bored at four of the two-lane tunnels, while the other three tunnels were bypassed; these improvements made the entire length of the mainline turnpike four lanes wide. Improvements continue to be made to the road: rebuilding the original section to modern standards, widening portions of the turnpike to six lanes, and adding interchanges. In 2018, an ongoing interchange project saw the redesignation of the easternmost three miles (4.8 km) of the road from I-276 to I-95. Though still considered part of the turnpike mainline, it is no longer signed with turnpike markers and uses I-95's mileposts and exit numbers.

Route description

The turnpike runs east to west across Pennsylvania, from the Ohio state line in Lawrence County east to the New Jersey state line in Bucks County. It passes through the Pittsburgh, Harrisburg, and Philadelphia areas, along with farmland and woodland. The highway crosses the Appalachian Mountains in the central part of the state, passing through four tunnels. The PTC, created in 1937 to construct, finance, operate, and maintain the road, controls the highway.[6] In 2015, the roadway had an annual average daily traffic count ranging from a high of 120,000 vehicles between the Norristown interchange and I-476 to a low of 12,000 vehicles between the Ohio state line and the interchange with I-79 and U.S. Route 19 (US 19).[7] As part of the Interstate Highway System, the turnpike is part of the National Highway System,[8] a network of roads important to the country's economy, defense, and mobility.[9] The Pennsylvania Turnpike is designated as a Blue Star Memorial Highway honoring those who have served in the United States Armed Forces; the Garden Club Federation of Pennsylvania has placed Blue Star Memorial Highway markers at service plazas along the turnpike.[10][11]

In addition to the east–west mainline, the PTC also operates the Northeast Extension of the Pennsylvania Turnpike (I-476), the Beaver Valley Expressway (I-376), the Mon–Fayette Expressway (Pennsylvania Route 43 or PA 43), the Amos K. Hutchinson Bypass (PA 66), and the Southern Beltway (PA 576).[12]

Ohio to Irwin

 
Westbound approaching the Pittsburgh interchange with I-376/US 22 in Monroeville

The Pennsylvania Turnpike begins at the Ohio state line in Lawrence County, beyond which the highway continues west as the Ohio Turnpike. From the state line, the turnpike heads southeast as a four-lane freeway designated as I-76 through rural areas south of New Castle. A short distance from the Ohio state line, the eastbound lanes come to the all-electronic Gateway toll gantry. The highway then crosses into Beaver County, where it reaches its first interchange with I-376 (here, the part called Beaver Valley Expressway) in Big Beaver.[13][14][15]

After this interchange, the turnpike passes under Norfolk Southern's Koppel Secondary rail line before it reaches the exit for PA 18 in Homewood. Past PA 18, the highway crosses CSX's Pittsburgh Subdivision rail line, the Beaver River, and Norfolk Southern's Youngstown Line on the Beaver River Bridge.[6][13][14] The road then enters Butler County, where it comes to Cranberry Township.[15] Here, an interchange serves I-79 and US 19. The turnpike continues through a mix of rural land and suburban residential development north of Pittsburgh into Allegheny County.[14][15]

The road then approaches the Warrendale toll plaza, where distance-based tolling begins, and continues southeast, passing over the P&W Subdivision rail line, which is owned by CSX and operated by the Buffalo and Pittsburgh Railroad. East of this point, the turnpike has an interchange with PA 8 in Hampton Township. The turnpike then comes to the Allegheny Valley exit in Harmar Township, which provides access to PA 28 via Freeport Road.[13][14] East of this interchange, the road heads south, with Canadian National's Bessemer Subdivision rail line parallel to the east of the road. The highway crosses Norfolk Southern's Conemaugh Line, the Allegheny River, and the Allegheny Valley Railroad's Allegheny Subdivision line on the six-lane Allegheny River Turnpike Bridge.[13][14][16]

After the Allegheny River crossing, the turnpike returns to four lanes, passing through the Oakmont Country Club before coming to a bridge over Canadian National's Bessemer Subdivision. From here, the railroad tracks run along the west side of the road before splitting further to the west. The highway heads southeast to Monroeville, an eastern suburb of Pittsburgh; an interchange with I-376/US 22 (Penn–Lincoln Parkway) provides access to Pittsburgh.[13][14] East of Monroeville, the turnpike continues through eastern Allegheny County before crossing into Westmoreland County.[14][15] Here, it heads south and passes over Norfolk Southern's Pittsburgh Line before it comes to the exit for US 30 near Irwin.[13][14]

Irwin to Carlisle

After the Irwin interchange, the Pennsylvania Turnpike widens to six lanes and heads into rural areas west of Greensburg. Curving southeast, it reaches New Stanton, where an interchange provides access to I-70, US 119, and the southern terminus of PA 66 (Amos K. Hutchinson Bypass). The road narrows back to four lanes at this interchange, and I-70 forms a concurrency with I-76 on the turnpike. After New Stanton, the road passes over the Southwest Pennsylvania Railroad's Radebaugh Subdivision line and winds southeast to the exit for PA 31 in Donegal, which also provides access to PA 711.[13][14] Continuing east past Donegal, the turnpike crosses Laurel Hill into Somerset County.[14][15]

In this county, the road continues southeast to Somerset and an interchange with PA 601 accessing US 219 and Johnstown before it crosses over CSX's S&C Subdivision rail line. East of Somerset, the highway passes north of the Somerset Wind Farm before it reaches Allegheny Mountain,[13][14] going under the mountain in the Allegheny Mountain Tunnel.[6][13][14] Exiting the tunnel, the turnpike winds down the mountain at a three-percent grade, which is the steepest grade on the turnpike,[14][17][18] and heads into Bedford County, passing through a valley.[15] At Bedford, an exit for US 220 Business (US 220 Bus.) provides access to US 220 and the southern terminus of I-99; this exit also serves Altoona to the north.[13][14]

 
Eastbound at the Breezewood interchange, where I-70 splits from I-76

East of Bedford the turnpike passes through The Narrows, a gap in Evitts Mountain. The turnpike, US 30, and the Raystown Branch Juniata River all pass through the 650-foot-wide (200 m) narrows.[14][17] The road winds through a valley south of the river, before traversing Clear Ridge Cut near Everett.[13][14][19] Further east, at Breezewood, I-70 leaves the turnpike; this interchange is notably home to some of the only traffic lights on an Interstate Highway.[13][14]

After Breezewood, I-76 continues along the turnpike, heading northeast across Rays Hill into Fulton County.[14][15] The turnpike continues east across Sideling Hill, before reaching an interchange with US 522 in Fort Littleton. After this interchange, the highway parallels US 522 before curving east into Huntingdon County.[14][15] The turnpike goes under Tuscarora Mountain through the Tuscarora Mountain Tunnel, entering Franklin County.[6][14][15] It then curves northeast into a valley to the exit for PA 75 in Willow Hill.[13][14]

Again heading east, the road passes under Kittatinny Mountain through the Kittatinny Mountain Tunnel. Shortly after exiting the tunnel, the highway enters the Blue Mountain Tunnel under Blue Mountain.[6][13][14] Leaving that tunnel, the turnpike heads northeast along the base of Blue Mountain to an exit for PA 997.[13][14] East of this interchange, the road enters Cumberland County, heading east through the Cumberland Valley on a stretch known as "the straightaway".[14][15][20] Further east, the turnpike reaches Carlisle and an interchange with US 11 providing access to I-81.[13][14]

Carlisle to Valley Forge

 
Westbound past the PA 29 interchange in Charlestown Township

Approaching Harrisburg, the Pennsylvania Turnpike heads east through a mixture of rural land and suburban development, passing over Norfolk Southern's Shippensburg Secondary rail line. In Upper Allen Township, the highway comes to the US 15 interchange accessing Gettysburg to the south and Harrisburg to the north. The road continues east and passes over Norfolk Southern's Lurgan Branch rail line before it heads into York County, where it reaches the interchange with I-83 serving Harrisburg, its western suburbs, and York to the south.[13][14][15] East of I-83, the turnpike widens to six lanes and crosses over Norfolk Southern's Port Road Branch rail line, the Susquehanna River, Amtrak's Keystone Corridor rail line, and Norfolk Southern's Royalton Branch rail line on the Susquehanna River Bridge. Now in Dauphin County, the road bypasses Harrisburg to the south.[14][15][21]

In Lower Swatara Township the turnpike reaches an interchange with the southern end of I-283, serving Harrisburg and its eastern suburbs and providing access to PA 283; the PTC headquarters are located adjacent to this interchange. Here, the road narrows back to four lanes and runs through suburban development near Middletown. The roadway passes over the Middletown and Hummelstown Railroad and the Swatara Creek before it continues into rural areas.[13][14] The turnpike crosses a corner of Lebanon County before entering Lancaster County.[15]

In Lancaster County, the highway passes through Pennsylvania Dutch Country[22] and comes to an interchange with PA 72 accessing Lebanon to the north and Lancaster to the south. Further east, the turnpike passes over an East Penn Railroad line in Denver before it reaches an interchange with US 222 and PA 272 which serves the cities of Reading and Lancaster. The route continues into Berks County and comes to an interchange with the southern terminus of I-176 (a freeway to Reading) and PA 10 in Morgantown that also provides access to PA 23.[13][14][15]

The turnpike then enters Chester County, running southeast[13][14][15] to an exit for PA 100 north of Downingtown, where it heads into the western suburbs of Philadelphia. Continuing east, it reaches an interchange with PA 29 near Malvern.[13][14] The highway crosses into Montgomery County and comes to the Valley Forge interchange in King of Prussia, where I-76 splits from the turnpike and heads southeast as the Schuylkill Expressway toward Philadelphia; this interchange also provides access to US 202 and US 422.[13][14][15]

Valley Forge to New Jersey

 

 

Interstate 276 Toll

LocationUpper Merion TownshipBristol Township
Length29.78 mi[23] (47.93 km)
Existed1964–present
 
Eastbound past the Mid-County interchange with I-476 in Plymouth Meeting

Starting at the Valley Forge interchange, the turnpike is designated as I-276 and becomes a six-lane road serving as a suburban commuter highway.[13][14][24] The road comes to a bridge over SEPTA's Norristown High Speed Line and runs parallel to Norfolk Southern's Dale Secondary rail line, which is located south of the road. The turnpike crosses Norfolk Southern's Harrisburg Line, the Schuylkill River, and SEPTA's Manayunk/Norristown Line on the Schuylkill River Bridge near Norristown. A short distance later, the road passes over the Schuylkill River Trail and Norfolk Southern's Morrisville Connecting Track on the Schuylkill River Bridge before the parallel Dale Secondary rail line heads further south from the road.[6][13][14] In Plymouth Meeting, an interchange with Germantown Pike provides access to Norristown before the roadway reaches the Mid-County Interchange. This interchange connects to I-476, which heads south as the Mid-County Expressway (commonly known as the "Blue Route") and north as the Northeast Extension of the turnpike; connecting the mainline turnpike to the Lehigh Valley and the Pocono Mountains regions of Pennsylvania.[13][14]

After the Mid-County Interchange, the mainline turnpike heads east through the northern suburbs of Philadelphia. In Fort Washington, the highway passes over SEPTA's Lansdale/Doylestown Line before it has an interchange with PA 309. At this point, the road becomes parallel to Norfolk Southern's Morrisville Line, which is located a short distance to the south of the road. One mile (1.6 km) later, the turnpike has a westbound exit and entrance for Virginia Drive. In Willow Grove, the highway reaches the PA 611 exit before passing over SEPTA's Warminster Line.[13][14] The turnpike continues through more suburban areas, crossing into Bucks County and coming to a bridge over Norfolk Southern's Morrisville Line.[14][15] Farther east, the roadway passes over SEPTA's West Trenton Line. In Bensalem Township, the highway comes to a bridge over CSX's Trenton Subdivision rail line before reaching an interchange with US 1, which provides access to Philadelphia.[13][14]

The highway narrows back to four lanes before an eastbound exit and entrance with PA 132. A short distance later, the turnpike arrives at the eastern end of the distance-based toll system at the Neshaminy Falls main line toll plaza. After passing through more suburbs, the road reaches a partial interchange with I-95, where it crosses under I-295 with no access; this interchange has access from the westbound turnpike to southbound I-95 and from northbound I-95 to the eastbound turnpike. At this point, I-276 ends and the Pennsylvania Turnpike becomes part of I-95. Here, signage indicates the westbound turnpike as a left exit from southbound I-95, using I-95 milepost exit number 40. This is the only place where continuing on the mainline turnpike is signed as an exit.[13][14]

After joining I-95, the remaining three miles (4.8 km) of road uses I-95's mileposts and exit numbers and is not directly signed as the Pennsylvania Turnpike, though it is still considered part of the mainline turnpike. Continuing east, the turnpike reaches its final interchange, providing access to US 13 near Bristol. Following this, the road passes over an East Penn Railroad line before it comes to the westbound all-electronic Delaware River Bridge toll gantry.[13][14] After this, the highway crosses the Delaware Canal and Amtrak's Northeast Corridor rail line before heading across the Delaware River into New Jersey on the Delaware River–Turnpike Toll Bridge.[6][13][14] At this point, the Pennsylvania Turnpike ends, and I-95 continues east (north) as the Pearl Harbor Memorial Extension of the New Jersey Turnpike, which connects to the mainline of the New Jersey Turnpike.[13][14][25]

Major bridges and tunnels

 
West portal of the Allegheny Mountain Tunnel

The Pennsylvania Turnpike incorporates several major bridges and tunnels along its route. Four tunnels cross central Pennsylvania's Appalachian Mountains. The 6,070-foot (1,850 m) Allegheny Mountain Tunnel passes under Allegheny Mountain in Somerset County. The Tuscarora Mountain Tunnel runs beneath Tuscarora Mountain at the border of Huntingdon and Franklin counties, and is 5,236 feet (1,596 m) long. The Kittatinny Mountain and Blue Mountain tunnels are adjacent to each other in Franklin County and are 4,727 feet (1,441 m) and 4,339 feet (1,323 m) long, respectively.[6][13]

Five bridges carry the turnpike over major rivers in the state. The 1,545-foot-long (471 m) Beaver River Bridge crosses the Beaver River in Beaver County.[6][13] The highway crosses the Allegheny River in Allegheny County on the 2,350-foot-long (720 m) Allegheny River Turnpike Bridge[13][16] and crosses the Susquehanna River between York and Dauphin counties on the 5,910-foot-long (1,800 m) Susquehanna River Bridge.[13][21] In Montgomery County, the turnpike crosses the Schuylkill River on the 1,224-foot-long (373 m) Schuylkill River Bridge. At the New Jersey state line in Bucks County, the highway is connected to the Pearl Harbor Memorial Extension of the New Jersey Turnpike by the 6,571-foot-long (2,003 m) Delaware River–Turnpike Toll Bridge over the Delaware River.[6][13]

Tolls

 
Toll plaza at Somerset interchange before conversion to all-electronic tolling

The Pennsylvania Turnpike uses all-electronic tolling, with tolls payable by toll by plate (which uses automatic license plate recognition to take a photo of the vehicle's license plate and mail a bill to the vehicle owner) or E-ZPass. Between the Warrendale and Neshaminy Falls toll plazas on the mainline, as well as on the Northeast Extension from Mid-County to Wyoming Valley, tolls are based on distance traveled.[26] An eastbound mainline toll gantry is located at Gateway near the Ohio state line and a westbound mainline toll gantry is located at the Delaware River Bridge near the New Jersey state line, both charging a flat toll.[26][27] There is no toll between Gateway and Warrendale and between Neshaminy Falls and the Delaware River Bridge.[26]

As of 2023, it costs a passenger vehicle $90.90 to travel the length of the mainline turnpike between Warrendale and Neshaminy Falls using toll by plate, and $45.00 using E-ZPass; the eastbound Gateway toll gantry costs $14.40 with toll by plate and $7.10 with E-ZPass for passenger vehicles while the westbound Delaware River Bridge toll gantry costs $9.20 using toll by plate and $6.90 using E-ZPass.[26] Since 2009, the turnpike has raised tolls once a year, starting on January 1, to provide funding for increasing annual payments to the Pennsylvania Department of Transportation (PennDOT), as mandated by Act 44.[28] The turnpike commission paid PennDOT $450 million annually, of which $200 million went to non-turnpike highway projects across the state and $250 million went to funding mass transit. As part of Act 89 signed in 2013, the annual payments to PennDOT will end after 2022 (35 years earlier than the original proposal under Act 44), but it is not known if the annual toll increases will continue after 2022. Act 89 has also redirected the entire $450 million annual payments to PennDOT toward funding mass transit.[29] With the annual rise in tolls, traffic has been shifting from the turnpike to local roads.[30]

Until March 2020, the Pennsylvania Turnpike used the ticket system of tolling between the Warrendale and Neshaminy Falls toll plazas, as well as on the Northeast Extension from Mid-County to Wyoming Valley.[31] When entering the turnpike, motorists received a ticket listing the toll for each exit; the ticket was surrendered when exiting, and the applicable toll was paid. If the ticket was lost, motorists were charged the maximum toll for that exit.[32] Cash, credit cards, and E-ZPass were accepted at traditional toll plazas.[31] In 2010, McCormick Taylor and Wilbur Smith Associates were hired to conduct a feasibility study on converting the road to all-electronic tolls.[33] On March 6, 2012, the turnpike commission announced that it was implementing this plan.[34] The turnpike commission projected that it would save $65 million annually on labor costs by eliminating toll collectors.[35] On January 3, 2016, all-electronic tolling was introduced in the westbound direction at the Delaware River Bridge mainline toll plaza, while the eastern terminus of the ticket system was moved from the Delaware River Bridge to Neshaminy Falls.[36] On October 27, 2019, all-electronic tolling was implemented at the eastbound Gateway mainline toll plaza.[37] All-electronic tolling was originally scheduled to be implemented on the entire length of the Pennsylvania Turnpike in the later part of 2021.[38] However, in March 2020, the turnpike made the switch early as a result of the COVID-19 pandemic.[39] The all-electronic tolling system on the turnpike will initially use toll booths at exits until mainline toll gantries between interchanges are constructed.[38][40] Mainline toll gantries are planned to be in operation by 2025.[41]

As of 2020, about 86 percent of vehicles along the Pennsylvania Turnpike use E-ZPass for payment of tolls.[42]

Act 44 toll increases

The turnpike commission raised tolls by 25 percent on January 4, 2009, to provide funds to PennDOT for road and mass-transit projects, as mandated by Act 44.[28][43] This toll hike brought the rate to travel the turnpike to $0.074 per mile ($0.046/km) (equivalent to $0.09 per mile ($0.056/km) in 2021[44]).[45] At this point, an annual toll increase was planned.[43]

A three-percent toll increase went into effect January 3, 2010, bringing the rate to $0.077 per mile ($0.048/km) (equivalent to $0.09/mi ($0.056/km) in 2021[44]).[46][47] The cash toll increased 10 percent on January 2, 2011, and E-ZPass tolls increased three percent.[48] The new toll rate was $0.085 per mile ($0.053/km) (equivalent to $0.1/mi ($0.062/km) in 2021[44]) using cash and $0.079 per mile ($0.049/km) (equivalent to $0.1/mi ($0.062/km) in 2021[44]) using E-ZPass.[44][49] As part of this toll hike, the turnpike commission initially planned to omit the toll amount from new tickets, and Pennsylvania Auditor Jack Wagner wondered if the commission was trying to hide the increase.[48] The commission later decided to include the tolls on new tickets.[33]

Cash tolls increased 10 percent on January 1, 2012, while E-ZPass tolls were unchanged from the previous year.[50] With this increase, the cash toll rate increased to $0.093 per mile ($0.058/km) (equivalent to $0.11/mi ($0.068/km) in 2021[44]).[51] Tolls for both cash and E-ZPass customers increased in January of each of the next eight years.[52]

Services

Emergency assistance and information

The turnpike formerly had a call box every mile (1.6 km) for its entire length.[53] Call boxes were first installed between New Stanton and New Baltimore in December 1988, and, in 1989, call boxes were extended along the length of the highway.[54] In September 2017, the turnpike commission began removing the call boxes due to increased mobile phone usage making the call boxes obsolete.[55] Motorists needing assistance may dial *11 on mobile phones. First-responder service is available to all turnpike users via the GEICO Safety Patrol program. The free program checks for disabled motorists, debris, and accidents along the road and provides assistance 24 hours daily year-round. Each patrol vehicle covers a 20-to-25-mile (32 to 40 km) stretch of the turnpike.[56][57] Towing service is available from authorized service stations near the highway,[58] and Pennsylvania State Police Troop T patrols the turnpike. The troop's headquarters is in Highspire; its turnpike substations are grouped into two sections: the western section has substations in Gibsonia, New Stanton, Somerset, and Everett while the eastern section has substations in Newville, Bowmansville, and King of Prussia (the eastern section also has a substation at Pocono on the Northeast Extension).[59]

The PTC broadcasts road, traffic, and weather conditions over highway advisory radio transmitters at each exit on 1640 kHz AM, with a range of approximately two miles (3.2 km).[60] The 511PA travel information service provides alerts, an interactive map, weather information, and traffic cameras to motorists. There are variable-message signs located along the roadway that provide information to motorists such as accidents, construction, weather, and traffic congestion.[61]

Service plazas

 
Sideling Hill service plaza

The Pennsylvania Turnpike has 15 service plazas on the main highway throughout the state, as well as two on the Northeast Extension. Each plaza has multiple fast-food restaurants, a Sunoco gas station, and a 7-Eleven convenience store. Other amenities include ATMs, E-ZPass sales, free cellphone charging, Pennsylvania Lottery sales, picnic areas, restrooms, tourist information, Travel Board information centers, and Wi-Fi. The King of Prussia plaza has a welcome center, and the New Stanton and Sideling Hill plazas feature seasonal farmers' markets. A few plazas offer E85 while New Stanton offers compressed natural gas; all of them offer conventional gasoline and diesel fuel. Select service plazas have electric vehicle charging stations. The Sunoco and 7-Eleven locations as well as the Subway at North Midway are operated by 7-Eleven itself while the remaining restaurants and general upkeep of the service plazas are operated by Applegreen.[62]

Throughout the turnpike's history, various plazas have been added or eliminated. In the 1950s, two original eastbound plazas at Laurel Hill and New Baltimore were replaced by the South Somerset plaza. In 1968, the westbound Cove Valley plaza was replaced by the Sideling Hill plaza (which serves both westbound and eastbound traffic) as part of the bypass of the Rays Hill and Sideling Hill tunnels.[63] Three westbound plazas at Denver, Pleasant Valley, and Mechanicsburg were closed in 1980. The eastbound Path Valley plaza closed in 1983 due to a lack of business since it was located only 15 miles (24 km) east of the then-newly-constructed Sideling Hill plaza.[64] Five plazas have closed since 2000: the Butler plaza closed in 2002 to make way for the Warrendale Toll Plaza,[65] the eastbound Hempfield and South Neshaminy plazas were demolished in 2007 for additional lanes and a new slip ramp, respectively,[66][67] the eastbound Zelienople plaza closed in 2008 due to a lack of business since it was located on the free stretch of the turnpike from Ohio to Warrendale,[68] and the westbound North Neshaminy plaza shut down in 2010 for an upcoming construction project.[67]

In 1990, the Brandywine (now Peter J. Camiel) plaza was demolished and reconstructed, the first such major project in the turnpike's history.[69] Starting in 2006, the PTC and HMSHost started a system-wide project in which all service plazas would be reconstructed or extensively renovated, starting with Oakmont Plum, which closed in 2006 and reopened in 2007. This was followed by the reconstruction of the North Somerset and Sideling Hill plazas (2007–2008); New Stanton (2008–2009); King of Prussia (2009–2010); Lawn and Bowmansville (2010–2011); South Somerset, Blue Mountain, and Cumberland Valley (2011–2012); South Midway and Highspire (2012–2013); Peter J. Camiel (2013–2014); and Valley Forge and North Midway (2014–2015).[70]

The Art Sparks program was launched in 2017 as a partnership between the turnpike commission and the Pennsylvania Council on the Arts to install public art created by local students in the Arts in Education residency program in service plazas along the turnpike over the next five years. The public art consists of a mural reflecting the area where the service plaza is located. The first Art Sparks mural debuted at the Lawn service plaza in May 2017.[71][72]

In April 2019, the Sunoco/A-Plus locations began to be converted to 7-Eleven locations, as part of a larger deal that saw 7-Eleven take over Sunoco's company-owned convenience stores along the East Coast and Texas; Sunoco continues to supply fuel to the locations.[73][74]

History

The Pennsylvania Turnpike was planned in the 1930s to improve transportation across the Appalachian Mountains of central Pennsylvania. It used seven tunnels bored for the abandoned South Pennsylvania Railroad project during the 1880s.[75] The highway opened in 1940 between Irwin and Carlisle as the first long-distance controlled-access highway in the United States.[76] Following its completion, other toll roads and the Interstate Highway System were built.[77] The highway was extended east to Valley Forge in 1950 and west to the Ohio state line in 1951.[78][79] It was completed east to the New Jersey state line (the Delaware River) in 1954; the Delaware River Bridge opened two years later.[80][3] During the 1960s, the entire highway was expanded to four lanes by adding a second tube at four of the tunnels and bypassing the other three.[81] Other improvements have been made, including the addition of interchanges, the widening of portions of the highway to six lanes, and the reconstruction of the original section. A partial interchange with I-95 opened in September 2018 and will be expanded to a full interchange in the future.[82]

Planning

Before the turnpike, there were other forms of transportation across the Appalachians. Native Americans traveled across the mountains along wilderness trails; later, European settlers followed wagon roads to cross the state.[83] The Philadelphia and Lancaster Turnpike opened between Lancaster and Philadelphia in 1794, the first successful turnpike in the United States. The road was paved with logs, an improvement on the dirt Native American trails.[84] In 1834, the Main Line of Public Works opened as a system of canals, railroads, and cable railways across Pennsylvania to compete with the Erie Canal in New York.[85]

The Pennsylvania Railroad was completed between Pittsburgh and Philadelphia in 1854.[86] During the 1880s, the South Pennsylvania Railroad was proposed to compete with the Pennsylvania. It received the backing of William Henry Vanderbilt, head of the New York Central Railroad (the Pennsylvania's chief rival). Andrew Carnegie also provided financial support, since he was unhappy with rates charged by the Pennsylvania Railroad.[87] Construction began on the rival line in 1883 but stopped when the railroads reached an agreement in 1885.[88][89] After construction halted, the only vestiges of the South Pennsylvania were nine tunnels, some roadbed, and piers for a bridge over the Susquehanna River in Harrisburg.[89]

During the early 20th century, the automobile gradually became the primary form of transportation.[75] Motorists crossing the Pennsylvania mountains during the 1930s were limited to hilly, winding roads such as the Lincoln Highway (US 30) or the William Penn Highway (US 22), which had grades exceeding nine percent.[18][90] Due to their sharp curves and steep grades, the roads were dangerous and caused many fatal accidents from skids.[88]

As a result of the challenge of crossing the Pennsylvania mountains by automobile, William Sutherland of the Pennsylvania Motor Truck Association and Victor Lecoq of the Pennsylvania State Planning Commission proposed a toll highway in 1934.[75][91] This highway would be a four-lane limited-access road modeled after the German autobahns and Connecticut's Merritt Parkway.[88][92][93] The turnpike could also serve as a defense road,[94] and construction costs could be reduced by using the abandoned tunnels of the South Pennsylvania Railroad project.[75]

 
Winding section east of Fort Littleton in 1942

In 1935, Sutherland and Lecoq introduced their turnpike idea to state legislator Cliff Patterson, who proposed a feasibility study on April 23, 1935. The proposal passed, and the Works Progress Administration (WPA) explored the possibility of building the road. Its study estimated a cost of between $60 and $70 million (equivalent to between $944 million and $1.1 billion in 2021[95]) to build the turnpike. Patterson introduced Bill 211 to the legislature, calling for the establishment of the PTC. The bill was signed into law by Governor George Howard Earle III on May 21, 1937,[75] and, on June 4, the first commissioners were appointed.[96] The highway was planned to run from US 30 in Irwin (east of Pittsburgh) east to US 11 in Middlesex (west of Harrisburg), a length of about 162 miles (261 km). It would pass through nine tunnels along the way.[97]

The road would have four lanes, with a median and no grade steeper than three percent. Access to the highway would be controlled by entrance and exit ramps.[97] There would be no at-grade intersections, driveways, traffic lights, crosswalks, or at-grade railroad crossings.[98] Curves would be wide and road signage large. The right-of-way for the turnpike would be 200 feet (61 m); the road would be 24 feet (7.3 m) wide, with 10-foot (3.0 m) shoulders and a 10-foot (3.0 m) median. Through the tunnels, the road would have two lanes, a 14-foot (4.3 m) clearance, and a 23-foot-wide (7.0 m) roadway.[97] The turnpike's design would be uniform for its entire length.[98]

In February 1938, the commission began investigating proposals for $55 million in bonds to be issued for construction of the turnpike.[99] A month later, Van Ingen and Company purchased $60 million (equivalent to $921 million in 2021[95]) in bonds they would offer to the public.[100] President Franklin D. Roosevelt approved a $24-million (equivalent to $368 million in 2021[95]) grant from the WPA in April 1938 for construction of the road; the commonwealth also contributed $29 million (equivalent to $445 million in 2021[95]) toward the project.[101] The WPA grant received final approval,[102] but plans were still made to sell bonds; the first issue was planned for about $20 million (equivalent to $307 million in 2021[95]). The reduced bond issue was due to the grant from the WPA.[103]

In June, the Reconstruction Finance Corporation (RFC) announced they would lend the commission sufficient funds to build the road.[104] The RFC loan totaled $32 million (equivalent to $491 million in 2021[95]), with a $26 million (equivalent to $399 million in 2021[95]) grant from the Public Works Administration (PWA), providing $58 million (equivalent to $890 million in 2021[95]) for the turnpike's construction; highway tolls would repay the RFC.[105] In October 1938, the turnpike commission agreed with the RFC and PWA that the RFC would purchase $35 million (equivalent to $537 million in 2021[95]) in bonds, in addition to the PWA grant.[106] That month, a banking syndicate purchased the entire bond amount from the RFC.[107] The previous month, a proposed railroad from Pittsburgh to Harrisburg using the former South Pennsylvania Railroad right-of-way that had been designated for the turnpike was turned down.[108]

Design

 
Laurel Hill Tunnel in 1942

In building the turnpike, boring the former railroad tunnels was completed. Since the Allegheny Mountain Tunnel bore was in poor condition, a new bore was drilled 85 feet (26 m) to the south.[109] The commission considered bypassing the Rays Hill and Sideling Hill tunnels, but the cost of a bypass was considered too high.[81] Crews used steam shovels to widen the tunnels' portals,[109] and temporary railroad tracks transported construction equipment in and out.[110] Concrete was used in lining the tunnel portals.[111] The tunnels include ventilation ducts, drainage structures, sidewalks, lighting, telephone, and signal systems.[112] Lighting was installed along the roadway approaching the tunnel portals.[113]

The tunnels bored through the seven mountains totaled 4.5 miles (7.2 km). The tunnels were Laurel Hill Tunnel, Allegheny Mountain Tunnel, Rays Hill Tunnel, Sideling Hill Tunnel, Tuscarora Mountain Tunnel, Kittatinny Mountain Tunnel, and Blue Mountain Tunnel, and the road became known as the "tunnel highway".[114]

Many bridge designs were used for roads over the highway, including the concrete arch bridge, the through plate girder bridge, and the concrete T-beam bridge.[115][116][117] Bridges used to carry the turnpike over other roads and streams included a concrete arch viaduct in New Stanton.[118] At 600 feet (180 m), the New Stanton viaduct was the longest bridge along the original section of the turnpike.[119] Other turnpike bridges included plate girder bridges like the bridge over Dunnings Creek in the Bedford Narrows. Smaller concrete T-beam bridges were also built[120][121] A total of 307 bridges were constructed along the original section of the turnpike.[119]

Eleven interchanges were built along the turnpike, most of which were trumpet interchanges in which all ramps merge at the toll booths;[122][123] only the New Stanton, Carlisle, and Middlesex interchanges did not follow this design.[122] Lighting was installed approaching interchanges, along with acceleration and deceleration lanes.[113] The road also featured guardrails, consisting of steel panels attached to I-beams.[124] Large exit signs were used, and road signs had cat's-eye reflectors to increase visibility at night.[124][125] Billboards were prohibited.[126] In September 1940, the Pennsylvania Public Utility Commission ruled that trucks and buses would be allowed to use the highway.[127]

Since the first section of the highway was built through a rural part of the state, food and gasoline were not readily available to motorists. Because of this, the commission decided to provide service plazas at 30-mile (48 km) intervals. The plazas would be constructed of native fieldstone, resembling Colonial-era architecture.[128][129] In 1940, Standard Oil of Pennsylvania was awarded a contract for 10 Esso service stations along the turnpike.[130] Eight of the service plazas would consist of service stations and a restaurant, while the plazas at the halfway point (in Bedford) would be larger.[129][130] The South Midway service plaza (the largest) contained a dining room, lunch counter, lounge, and lodging for truckers; a tunnel connected it to the smaller North Midway plaza.[129][131] The remaining service plazas were smaller, with a lunch counter. Food service at the plazas was provided by Howard Johnson's. After World War II, the food facilities were enlarged;[131] service stations sold gasoline, repaired cars, and provided towing service.[132]

Construction of first section

 
A view of the turnpike at an overpass in 1942

Before the first-section groundbreaking, in 1937, the turnpike commission sent workers to assess the former railroad tunnels. In September of that year, a contract was awarded to drain water from the tunnels.[133] After this, workers cleared rock slides and vegetation from the tunnel portals before evaluating the nine tunnels' condition.[134][135] It was decided that six of the nine former South Pennsylvania Railroad tunnels could be used for the roadway. The Allegheny Mountain Tunnel was in too poor a condition for use, and the Quemahoning and Negro Mountain tunnels would be bypassed with rock cuts through the mountains.[135] The Quemahoning Tunnel had been completed and used by the Pittsburgh, Westmoreland and Somerset Railroad.[136]

The Pennsylvania Turnpike groundbreaking was held on October 27, 1938, near Carlisle; Commission Chair Walter A. Jones thrust the first shovel into the earth.[137] Turnpike construction was on a tight schedule because completion of the road was originally planned by May 1, 1940. After the groundbreaking, contracts for finishing the former South Pennsylvania Railroad tunnels, grading the turnpike's right-of-way, constructing bridges, and paving were awarded.[18] By July 1939, the entire length of the turnpike was under contract.[98]

The first work to begin on the road was grading its right-of-way, which involved a great deal of earthwork due to the mountainous terrain.[137] Building the highway required the acquisition of homes, farms, and a coal mine by eminent domain.[98] A tunnel was originally planned across Clear Ridge near Everett, but the turnpike commission decided to build a cut into the ridge.[19] Building the cut involved bulldozers excavating the mountain and explosives blasting the rock.[138] Concrete culverts were built to carry streams and roads under the highway in the valley floor.[139] The Clear Ridge cut was 153 feet (47 m) deep (the deepest highway cut at the time) and was known as "Little Panama" after the Panama Canal.[119] West of Clear Ridge, cuts and fills were built for the turnpike to pass along the southern edge of Earlston.[140]

Considerable work was also involved in building the roadway up the three-percent grade at the east end of Allegheny Mountain, the steepest grade the turnpike traversed.[141] The base of Evitts Mountain was blasted to carry the turnpike across Bedford Narrows along with US 30, the Raystown Branch of the Juniata River, and a Pennsylvania Railroad branch line.[17] In New Baltimore, the turnpike commission had to purchase land from St. John's Church (which contained a cemetery); as part of the agreement, stairways were built on either side of the turnpike to provide access to the church.[142]

Paving began on August 31, 1939.[98] The roadway would have a concrete surface, and concrete was poured directly onto the earth with no gravel roadbed.[143] Concrete batch plants were set up along the road to aid in paving.[144] Interchange ramps were paved with asphalt.[121] The paving operations led to a delay in the projected opening of the highway; by October 1939, the completion date was pushed back from May 1 to June 29, 1940, since paving could not be done during the winter. The commission rushed the paving, attempting to increase the distance paved from one to five miles (1.6 to 8.0 km) a day.[112]

 
Westbound at New Stanton interchange prior to construction of the connecting I-70

Completion was postponed to July 4, before being again postponed to late summer 1940 when rain delayed paving operations.[145] Paving concluded by the end of the summer, and, on September 30, the turnpike commission announced that the road would open on October 1, 1940.[18][146][147] Since the turnpike was opened on short notice, no ribbon-cutting ceremony was held.[147]

On August 26, 1940, a preview of the highway was organized by Commission Chair Jones. It began the previous night with a banquet at The Hotel Hershey and proceeded west along the turnpike, stopping at the Clear Ridge cut before lunch at the Midway service plaza. The preview ended with dinner and entertainment at the Duquesne Club in Pittsburgh.[146][148] That month, a military motorcade traveled portions of the turnpike.[149]

The roadway took 770,000 short tons (700 kt) of sand, 1,200,000 short tons (1,100 kt) of stone, 50,000 short tons (45 kt) of steel, and more than 300,000 short tons (270 kt) of cement to complete.[114] It was built at a cost of $370,000 per mile ($230,000/km) (equivalent to $5.67 million per mile ($2.5 million/km) in 2021[95]).[150] A total of 18,000 men worked on the turnpike; 19 died during its construction.[151]

When the highway was under construction in 1939, its proposed toll was $1.50 (equivalent to $23.00 in 2021[95]) for a one-way car trip; a round trip would cost $2.00 (equivalent to $31.00 in 2021[95]). Trucks would pay $10.00 (equivalent to $155.00 in 2021[95]) one way. Varying tolls would be charged for motorists who did not travel the length of the turnpike.[112] Upon its opening in 1940, automobile tolls were set at $1.50 (equivalent to $23.00 in 2021[95]) one way and $2.25 (equivalent to $34.00 in 2021[95]) round trip. The tolls were to be used to pay off bonds to build the road and were to be removed when the bonds were paid.[113] However, tolls continue to be charged to finance improvements to the turnpike system.[152] The toll rate was about $0.01 per mile ($0.0062/km) (equivalent to $0.15 per mile ($0.093/km) in 2021[95]) when the turnpike opened. The ticket system was used to pay for tolls.[153] This toll rate remained the same for the turnpike's first 25 years; other toll roads (such as the New York State Thruway and the Ohio, Connecticut, and Massachusetts turnpikes) had a higher rate.[154]

Opening of first section

The Pennsylvania Turnpike opened at midnight on October 1, 1940, between Irwin and Carlisle; the day before the opening, motorists lined up at the Irwin and Carlisle interchanges.[76] Homer D. Romberger, a feed and tallow driver from Carlisle, became the first motorist to enter the turnpike at Carlisle, and Carl A. Boe of McKeesport became the first motorist to enter at Irwin.[155] Boe was flagged down by Frank Lorey and Dick Gangle, the first hitchhikers along the turnpike.[156] On October 6 (the first Sunday after the turnpike's opening), traffic was heavy, with congestion at toll plazas, tunnels, and service plazas.[157]

During its first 15 days of operation, the road saw over 150,000 vehicles.[158] By the end of its first year, the road earned $3 million (equivalent to $45.9 million in 2021[95]) in revenue from five million motorists, exceeding the $2.67 million (equivalent to $40.9 million in 2021[95]) needed for operation and bond payments.[159][160] With the onset of World War II, revenue declined due to tire and gas rationing;[161] after the war, traffic again increased.[162]

 
 
West portal of Blue Mountain Tunnel, viewed from Kittatinny Mountain Tunnel. Left photo from 1942; right photo from 2017

When it opened, the turnpike became the first long-distance limited-access road in the United States.[77] It provided a direct link between the Mid-Atlantic and Midwestern states and cut travel time between Pittsburgh and Harrisburg from nearly 6 to about 2.5 hours.[113][163] The road was given the nicknames "dream highway" and "the World's Greatest Highway" by the turnpike commission[1][153] and was also known as "the Granddaddy of the Pikes".[164] Postcards and other souvenirs promoted the original stretch's seven tunnels through the Appalachians.[165]

The highway was considered a yardstick by which limited-access highway construction would be measured.[166] Commission Chair Jones called for more limited-access roads to be built across the country for defense purposes,[159] and the turnpike was a model for a proposed national network of highways planned during World War II.[167] The Pennsylvania Turnpike led to the construction of other toll roads, such as the New Jersey Turnpike and (eventually) the Interstate Highway System.[77] It has been designated a National Historic Civil Engineering Landmark by the American Society of Civil Engineers.[168]

The concrete highway pavement began to fail several years after the road opened due to excessive transverse-joint spacing and the lack of gravel between earth and concrete. As a result, in 1954, an eight-year project began to repave the turnpike with a three-inch (7.6 cm) layer of asphalt between Irwin and Carlisle.[169][77]

Extensions

 

Before the first section of the Pennsylvania Turnpike opened, the commission considered extending it east to Philadelphia, primarily for defense purposes. In 1939, the state legislature passed a bill allowing for an extension of the road to Philadelphia, which was signed into law by Governor Arthur James in 1940 as Act 11.[93][170] The extension was projected to cost between $50 and $60 million in 1941 (equivalent to between $717 million and $861 million in 2021[95]).[170] Funding for the Philadelphia extension was in place in 1948.[171] In July 1948, the turnpike commission offered $134 million (equivalent to $1.22 billion in 2021[95]) in bonds to pay for the extension, which was projected to cost $87 million.[172] The Philadelphia extension was to run from Carlisle east to US 202 in King of Prussia.[78][173] From there, the extension would connect to a state-maintained freeway that would continue to Center City, Philadelphia.[174] Groundbreaking for the Philadelphia extension took place on September 28, 1948, in York County. Governor James H. Duff and Commission Chair Thomas J. Evans attended the ceremony.[175]

The extension would look similar to the original section of the turnpike but would use air-entrained concrete poured onto stone.[78][176] Transverse joints on the pavement were spaced at 46-foot (14 m) intervals rather than the 77-foot (23 m) ones on the original portion.[78] Because it traversed through less mountainous terrain, the extension did not require as much earthwork as the original section.[177] It required the construction of large bridges, including those that cross the Susquehanna River and the Swatara Creek.[178][179] To save money, the Susquehanna River Bridge was constructed with a four-foot-raised (1.2 m) concrete median and no shoulders.[178] This extension of the turnpike would use the same style of overpasses as the original section; the steel deck bridge was also introduced.[180] With the construction of the Philadelphia extension, the Carlisle interchange was closed and the Middlesex interchange with US 11 was realigned to allow for the new extension; it was renamed to the Carlisle interchange.[177]

The extension's completion was delayed by weather and a cement workers' strike; it was to have been finished by October 1, 1950—the 10th anniversary of the opening of the first section.[181] On October 23, 1950, the Philadelphia extension was previewed in a ceremony led by Governor Duff.[182] The extension opened to traffic on November 20, 1950; the governor and Chair Evans cut the ribbon at the Valley Forge mainline toll plaza to the west of King of Prussia.[78][183]

In 1941, Governor James suggested building a western extension to Ohio.[170] That June, Act 54 was signed into law to build the extension.[184] In 1949, the turnpike commission began looking into funding for this road, which would run from Irwin to the Ohio state line near Youngstown, Ohio, bypassing Pittsburgh to the north.[185] That September, $77 million (equivalent to $705 million in 2021[95]) in bonds were sold to finance construction of the western extension.[186] Groundbreaking for the extension took place on October 24, 1949.[187] It was scheduled to take place at the Brush Creek viaduct in Irwin with Governor Duff in attendance.[188]

Like the Philadelphia extension, the western extension required the building of long bridges, including those that cross the Beaver River and the Allegheny River.[189] The overpasses along the road consisted of steel girder bridges and through plate girder bridges.[190] Unlike the other segments, the concrete arch bridge was not used for overpasses, although it was used to carry the turnpike over other roads.[191] On August 7, 1951, the roadway opened between the Irwin and Pittsburgh interchanges.[192] Ohio Governor Frank Lausche led a dedication ceremony on November 26, 1951.[193] The extension opened to the Gateway toll plaza near the Ohio state line on December 26, 1951.[79][194] At the time, the highway ended in a cornfield. Traffic followed a temporary ramp onto rural local roads until the connecting Ohio Turnpike could be built.[79][193] On December 1, 1954, the Ohio Turnpike opened.[195]

 
Westbound approaching the Mid-County interchange with I-476 in Plymouth Meeting

In 1951, plans to extend the turnpike east to New Jersey at the Delaware River to connect with the New Jersey Turnpike were made.[196] The construction of the Delaware River extension was approved by Governor John S. Fine in May of that year.[197] A route for the extension, which would bypass Philadelphia to the north, was announced in 1952. It would cross the Delaware River on a bridge north of Bristol near Edgely, where it would connect to a branch of the New Jersey Turnpike.[198] That September, the turnpike commission announced $65 million (equivalent to $540 million in 2021[95]) in bonds would be issued to finance the project.[199] Work on the Delaware River extension began on November 20, 1952; Governor Fine dug the first shovel into the earth at the groundbreaking ceremony.[200] As a result of building the extension, the Valley Forge mainline toll plaza was located farther east at the connection to the Schuylkill Expressway and would then become the Valley Forge interchange toll plaza.[201] The Delaware River extension included a bridge over the Schuylkill River that was built to the same standards as the Susquehanna River Bridge.[202] The construction of the Delaware River bridge required an amendment to the Pennsylvania Constitution, which barred the state from forming compacts with other states. On August 23, 1954, the Delaware River Extension opened between King of Prussia and US 611 in Willow Grove.[203] The remainder of the road to the Delaware River opened on November 17, 1954.[80]

In April 1954, $233 million (equivalent to $1.89 billion in 2021[95]) in bonds were issued to finance the building of the Delaware River Bridge and the Northeast Extension.[204] Groundbreaking for the Delaware River Bridge connecting the Pennsylvania Turnpike to the New Jersey Turnpike took place on June 26, 1954, in Florence, New Jersey.[80] The steel arch bridge, which opened to traffic on May 23, 1956, was funded jointly by the Pennsylvania Turnpike Commission and the New Jersey Turnpike Authority.[3][205] Pennsylvania Governor George M. Leader and New Jersey Governor Robert B. Meyner were present at the opening ceremony.[206] A mainline toll barrier was built to the west of the bridge, marking the eastern end of the ticket system.[207] This bridge was originally six lanes wide. It contained no median, but one was later installed, and the bridge was reduced to four lanes.[3]

With the construction of the extensions and connecting turnpikes, the highway was envisioned to be a part of a system of toll roads stretching from Maine to Chicago.[208] When the Delaware River Bridge was completed in 1956, a motorist could drive from New York City to Indiana on limited-access toll roads.[207] By 1957, it was possible to drive from New York City to Chicago without encountering a traffic signal.[209]

On the turnpike extensions, the service plazas were less frequent, larger, and further from the road.[180] Gulf Oil operated service stations on the extensions, and Howard Johnson's provided food service in sit-down restaurants.[210][211]

Route numbers

 

Interstate 80S

LocationNorth Beaver TownshipUpper Merion Township
Existed1958–1964

 

Interstate 280

LocationUpper Merion TownshipBristol Township
Length32.65 mi[23] (52.55 km)
Existed1958–1964

In August 1957, the Bureau of Public Roads added the roadway to the Interstate Highway System upon the recommendations of various state highway departments to include toll roads in the system.[212] I-80 was planned to run along the turnpike from the Ohio state line to Harrisburg while I-80S would continue eastward toward Philadelphia. I-70 was also planned to follow the turnpike between Pittsburgh and Breezewood.[213] At a meeting of the Route Numbering Subcommittee on the US Numbered System on June 26, 1958, it was decided to move the I-80 designation to an alignment further north while the highway between the Ohio state line and the Philadelphia area would become I-80S. I-70 was still designated on the turnpike between Pittsburgh and Breezewood. Between King of Prussia and Bristol, the turnpike was designated I-280.[214][215]

 
Sign at the turnpike entrance at Valley Forge showing I-76 and I-276 designations for the mainline and I-476 designation for the Northeast Extension

In April 1963, the state of Pennsylvania proposed renumbering I-80S to I-76 and I-280 to I-276 because the spurs of I-80S did not connect to I-80 in northern Pennsylvania. The renumbering was approved by the Federal Highway Administration (FHWA) on February 26, 1964. With this renumbering, the turnpike would carry I-80S between the Ohio state line and Pittsburgh, I-76 between Pittsburgh and King of Prussia, I-70 between New Stanton and Breezewood, and I-276 between King of Prussia and Bristol. In 1971, the state of Ohio wanted to eliminate I-80S, replacing it with a realigned I-76. The state of Pennsylvania disagreed with the change and recommended that I-80S become I-376 instead. The Pennsylvania government later changed its mind and supported Ohio's plan to renumber I-80S as I-76. In December of that year, the change was approved by the American Association of State Highway Officials. As a result, I-76 would follow the turnpike between the Ohio state line and King of Prussia.[215] This change took effect on October 2, 1972.[216] With the completion of ramps connecting I-95 and the Pennsylvania Turnpike near Bristol on September 22, 2018, the portion of the turnpike between the new interchange and the New Jersey state line became part of I-95 while the eastern terminus of I-276 was cut back to the new interchange.[217][218]

With the creation of the Interstate Highway System, restaurants and gas stations were prohibited along Interstate Highways. However, when it joined the system, the turnpike was grandfathered, allowing it to continue operating its service plazas.[219]

Speed limits

70 mph speed limit on Pennsylvania Turnpike
 
1942
 
2014

The turnpike had no enforced speed limit when it opened except for the tunnels, which had a 35-mile-per-hour (56 km/h) speed limit. Some drivers traveled as fast as 90 mph (140 km/h) on the road.[153] In 1941, speed limits of 70 mph (110 km/h) for cars and 50–65 mph (80–105 km/h) for trucks were enacted.[184] During World War II, the turnpike adopted the national speed limit of 35 mph (56 km/h);[1] after the war, the limit returned to 70 mph (110 km/h).[220]

In 1953, the speed limit on the portion of the highway between the Ohio state line and Breezewood was lowered to 60 mph (97 km/h) to reduce the number of accidents but returned to 70 mph (110 km/h) when the measure proved ineffective.[221][222] The limit on the turnpike was reduced to 65 mph (105 km/h) in 1956 for cars, buses, and motorcycles, with other vehicles limited to 50 mph (80 km/h).[169] A minimum speed of 35 mph (56 km/h) was established in 1959;[223] it was raised to 40 mph (64 km/h) in 1965.[224]

With the passage of the 1974 National Maximum Speed Law, the speed limit on the turnpike was reduced to 55 mph (89 km/h).[225] It was again raised to 65 mph (105 km/h) in 1995, except for urban areas with a population greater than 50,000; the latter retained the 55-mile-per-hour (89 km/h) speed limit.[226] In 2005, the turnpike commission approved raising the speed limit to 65 mph (105 km/h) for the entire length of the turnpike (except the tunnels, mainline toll plazas, and the winding portion near the Allegheny Mountain Tunnel, which retained the 55-mile-per-hour (89 km/h) limit).[227] On July 22, 2014, the speed limit increased to 70 mph (110 km/h) between the Blue Mountain and Morgantown interchanges.[228] On March 15, 2016, the PTC approved raising the speed limit on the remainder of the turnpike to 70 mph (110 km/h), excluding sections that are posted with a 55-mile-per-hour (89 km/h) speed limit.[229][230] On May 3, 2016, the speed limit increased to 70 mph (110 km/h) on the 65-mile-per-hour (105 km/h) sections of the toll road. The speed limit remains 55 mph (89 km/h) at construction zones, the tunnels, mainline toll plazas, the winding portion near the Allegheny Mountain Tunnel, and the section between Bensalem and the Delaware River Bridge.[231][232][233]

Tunnel modernization and realignment

 
Eastern portal of the Sideling Hill Tunnel

As traffic levels increased, bottlenecks at the two-lane tunnels on the Pennsylvania Turnpike became a major problem. By the late 1950s, traffic jams formed at the tunnels, especially during the summer months in the middle of the year.[234] In 1959, four senators urged state officials to work with the turnpike commission to study ways to reduce the traffic jams.[235] That year, the commission began studies aimed at resolving the traffic jams at the Laurel Hill and Allegheny Mountain tunnels; studies for the other tunnels followed.[236] At the conclusion of the studies, the turnpike commission planned to make the entire turnpike at least four lanes by either adding a second tube at the tunnels or bypassing them.[81] The new and upgraded tunnel tubes would feature white tiles, fluorescent lighting, and upgraded ventilation.[154]

The turnpike commission announced plans to build a second bore at the Allegheny Mountain Tunnel and a four-lane bypass of the Laurel Hill Tunnel in 1960. A bypass was planned for the Laurel Hill Tunnel because traffic would be more quickly and less expensively relieved than it would by boring another tunnel.[237] In 1962, the commission approved these two projects.[238] That August, $21 million (equivalent to $146 million in 2021[95]) in bonds were sold to finance the two projects.[239] The Laurel Hill Tunnel was bypassed using a deep cut to the north; it would feature a wide median, truck climbing lanes, and a 145-foot-deep (44 m) cut into the mountain.[154][240] Groundbreaking for the new alignment took place on September 6, 1962.[241] This bypass opened to traffic on October 30, 1964, at a cost of $7.5 million (equivalent to $50.8 million in 2021[95]).[154][240] Work on boring the second tube at Allegheny Mountain Tunnel also began on September 6, 1962.[240] The former South Pennsylvania Railroad tunnel was considered but was again rejected because of its poor condition.[242] On March 15, 1965, the new tube opened to traffic, after which the original tube was closed to allow updates to be made. It reopened on August 25, 1966.[240][243] The construction of the second tube at Allegheny Mountain cost $12 million (equivalent to $77.7 million in 2021[95]).[154]

 
The Abandoned Pennsylvania Turnpike

In 1965, the turnpike commission announced plans to build second tubes at the Tuscarora, Kittatinny, and Blue Mountain tunnels while a 13.5-mile (21.7 km) bypass of the Rays Hill and Sideling Hill tunnels would be built.[244] A bypass of these two tunnels was considered in the 1930s but, at the time, was determined to be too expensive.[81] An early 1960s study concluded that a bypass would be the best option to handle traffic at Rays Hill and Sideling Hill.[81][245] This bypass of the two tunnels would have a 36-foot-wide (11 m) median with a steel barrier in the middle.[63] The commission sold $77.5 million (equivalent to $502 million in 2021[95]) in bonds in January 1966 to finance this project.[246] Construction of the bypass of the Rays Hill and Sideling Hill tunnels involved building a cut across both hills.[247][248] The new alignment began at the Breezewood interchange, where a portion of the original turnpike was used to access US 30.[249] In building the cut across Rays Hill, a portion of US 30 had to be realigned.[247] The cut over Sideling Hill passes over the Sideling Hill Tunnel.[248] The new alignment ends a short distance east of the Cove Valley service plaza on the original segment. The turnpike bypass of Rays Hill and Sideling Hill tunnels opened to traffic on November 26, 1968.[81] When the highway was realigned to bypass the Rays Hill and Sideling Hill tunnels, the Cove Valley service plaza on the original section was closed and replaced with the Sideling Hill service plaza (the only service plaza on the main turnpike serving travelers in both directions).[63] After traffic was diverted to the new alignment, the former stretch of roadway passing through the Rays Hill and Sideling Hill tunnels became known as the Abandoned Pennsylvania Turnpike. The turnpike commission continued to maintain the tunnels for a few years but eventually abandoned them. The abandoned stretch deteriorated; signs and guardrails were removed, pavement started crumbling, trees grew in the median, and vandals and nature began taking over the tunnels. The turnpike commission still performed some maintenance on the abandoned stretch and used it for testing pavement marking equipment.[250] In 2001, the turnpike commission turned over a significant portion of the abandoned section to the Southern Alleghenies Conservancy; bicycles and hikers could use the former roadway.[251] The abandoned stretch of the turnpike is the longest stretch of abandoned freeway in the United States.[81]

Meanwhile, studies concluded that a parallel tunnel was the most economical option at the Tuscarora, Kittatinny, and Blue Mountain tunnels. Work on the new tube at the Tuscarora Mountain Tunnel began on April 11, 1966, while construction began at the Kittatinny and Blue Mountain tunnels a week later.[243] The parallel tubes at these three tunnels would open on November 26, 1968, the same day as the bypass of the Rays Hill and Sideling Hill tunnels. The original tubes were subsequently remodeled.[81] Both the new and remodeled tunnels would have fluorescent lighting, white tile walls, and 13-foot-wide (4.0 m) lanes.[252] The portals of the new tunnels were designed to resemble those of the original tunnels. Reconstruction of the original Tuscarora Mountain Tunnel was completed in October 1970, while work on refurbishing the original Kittatinny and Blue Mountain tunnels was finished on March 18, 1971.[253] With the completion of these projects, the entire length of the mainline highway was at least four lanes wide.[254]

Late 20th century

 
Westbound past the Bensalem interchange with US 1

The roadway's median, while initially thought to be wide enough, was considered too narrow by 1960. The turnpike commission installed median barriers at curves and high-accident areas starting in the 1950s.[255] In 1960, it began to install 100 miles (160 km) of median barrier along the turnpike.[256] Work was completed in December 1965 at a cost of $5 million (equivalent to $33.3 million in 2021[95]).[6] In October 1963, work began on replacing the New Stanton interchange, which required left turns across traffic on the ramps and was frequently congested. The new, grade-separated interchange opened on November 12, 1964, and provided access to I-70 at the western end of the turnpike stretch of I-70/I-76.[257] A new interchange serving I-283 and PA 283 opened at Harrisburg East in 1969. Due to the realignment of US 222 to a four-lane freeway, a new Reading interchange was proposed.[258] This was opened on April 10, 1974.[259]

In 1968, the turnpike commission proposed converting the section of the road between Morgantown and the Delaware River Bridge from a ticket to a barrier system.[258] The project was canceled in 1971 due to a decline in revenue caused by the completion of I-80.[253] In 1969, the turnpike commission announced a 75-percent toll hike, the first such increase for cars.[260] This rise in tolls, which took place September 1 of that year, brought the toll rate to $0.02 per mile ($0.012/km) (equivalent to $0.12 per mile ($0.075/km) in 2021[95]).[261]

In 1969, the turnpike commission said that, because of increasing traffic, it was necessary to widen the turnpike. It proposed doubling the number of lanes from four to eight; the portion in the Philadelphia area was to be 10 lanes wide. Cars and trucks would be carried on separate roadways under this plan.[262] The roadway would also have an 80-mile-per-hour (130 km/h) speed limit and holographic road signs. This widening would have kept much of the routing intact, but significant realignments were proposed between the Allegheny Mountain and Blue Mountain tunnels.[263] Because of the $1.1-billion (equivalent to $5.2 billion in 2021[95]) cost and the 1973 oil crisis that resulted in the imposition of a 55-mile-per-hour (89 km/h) speed limit, this plan was not implemented.[245] By the 1970s, the Pennsylvania Turnpike started to see a decline in the volume of traffic because of the opening of I-80, which provided a shorter route across the northern part of the state, and the 1973 oil crisis, which led to a decline in long-distance travel.[259][264] In the late 1970s, the turnpike commission proposed truck climbing lanes east of the Allegheny Mountain Tunnel near New Baltimore and near the Laurel Hill Bypass.[265] These were completed on December 2, 1981.[266]

In 1978, as the Howard Johnson's exclusive contract to provide food service was ending, the turnpike commission considered bids for competitors to provide food service.[267] That year, Aramark was awarded a contract for food service at two plazas, ending the Howard Johnson's monopoly.[268] The highway became the first toll road in the country to offer more than one fast-food chain at its service plazas.[269] At this time, gas stations along the turnpike were operated by Gulf Oil, Exxon, and ARCO.[268] Hardee's also opened restaurants at the service plazas in 1980 to compete with Howard Johnson's.[270] With this, the turnpike became the first road in the world to offer fast food at its service plazas.[271] The remaining Howard Johnson's restaurants were phased out throughout the 1980s.[272] Additionally, a toll increase of 22 percent was announced in 1978, effective August 1 of that year; this raised the rate to $0.022 per mile ($0.014/km) (equivalent to $0.073 per mile ($0.045/km) in 2021[95]).[261][273]

 
Eastbound approaching the Willow Grove interchange with PA 611

The portion of the turnpike in the Philadelphia area had become a congested commuter road by the 1980s.[24] In 1983, funding was approved to widen the turnpike to six lanes between the Valley Forge and Philadelphia interchanges.[274] This planned project was put on hold because of disagreements between Governor Dick Thornburgh and the turnpike commission members and differences between the commissioners.[275][276] The Pennsylvania Legislature approved the project in 1985; the road would be widened between the Norristown and Philadelphia interchanges.[277][278] Construction on the widening began on March 10, 1986,[279] and was completed on November 23, 1987, with a ribbon-cutting at the Philadelphia interchange. The widening project cost $120 million (equivalent to $567 million in 2021[95]).[280] An interchange to serve the New Cumberland Defense Depot near Harrisburg was planned in the 1980s.[281] In 1992, the turnpike commission decided not to build it because it would instead build a connector road to the depot between PA 114 and Old York Road that would parallel the turnpike.[282]

Burger King and McDonald's opened on the Pennsylvania Turnpike in 1983.[269] This marked a transition from sit-down to fast-food dining on the turnpike by popular demand.[271] The Marriott Corporation purchased the remaining Howard Johnson's restaurants in 1987, incorporating it into its Host Hotels & Resorts division and replacing them with restaurants such as Roy Rogers and Bob's Big Boy.[272]

In 1986, a toll hike of 30 percent was planned and the new rates went into effect on January 2, 1987.[261][283] With this increase, the toll rate was $0.031 per mile ($0.019/km) (equivalent to $0.064 per mile ($0.040/km) in 2021[95]).[261] Motorists originally stopped at booths to receive toll tickets from turnpike staff, but, in 1987, ticket machines replaced human workers.[284]

Plans to build an interchange connecting to the north end of I-476 (Mid-County Expressway) were made; the turnpike commission approved a contract to build the interchange in March 1989.[285] That June, a losing bidder decided to challenge the turnpike commission, saying it violated female and minority contracting rules regarding the percentage of these employees that were used for the project. Under this rule, bidders were supposed to have at least 12 percent of contracts to minority-owned companies and at least four percent to female-owned companies. The losing bidder had 12.4 percent of the contracts to minority companies and 4.2 percent to female-owned companies while the winning bidder had 6.1 percent and 3.7 percent, respectively. The turnpike commission decided to rebid the contract but was sued by the original contractor. This dispute delayed the construction of the interchange.[286] The contract was rebid in November 1989 after the Supreme Court of Pennsylvania permitted it.[287] The interchange between I-476 and the turnpike mainline was completed in November 1992; the ramps to the Northeast Extension opened a month later.[288][289] An official ribbon-cutting took place on December 15, 1992.[290]

In September 1990, the Morgantown interchange was relocated to provide a direct connection to I-176; the overhead interchange lights at the new exit were a nuisance to nearby residents.[291][292] An interchange was also proposed in 1990 with PA 743 between Elizabethtown and Hershey, but a study in 1993 determined that it would not improve traffic flow on area roads.[293][294] The turnpike commission celebrated the highway's 50th anniversary in 1990. Over $300,000 (equivalent to $558,086 in 2021[95]) was spent to promote the turnpike through various means including a videotape, souvenirs, and a private party attended by politicians and companies that work with the turnpike.[295]

Gulf Oil LP (the modern-day successor to the original Gulf Oil after Standard Oil of California—now Chevron—bought Gulf in 1984) replaced the Exxon stations on the turnpike in 1990;[296] Sunoco took over operation of the gas stations from Gulf Oil LP in 1993, outbidding Shell US.[297] In 1995, a farmers market was introduced to the Sideling Hill service plaza.[298]

An electronic toll collection system was proposed in 1990 where a motorist would create an account and use an electronic device which would be read from an electronic tollbooth; the motorist would be billed later.[299] The multi-state electronic tolling system E-ZPass was planned to go into effect by 1998;[300][301] however, implementation of the system was postponed until 2000.[302]

Another 30-percent toll increase went into effect on June 1, 1991, to fund expansion projects, bringing the rate to $0.04 per mile ($0.025/km) (equivalent to $0.07 per mile ($0.043/km) in 2021[95]).[303][304]

 
Westbound in Upper Allen Township

Plans were made in 1993 to build a direct interchange between the turnpike and I-79 in Cranberry Township, Butler County.[305] A contract was awarded to build this interchange in November 1995.[306] In 1997, transportation officials agreed upon a design for the interchange.[307] The project also included moving the western end of the ticket system to a new toll plaza in Warrendale. The interchange project was delayed by a dispute with Marshall and Pine townships in Allegheny County, who wanted to prevent construction of the toll plaza as they thought it would cause noise, air, and light pollution.[308] Marshall Township eventually agreed to allow the toll plaza be built.[309] Groundbreaking for the new interchange took place on February 22, 2002.[310] The westbound Butler service plaza was closed because the Warrendale toll plaza was to be located at its site.[311] On June 1, 2003, the plaza opened and the Gateway toll plaza became a flat-rate toll plaza, while all the exit toll plazas west of Warrendale closed.[312] The direct interchange between the turnpike and I-79, connecting to US 19, opened on November 12, 2003. The project cost $44 million (equivalent to $63 million in 2021[95]).[313]

In 1996, plans were made to reconstruct the Irwin to Carlisle section of the turnpike along with the western part to the Ohio state line.[314] A rebuilding project was proposed for the original section of the roadway in 1998. The first portion planned for construction was a five-mile (8.0 km) stretch east of the Donegal interchange; a contract was awarded in June 1998.[315] This project involved the replacement of overpasses, widening of the median, and the complete repaving of the road.[315][316] The rebuilding was due for completion in 2014, with a projected cost of $5 million per mile ($3.1 million/km) (equivalent to $5.71 million per mile ($3.7 million/km) in 2021[95]).[317] During the reconstruction, the turnpike commission used a humorous advertising campaign called "Peace, Love and the Pennsylvania Turnpike". It ran for 90 days in 2001 and used tie-dyed billboards that resembled those from the 1970s and carried phrases such as "Rome wasn't built in a day" and "Spread the love. Let someone merge."[318]

In 1996, a study on improving the Allegheny Mountain Tunnel by either building another tube or by constructing a bypass was carried out.[319][320] Based on the study, the turnpike commission planned to replace the deteriorating tunnel with a cut through the mountain.[320] The plans were put on hold in 2001 because it would cost $93.7 million (equivalent to $139 million in 2021[95]). It resurrected the project in 2009.[321] The nearby Mountain Field and Stream Club prefers that the tunnels be improved or a new tube built rather than building the bypass. These improvements are needed because the Allegheny Mountain Tunnel is narrow and deteriorating, with disintegrating ceiling slabs and outdated lighting and ventilation.[322]

Construction began in 1998 to improve the bridge over the Schuylkill River in Montgomery County. The work involved building a new bridge adjacent to the existing bridge; the new bridge was wide enough to accommodate a future widening to six lanes. This project was completed in 2000.[323]

A study began in 1999 to widen the road to six lanes between Valley Forge and Norristown.[324] In October 2004, work began on widening this stretch of road,[325] which was completed in November 2008 at a cost of $330 million (equivalent to $414 million in 2021[95]).[326]

21st century

 
Eastbound at the Valley Forge interchange, where I-76 splits from the turnpike and I-276 begins

In 2000, the turnpike commission announced plans to build a new bridge, a segmental concrete bridge wider than the original, over the Susquehanna River.[327] In 2004, work began on building the new, six-lane bridge which cost $150 million (equivalent to $209 million in 2021[95]). On May 16, 2007, a ribbon-cutting took place to mark the completion of the westbound direction of the bridge, which opened to traffic the following day.[21][328] The eastbound direction of the bridge opened a month later.[329]

In October 2000, the turnpike commission announced the road would be switching from sequential exit numbering to distance-based exit numbering. At first, both exit numbers would exist, but the old numbers would be phased out.[330][331] Work began on posting the new exit numbers in 2001.[332]

On December 2, 2000, E-ZPass debuted on the turnpike between Harrisburg West and the Delaware River Bridge.[333][334][335] By December 15, 2001, E-ZPass could be used on the entire length of the Pennsylvania Turnpike.[336][337] Commercial vehicles were allowed to use the system beginning on December 14, 2002.[338]

On June 1, 2003, the Warrendale toll plaza became the west end of the ticket system; the Gateway toll plaza became a flat-rate plaza, and toll booths at the New Castle, Beaver Valley, and Cranberry interchanges were closed.[312] Express E-ZPass lanes opened at the Warrendale toll plaza in June 2004, which allowed motorists to travel through the toll plaza at highway speeds.[339]

On August 1, 2004, tolls increased by 42 percent to a rate of $0.059 per mile ($0.037/km) (equivalent to $0.082 per mile ($0.051/km) in 2021[95]) to provide money for road construction.[340] On November 24, 2004 (the day before Thanksgiving), 2,000 Teamsters Union employees went on the first strike in the turnpike's history after contract negotiations failed. Since this is usually one of the busiest travel days in the US, to avoid traffic jams, tolls were waived for the rest of the day.[341] Beginning on November 25, 2004, turnpike management personnel collected flat-rate cash passenger tolls of $2 and commercial tolls of $15 on the ticketed system, while E-ZPass customers were charged the lesser amount of the toll or the flat rate.[342] The strike ended after seven days, when both sides reached an agreement on November 30, 2004; normal toll collection resumed December 1, 2004.[343]

In 2004, proposals to widen the highway to six lanes between Downingtown and Valley Forge were made.[344] In 2007, the western terminus of the widening project was scaled back from Downingtown to the proposed PA 29 slip ramp.[345] Plans for the widening were presented to the public in 2009.[346] Later that year, the widening was put on hold because of engineering problems.[347] The widening plans resumed in 2010.[348] Work was due to begin in 2013, with completion in 2015.[349] In October 2012, the project was postponed a year because of delays in the approval of permits.[350] The widening project between the PA 29 and Valley Forge interchanges was split into two phases, one running between the PA 252 overpass and the Valley Forge interchange and the other between the PA 29 interchange and the PA 252 overpass.[351] Construction on widening the section between the PA 252 overpass and the Valley Forge interchange began on September 27, 2021, with completion expected in May 2025.[352]

 
The stairs to St. John's Church in New Baltimore in 2010

In 2005, the turnpike commission announced plans to convert the Gateway toll plaza to eastbound-only in 2006 to reduce congestion and facilitate construction of Express E-ZPass lanes.[353] The Express E-ZPass lanes at Gateway opened in July 2007.[354]

Plans were made to build a new pair of bridges over the Allegheny River in 2005.[355] Work began in May 2007, and a dedication ceremony was held on October 23, 2009.[16] The bridges, which cost $194 million (equivalent to $242 million in 2021[95]), opened to traffic the following day, and the old bridge was demolished on July 13, 2010.[356][357]

Plans were made to widen the highway to six lanes between Irwin and New Stanton in 2005.[358] Work on the project began in January 2006; it added a third lane in each direction, replaced several bridges, and realigned a portion of the turnpike and was completed in November 2011.[359] As part of the project, in January 2007, the Hempfield service plaza was permanently closed.[66]

HMSHost (the successor to Marriott's former Host Marriott division) received a 2006 contract to reconstruct the turnpike service plazas.[360] Improvements to the plazas, to cost $150 million (equivalent to $197 million in 2021[95]), will include a food court layout and improved restrooms. Sunoco continues operating gas stations at the renovated service plazas. Most of the plazas were completely rebuilt, although the exterior structure of South Midway's building was retained when it reopened in May 2013 due to its historical significance of being the flagship service plaza on the original section.[70][361] Four service plazas were slated to be closed as part of the deal with HMSHost.[362] Three plazas (Hempfield, South Neshaminy, and North Neshaminy) closed due to construction projects to the turnpike itself,[66][67][363] while the Zelienople service plaza (which was originally slated to stay open) closed due to its underuse.[364][365]

 
Westbound past the Virginia Drive interchange in Fort Washington

In November 2006, Governor Ed Rendell and former Pennsylvania House Speaker John Perzel raised the idea of leasing the turnpike longterm to a private group to raise money to improve other infrastructure in the state. Such a lease was speculated to raise up to $30 billion (equivalent to $39.4 billion in 2021[95]) for the state.[366] In October 2007, 34 companies submitted 14 proposals to lease the turnpike.[367] On May 19, 2008, a record $12.8-billion (equivalent to $16.4 billion in 2021[95]) proposal by the Spanish firm Abertis and Citigroup of New York City to lease the turnpike was submitted.[368] The consortium withdrew the offer on September 30, 2008, as they reasoned the proposal would not be approved in the state legislature.[369]

In 2007, as part of a project to widen a section of the turnpike in Somerset and Bedford counties to six lanes that will last from 2016 to 2020, the turnpike commission announced that it would remove the steps leading to St. John's Church in New Baltimore because they are a safety hazard.[370][371]

In 2015, a pilot program started at exit 189 (Willow Hill) that used automated payment machines that accept credit and debit cards.[372] In October 2016, the turnpike began accepting credit cards as payment at all cash toll booths.[373] In 2019, the turnpike commission announced plans to launch a smartphone app for paying tolls.[374] The Pennsylvania Turnpike used traffic lights as feedback signals for E-ZPass users since it was launched on the roadway in 2001. On March 17, 2017, the PTC announced that they would begin removing the feedback signals as part of upgrading the toll equipment; the feedback signals are being removed because they do not conform to federal signage guidelines.[375]

Slip ramps

 
The westbound Virginia Drive "slip ramp" in Fort Washington

In 1996, the turnpike commission considered adding "slip ramps" in the Philadelphia area in which electronic toll collection technology would be used.[376] Construction began on a westbound E-ZPass-only slip ramp at Virginia Drive (exit 340) in Fort Washington in early 2000;[335] it opened on December 2, 2000, having cost $5.1 million (equivalent to $7.74 million in 2021[95]).[333][335] Work on the eastbound slip ramp at PA 132 (exit 352) in Bensalem Township began in 2009;[377] the ramp opened on November 22, 2010. This slip ramp, which cost $7.4 million (equivalent to $9.11 million in 2021[95]), has access to and from the eastbound direction of the turnpike and was built to provide improved access to Parx Casino and Racing.[378] While all slip ramps were initially reserved for E-ZPass users, they opened to all traffic following the conversion of the turnpike to cashless tolling in 2020.[26]

Other slip ramps were planned in the Philadelphia area at PA 29 near the Great Valley Corporate Center and at PA 252 in Valley Forge in the 1990s. Residents opposed the PA 29 (exit 320) ramp, fearing it would spoil the rural area.[379] In 1999, the turnpike commission canceled plans to build a slip ramp at PA 252 and instead focussed on building one at PA 29.[380] The turnpike commission approved funding for the PA 29 ramp in 2002.[381] The project was put on hold in 2009 because of engineering and design problems in widening the adjacent portion of the turnpike.[347] It was announced that the turnpike commission would approve construction of the slip ramp at PA 29 in August 2010, and construction began in March 2011.[382][383] The interchange, which has access to and from both directions of the turnpike, opened on December 11, 2012; Governor Tom Corbett cut the ribbon.[383][384]

A slip ramp was also planned in 2000 to connect to Lafayette Street in Norristown as part of a revitalization plan for the community.[385] The project would involve extending Lafayette Street to the new ramp.[386] This proposed slip ramp is projected to cost $160 million (equivalent to $243 million in 2021[95]). Montgomery County officials have proposed a surcharge for the new exit in to help pay for the project.[387] Work on engineering and environmental approval for the extension of Lafayette Street occurred in 2008, and acquisition of land began in 2011. Construction of the extension of Lafayette Street began in 2013 and was completed in 2014.[388] On January 7, 2015, the turnpike commission committed $45 million (equivalent to $50.9 million in 2021[95]) to building this interchange.[389] The turnpike commission's Fiscal Year 2017 Capital Plan included $66 million (equivalent to $72.5 million in 2021[95]) for the interchange at Lafayette Street. The design phase of the interchange began in 2017, with preliminary engineering taking place in 2018 and 2019.[390]

In 2013, Montgomery County officials announced they were considering adding more slip ramps along the turnpike to ease traffic congestion.[391] The Pennsylvania Turnpike Corridor Reinvestment Project was released in 2015, with the project planning to construct additional interchanges along the Pennsylvania Turnpike in Montgomery County in order to revitalize business parks adjacent to the roadway.[392] Proposed locations for new interchanges include PA 63 near Willow Grove, Henderson Road in Upper Merion Township, and Lafayette Street/Ridge Pike near Norristown and Plymouth Meeting. In addition, there are plans to add eastbound ramps at the existing Virginia Drive interchange, add additional ramps at the Valley Forge interchange connecting to First Avenue and Moore Road in King of Prussia, add an additional ramp at the Fort Washington interchange connecting to Commerce Drive, and modernize the Willow Grove interchange.[393]

Pennsylvania Turnpike/Interstate 95 Interchange Project and redesignation

 
Looking west at the split where the Pennsylvania Turnpike westbound exits I-95 southbound

Plans to build a direct interchange between the Pennsylvania Turnpike and I-95 in Bristol Township to allow a connection between the portions of I-95 in Pennsylvania and along the New Jersey Turnpike were first proposed in 1978.[394][395] The two roads did not have an interchange because earlier laws—since repealed—prohibited federal funds from being used to build connections to toll roads.[212] In 1982, the federal government mandated that the interchange be built in Pennsylvania.[396] A gap existed in I-95 because of the unbuilt Somerset Freeway segment in central New Jersey.[394] Under the plan, I-95 would be rerouted to follow the turnpike between the new interchange and the New Jersey state line.[397] In addition, the interchange would serve as the new terminus of an extended I-295.[398][399] The area's residents, who thought the interchange would lead to a decline in their quality of life, opposed this plan.[400] An environmental impact statement (EIS) was released in 2003.[401] The interchange received environmental approval in 2004, the preliminary design was completed in 2008, and the final design followed.[82][402][403]

The project involved building a high-speed interchange between the two roadways. The turnpike commission will also widen the existing four-lane road to six lanes east of the Bensalem interchange. A new toll plaza was built east of the Street Road interchange at Neshaminy Falls to mark the eastern end of the ticket system that consists of high-speed E-ZPass lanes along with ticket and cash booths, and the former Delaware River Bridge toll barrier was converted to a westbound all-electronic facility. A new bridge will also be built over the Delaware River. Work on the project began in late 2010; the replacement of two bridges over the turnpike was completed in 2011.[398] Groundbreaking for the interchange with I-95 took place on July 30, 2013, with Governor Corbett in attendance.[404] Construction of the first stage of the interchange began in late 2014.[405] The flyover ramps between northbound I-95 and the eastbound turnpike and between the westbound turnpike and southbound I-95 opened on September 22, 2018.[217] Work on the new mainline toll plaza and widening of the turnpike between I-95 and the Delaware River also began in 2013, with completion in 2016.[398] Once funding is available, construction is expected to begin on completion of the movements between the turnpike, I-95, and I-295, along with the widening of the turnpike between the Bensalem interchange and I-95. Work on building a new Delaware River Bridge is planned to begin in 2025 at the earliest.[406] The first stage of the project, which includes the new toll plaza, widening, and the flyover ramps between I-95 and the turnpike, is to cost $420 million. The flyover ramps are expected to cost $142.9 million, with $100 million coming from federal funds and the remainder from the turnpike commission. The PTC is borrowing money from foreign investors in order to provide funding for the project. The commission entered into a partnership with the Delaware Valley Regional Center (DVRC) in 2014 to raise half of the funds needed to construct the interchange. The EB-5 visa program will allow the commission through the DVRC to save about $35 million over traditional borrowing costs over five years.[407] The remaining stages of the project are unfunded, with a projected total cost of $1.1 billion for the entire project.[405]

The connector was finished in 2018 and completed I-95, which runs from Florida north to Maine. That highway is part of the Interstate Highway System and serves over 110 million people in over 10 percent of the total US land area. The development began as part of the Federal-Aid Highway Act in 1956.[408]

Future

Allegheny Mountain Tunnel bypass

Long-term plans call for major maintenance to be performed on the twin Allegheny Mountain Tunnels; however, this presents a major problem for traffic.[409] On October 22, 2013, the PTC announced plans to replace the tunnels, the older of which was 73 years old that year, with either new tunnel or a bypass due to the age and condition of the twin tunnels and the need for additional capacity.[410] Approximately 11 million vehicles drive through the tunnel every year.[411]

On December 24, 2014, the PTC announced it was going forward with plans to replace the Allegheny Mountain Tunnel. Six options are being considered, three of which would include building bypasses via rock blasting (as was done with the Laurel Hill Tunnel) while the other three would involve boring two new tunnels, presumably three lanes each to accommodate the PTC's long-term plans to widen the entire mainline turnpike to six lanes except at the existing tunnels. If the PTC goes through with building new tunnels, the existing Allegheny Mountain Tunnels would be shut down. Although the projected costs for building a bypass would be less than half that of boring new tunnels and would also require $3 million less for annual maintenance on each tunnel, the Mountain Field and Stream Club, a local hunting group that owns 1,000 acres (400 ha) of land around the tunnel, opposed the bypass options; the group had also opposed plans to replace the tunnels in 2001.[412]

In February 2020, the PTC decided that the tunnel would be bypassed via a new roadway to the south. Such a plan is expected to be cheaper and have a lesser environmental impact than constructing a new tunnel. The project is currently under environmental review; design is expected to take three to four years, and construction will take another three years. The bypass will cost $332.4 million.[413]

New interchange in Penn Township

On July 16, 2019, the PTC voted to allocate $30 million to its 10-Year Capital Plan, for a new interchange from the turnpike to PA 130 in Penn Township, between current exits 57 and 67.[414] According to a Southwestern Pennsylvania Commission study, PA 130 would need to be widened to account for the additional traffic, costing about $38 million and bringing the total project cost to about $68 million.[415] The interchange would utilize cashless tolling, either through the electronic E-ZPass system or a camera system, in which the turnpike would take a photo of the driver's license plate and mail them an invoice.[416] The project would also need coordination between the turnpike commission and PennDOT, which maintains PA 130.[417] The project is supported by the Westmoreland County Chamber of Commerce.[418] On October 28, 2021, it was announced that design work on the interchange would begin. The interchange between the turnpike and PA 130 is projected to be completed in 2026.[419]

Exit list

CountyLocation[420]mi
[14][421]
kmOld exit
[422]
New exit
[421]
Name[421]DestinationsNotes
LawrenceNorth Beaver Township0.000.00 
 
 
 
 
I-76 Toll west / Ohio Turnpike west – Ohio
Ohio state line; western terminus
1.432.30Gateway Toll Gantry (toll eastbound only; E-ZPass or toll-by-plate)
BeaverBig Beaver10.7017.221A10New Castle 
 
I-376 Toll – New Castle, Pittsburgh
I-376 exit 26; indirect access to PA 351
12.8720.71213Beaver Valley  PA 18 – Ellwood City, Beaver Falls
Beaver River13.0–
13.3
20.9–
21.4
Beaver River Bridge
ButlerCranberry Township28.4745.82328Cranberry   I-79 / US 19 – Pittsburgh, ErieI-79 exit 77; formerly called the Perry Highway Interchange[423]
AlleghenyMarshall Township31.0049.89Warrendale Toll Plaza (western end of distance-based toll system)
Hampton Township39.1062.93439Butler Valley  PA 8 – Pittsburgh, Butler
Harmar Township47.7376.81548Allegheny Valley  PA 28 – New Kensington, PittsburghAccess via Freeport Road; indirect access to PA 910
Allegheny River47.8–
48.2
76.9–
77.6
Allegheny River Bridge
Plum49.3079.34Oakmont Plum service plaza (eastbound)
Monroeville56.4490.83657Pittsburgh 
 
  I-376 west / US 22 – Pittsburgh, Monroeville
I-376 exit 85; eastern terminus of I-376; eastern terminus of US 22 Bus.
WestmorelandPenn Township62.84101.13  PA 130Proposed interchange
North Huntingdon Township67.22108.18767Irwin  US 30 – Irwin, Greensburg, McKeesportGreensburg signed eastbound; McKeesport signed westbound
New Stanton75.39121.33875New Stanton 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
I-70 west to US 119 / PA Turnpike 66 north – Greensburg, Wheeling, WV
I-70 exit 58; PA 66 exit 0B; western end of I-70 overlap; southern terminus of PA 66
Hempfield Township77.60124.89New Stanton service plaza (westbound)
Donegal Township90.69145.95991Donegal   PA 31 / PA 711 – Ligonier, Uniontown
SomersetSomerset109.91176.8810110Somerset  US 219 – Somerset, JohnstownAccess via PA 601
Somerset Township112.30–
112.40
180.73–
180.89
North Somerset service plaza (westbound)
South Somerset service plaza (eastbound)
StonycreekAllegheny
township line
122.7–
123.9
197.5–
199.4
Allegheny Mountain Tunnel
BedfordBedford Township145.50234.1611146Bedford   I-99 / US 220 – Bedford, AltoonaAccess via US 220 Bus.
147.30237.06North Midway service plaza (westbound)
South Midway service plaza (eastbound)
East Providence Township161.50259.9112161Breezewood  
 
 
US 30 to I-70 east – Everett, Baltimore
Eastern end of I-70 overlap; Everett signed westbound
FultonTaylor Township172.30277.29Sideling Hill service plaza (both directions)
Dublin Township179.44288.7813180Fort Littleton  US 522 – McConnellsburg, Mount Union
HuntingdonFranklin
county line
DublinMetal
township line
187.3–
188.3
301.4–
303.0
Tuscarora Mountain Tunnel
FranklinMetal Township188.59303.5114189Willow Hill  PA 75 – Willow Hill, Fort Loudon
FannettLurgan
township line
198.5–
199.4
319.5–
320.9
Kittatinny Mountain Tunnel
Lurgan Township199.5–
200.3
321.1–
322.4
Blue Mountain Tunnel
201.29323.9415201Blue Mountain  PA 997 – Shippensburg, Chambersburg
CumberlandHopewell Township202.50325.89Blue Mountain service plaza (westbound)
West Pennsboro Township219.10352.61Cumberland Valley service plaza (eastbound)
Middlesex Township226.54364.5816226Carlisle   I-81 / US 11 – Carlisle, Harrisburg, ChambersburgHarrisburg signed eastbound; Chambersburg signed westbound; indirect access to I-81 exit 52 via US 11
Upper Allen Township236.22380.1617236Gettysburg Pike  US 15 – Gettysburg, Harrisburg
YorkFairview Township241.87389.2518242Harrisburg West  I-83 – York, Baltimore, HarrisburgI-83 exit 39B
Susquehanna River246.5–
247.3
396.7–
398.0
Susquehanna River Bridge
DauphinLower Swatara Township247.38398.1219247Harrisburg East 
 
  I-283 north / PA 283 – Harrisburg, Hershey
Southern terminus of I-283
249.70401.85Highspire service plaza (eastbound)
DauphinLebanon
county line
ConewagoSouth Londonderry
township line
258.80416.50Lawn service plaza (westbound)
LancasterRapho Township266.45428.8120266Lebanon–Lancaster  PA 72 – Lebanon, Lancaster
East Cocalico Township286.09460.4221286Reading   US 222 / PA 272 – Reading, Ephrata, LancasterAccess via Colonel Howard Boulevard, which also has an interchange with Lesher Road; Ephrata signed eastbound; Lancaster signed westbound
Brecknock Township289.90466.55Bowmansville service plaza (eastbound)
BerksCaernarvon Township22Morgantown  PA 10 – Morgantown, ReadingReplaced by newer exit in 1996
298.33480.1222298Morgantown 
 
  
 
I-176 north / PA 10 to PA 23 – Morgantown, Reading
Southern terminus of I-176
ChesterWallace Township304.80490.53Peter J. Camiel service plaza (westbound)
Uwchlan Township311.93502.0023312Downingtown  PA 100 – Pottstown, West Chester
CharlestownEast Whiteland
Tredyffrin township tripoint
319.33513.91320SR 29  PA 29 – Phoenixville, MalvernNo trucks
Tredyffrin Township324.50522.23Valley Forge service plaza (eastbound)
MontgomeryUpper Merion Township326.62525.6424326Valley Forge 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
I-76 east to US 202 / I-476 / US 422 – Philadelphia, Valley Forge
Eastern end of I-76 overlap; western end of I-276; I-476 signed eastbound; US 422 signed westbound
328.40528.51King of Prussia service plaza (westbound)
Schuylkill River331.7–
331.9
533.8–
534.1
Schuylkill River Bridge
Plymouth Township333.28536.3625333NorristownNorristownAccess via Germantown Pike and Plymouth Road; eastbound signed to I-476 south
334.5538.3 
 
 
I-476 Toll north (Northeast Extension) – Allentown
334.5538.325A20Mid-County 
 
I-476 south – Chester, Philadelphia
Westbound exit and eastbound entrance; eastbound exit and westbound entrance via Norristown interchange; exit number corresponds to I-476 mileposts
Upper Dublin Township338.36544.5426339Fort Washington  PA 309 – Philadelphia, Ambler
339.80546.8626A[335]340Virginia DriveVirginia DriveWestbound exit and entrance; no trucks; indirect access to PA 152
Upper Moreland Township342.91551.8627343Willow Grove  PA 611 – Doylestown, Jenkintown
BucksBensalem Township351.49565.6728351Bensalem  
 
 
US 1 to I-95 south – Philadelphia, Trenton
Formerly called the Philadelphia Interchange;[424] I-95 signed eastbound
351.89566.31352Street Road  PA 132 (Street Road)Eastbound exit and entrance; no trucks
352.67567.57Neshaminy Falls Toll Plaza (eastern end of distance-based toll system)
Bristol Township41.166.1 
 
I-95 south – Philadelphia
Westbound exit and eastbound entrance; eastern end of I-276 and Pennsylvania Turnpike signage; western end of I-95 overlap; exits follow I-95 mileage; continuation of Pennsylvania Turnpike signed as exit 40 from I-95 southbound
42.468.229 / 35842  US 13 – Levittown, BristolFormerly called the Delaware Valley Interchange;[424] exit number follows I-95 mileage
42.969.0Delaware River Bridge Toll Gantry (toll westbound only; E-ZPass or toll-by-plate)
Delaware River42.9–
43.7
69.0–
70.3
Delaware River–Turnpike Toll Bridge
43.770.3 
 
 
 
I-95 north (Pearl Harbor Extension) to N.J. Turnpike – New York
New Jersey state line; eastern terminus
1.000 mi = 1.609 km; 1.000 km = 0.621 mi

In popular culture

  • The Pennsylvania Turnpike appeared in the Russian film Brother 2.[425]
  • The turnpike is used as a backdrop in the 2009 film adoption of Cormac McCarthy's novel The Road.[425]
  • The song "You're My Home" by Billy Joel contains the lyric, "Home could be the Pennsylvania Turnpike".[425]
  • Country music composer George Vaughn Horton wrote Pennsylvania Turnpike, I Love You So, as performed by Dick Todd.[425]
  • The lyrics to the song "Probable Cause" by Why? reference the Pennsylvania Turnpike as the setting of the song.[426]

See also

References

  1. ^ a b c Dakelman, Mitchell E. & Schorr, Neal A. (2004). The Pennsylvania Turnpike. Images of America. Mount Pleasant, SC: Arcadia Publishing. p. 69. ISBN 0-7385-3532-X. OCLC 55992362.
  2. ^ "75 Years of Turnpike History". Pennsylvania Turnpike Commission. Retrieved August 3, 2015.
  3. ^ a b c d Dakelman & Schorr (2004), p. 104.
  4. ^ . Pennsylvania Department of Transportation. January 2012. Archived from the original on January 20, 2013. Retrieved October 11, 2012.
  5. ^ Pennsylvania Historical and Museum Commission. "PHMC Historical Markers Search" (Searchable database). Commonwealth of Pennsylvania. Retrieved October 16, 2019.
  6. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k The Pennsylvania Turnpike. Pennsylvania Turnpike Commission. 1981.
  7. ^ Pennsylvania Department of Transportation (2015). (PDF) (Map). Pennsylvania Department of Transportation. Archived from the original (PDF) on October 25, 2017. Retrieved January 3, 2018.
  8. ^ Federal Highway Administration (2010). National Highway System: Pennsylvania (PDF) (Map). Federal Highway Administration. Retrieved October 14, 2012.
  9. ^ Natzke, Stefan; Neathery, Mike & Adderly, Kevin (June 20, 2012). "What is the National Highway System?". National Highway System. Federal Highway Administration. from the original on September 24, 2012. Retrieved July 1, 2012.
  10. ^ . National Remember our Troops Campaign. Archived from the original on January 6, 2015. Retrieved November 3, 2013.
  11. ^ . Pennsylvania Turnpike Commission. June 1, 2010. Archived from the original on March 14, 2016. Retrieved November 3, 2013.
  12. ^ Pennsylvania Turnpike Commission. (Map). Pennsylvania Turnpike Commission. Archived from the original on September 22, 2014. Retrieved September 21, 2014.
  13. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad ae af ag ah ai aj Pennsylvania Turnpike Commission. (PDF) (Map). Pennsylvania Turnpike Commission. Archived from the original (PDF) on October 17, 2015. Retrieved August 3, 2015.
  14. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad ae af ag ah ai aj ak al am an ao ap aq Google (September 6, 2012). "overview of Pennsylvania Turnpike" (Map). Google Maps. Google. Retrieved September 6, 2012.
  15. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q ADC Map (2003). Pennsylvania State Road Atlas. Alexandria, Virginia: ADC Map. pp. 54–56, 68–78, 82–84. ISBN 0875303714.
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  25. ^ "Interstate 95 straight line diagram" (PDF). New Jersey Department of Transportation. Retrieved March 26, 2007.
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  27. ^ "PA Turnpike Toll By Plate - What is it?". Pennsylvania Turnpike Commission. Retrieved January 3, 2016.
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  29. ^ "Pennsylvania Turnpike to raise tolls in 2015". Pittsburgh Post-Gazette. March 27, 2014. Retrieved May 14, 2014.
  30. ^ Boehm, Eric (January 6, 2013). "Tolls climbing, traffic declining as Pa. Turnpike officials chase revenue". The Reporter. Lansdale, PA. Retrieved January 6, 2013.
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  32. ^ "Traffic Rules and Regulations". Pennsylvania Turnpike Commission. Retrieved August 3, 2015.
  33. ^ a b Mattar, George (December 29, 2010). "Turnpike considers getting rid of cash tolls". The Intelligencer. Doylestown, PA. p. 1.
  34. ^ Thompson, Charles (March 6, 2012). "Caution: All-E-Z Pass turnpike ahead". The Patriot-News. Harrisburg, PA. p. A1.
  35. ^ Nussbaum, Paul (March 13, 2012). "Pa. Turnpike looks at much higher non-E-ZPass rates". The Philadelphia Inquirer. p. A1.
  36. ^ Behrman, Elizabeth (January 1, 2016). "Toll over Pennsylvania Turnpike's Delaware Bridge will be cashless". Greensburg Tribune-Review. Retrieved January 3, 2016.
  37. ^ Blazina, Ed (October 24, 2019). "Pa. Turnpike begins cashless tolling Sunday at Ohio border, Route 66 bypass". Pittsburgh Post-Gazette. Retrieved October 26, 2019.
  38. ^ a b Blazina, Ed (November 2, 2019). "Pa. Turnpike won't take cash by fall 2021". The Philadelphia Inquirer. Retrieved November 3, 2019.
  39. ^ Tierney, Jacob (June 2, 2020). "Pennsylvania Turnpike to lay off 500 employees, make cashless tolling permanent". TribLive. Retrieved June 2, 2020.
  40. ^ Blazina, Ed (November 29, 2020). "Pennsylvania Turnpike to build new toll plaza - but with no booths - in North Hills". Pittsburgh Post-Gazette. Retrieved November 30, 2020.
  41. ^ Kratz, Alyssa (December 2, 2022). "Pennsylvania Turnpike to implement open road tolling by 2025". York, PA: WPMT-TV. Retrieved January 1, 2023.
  42. ^ Southwick, Ron (July 21, 2020). "Pa. Turnpike raising tolls again in 2021; those without E-ZPass will pay much more". PennLive. Retrieved January 15, 2021.
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  45. ^ Rauhut, Marcus (January 4, 2009). "Turnpike tolls rise 25 percent Sunday". Public Opinion. Chambersburg, PA.
  46. ^ "Pa. Turnpike users now paying more". Bucks County Courier Times. Associated Press. January 3, 2010. p. 1.
  47. ^ Schmitz, Jon (July 16, 2010). "Turnpike To Become Costliest Toll Road: E-ZPass Customers Will Get Price Break Over Those Paying Cash". Pittsburgh Post-Gazette. p. A1.
  48. ^ a b DeStefano, Carla (January 2, 2011). "Turnpike rate increase takes effect". Herald-Standard. Uniontown, PA. p. A2.
  49. ^ Samuel, Peter (July 29, 2013). . TollRoadsnews. Archived from the original on January 7, 2014. Retrieved January 7, 2014.
  50. ^ "Your wallet could slim down in the new year". The Patriot-News. Harrisburg, PA. January 2, 2012. p. A1.
  51. ^ Urgo, Jacqueline L. (January 10, 2012). "The toll that higher tolls will take". The Philadelphia Inquirer. p. A2.
  52. ^ "PA Turnpike tolls increased on Sunday". Philadelphia, PA: WPVI-TV. January 7, 2019. Retrieved January 7, 2019.
  53. ^ . Pennsylvania Turnpike Commission. Archived from the original on June 11, 2016. Retrieved September 11, 2017.
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  56. ^ "Safety Patrol Program". Pennsylvania Turnpike Commission. Retrieved November 10, 2021.
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  58. ^ "If Your Vehicle Breaks Down..." Pennsylvania Turnpike Commission. Retrieved August 3, 2015.
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  61. ^ "Advanced Travelers Information System". Pennsylvania Turnpike Commission. Retrieved November 26, 2021.
  62. ^ "Service Plazas". Pennsylvania Turnpike Commission. Retrieved November 26, 2021.
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  64. ^ . The Fulton County News. Archived from the original on September 3, 2014. Retrieved June 29, 2014.
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  78. ^ a b c d e Dakelman & Schorr (2004), p. 88.
  79. ^ a b c Dakelman & Schorr (2004), p. 100.
  80. ^ a b c Dakelman & Schorr (2004), p. 103.
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  82. ^ a b "Project Overview". PA Turnpike / I-95 Interchange Project. Retrieved November 14, 2015.
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  84. ^ Cupper (1990), p. 2.
  85. ^ Dakelman & Schorr (2004), p. 13.
  86. ^ Cupper (1990), p. 3.
  87. ^ Dakelman & Schorr (2004), p. 14.
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  90. ^ Dakelman & Schorr (2004), p. 22.
  91. ^ Cupper (1990), p. 6.
  92. ^ Dakelman & Schorr (2004), p. 23.
  93. ^ a b Dakelman & Schorr (2004), p. 24.
  94. ^ "New Highway Held A Military Artery". The New York Times. October 17, 1937. p. 45.
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  99. ^ "Pennsylvania Now Ready for Bids On Big Bond Issue". The Wall Street Journal. February 9, 1938. p. 9.
  100. ^ "$60,000,000 Pennsylvania Turnpike Bonds Soon to Be Reoffered to the Public Here". The New York Times. March 12, 1938. p. 25.
  101. ^ "Approves Big Road Grant". The New York Times. April 9, 1938. p. 3.
  102. ^ "Pennsylvania Gets Road Grant". The New York Times. April 15, 1938. p. 13.
  103. ^ "Market Activity Aids Pennsylvania Road Bond Plans". The Wall Street Journal. April 28, 1938. p. 3.
  104. ^ "To Aid 'Super Highway'". The New York Times. June 12, 1938. p. 36.
  105. ^ "PWA, RFC To Build a 'Super Highway'". The New York Times. July 31, 1938. p. 1.
  106. ^ "Finance 162-Mile Highway". The New York Times. October 12, 1938. p. 44.
  107. ^ "Funds for Super-Highway". The New York Times. February 9, 1939. p. 33.
  108. ^ "Petition to Build a Railroad Denied". The New York Times. October 2, 1938. p. 74.
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  127. ^ "Trucks and Buses to Use Pennsylvania Turnpike". The New York Times. September 20, 1940. p. 33.
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  130. ^ a b "New Esso Stations". The Wall Street Journal. May 13, 1940. p. 7.
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  148. ^ "Turnpike Hailed by First Riders". The New York Times. August 27, 1940. p. 42.
  149. ^ Dakelman & Schorr (2004), p. 67.
  150. ^ Schmitt, F.E. (January 5, 1939). "South Penn Experiment". Engineering News-Record. New York: McGraw-Hill Publishing Company. 122 (1): 11. Retrieved December 28, 2008.
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  152. ^ Moran, Robert and Rich Heidorn Jr. (October 26, 1997). "Why You Pay To Cross Pa. Tollbooths Could Have Come Down. Jobs And Power Prevented That". The Philadelphia Inquirer. p. A01.
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  157. ^ Cupper (1990), p. 20.
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  160. ^ "Turnpike One Year Old". The New York Times. October 12, 1941. p. XX3.
  161. ^ "Penna. Turnpike Revenues Show Wide Drop From 1941". The Wall Street Journal. August 18, 1942. p. 6.
  162. ^ "Highway Traffic Rises". The New York Times. August 10, 1945. p. 15.
  163. ^ Cupper (1990), p. 18.
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  166. ^ "High-Speed Roads of Future Depicted". The New York Times. February 17, 1939. p. 21.
  167. ^ Estill, A.K. (February 16, 1944). "Express Highways". The Wall Street Journal. p. 1.
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  170. ^ a b c Davies, Lawrence E. (March 23, 1941). "Study Link to Turnpike". The New York Times. p. XX3.
  171. ^ "Superhighway Project Set". The New York Times. June 11, 1948. p. 36.
  172. ^ "Pennsylvania to Sell New Bonds to Extend Automobile Turnpike". The Wall Street Journal. July 27, 1948. p. 7.
  173. ^ "Pennsylvania Turnpike Extension Financing Set Through 4 Firms". The Wall Street Journal. June 10, 1948. p. 6.
  174. ^ "Pennsylvania Turnpike Revenue Issue, Largest Ever Offered, on Market Aug. 11". The New York Times. August 2, 1948. p. 25.
pennsylvania, turnpike, this, article, about, mainline, running, from, ohio, jersey, other, uses, disambiguation, penna, turnpike, turnpike, toll, highway, operated, commission, state, pennsylvania, controlled, access, highway, runs, miles, across, state, turn. This article is about the Pennsylvania Turnpike mainline running from Ohio to New Jersey For other uses see Pennsylvania Turnpike disambiguation The Pennsylvania Turnpike Penna Turnpike or PA Turnpike is a toll highway operated by the Pennsylvania Turnpike Commission PTC in the U S state of Pennsylvania A controlled access highway it runs for 360 miles 580 km across the state The turnpike s western terminus is at the Ohio state line in Lawrence County where the road continues west as the Ohio Turnpike The eastern terminus is at the New Jersey state line at the Delaware River Turnpike Toll Bridge over the Delaware River in Bucks County where the road continues east as the Pearl Harbor Memorial Extension of the New Jersey Turnpike Pennsylvania TurnpikePennsylvania Turnpike mainline highlighted in greenRoute informationMaintained by PTCLength360 09 mi 4 579 51 km ExistedOctober 1 1940 1 2 presentHistoryCompleted on May 23 1956 3 ComponenthighwaysI 76 Toll from the Ohio state line to Valley Forge I 70 Toll from New Stanton to Breezewood I 276 Toll from Valley Forge to Bristol Township I 95 Toll from Bristol Township to the New Jersey state lineRestrictionsNo hazardous goods allowed in the Allegheny Mountain Tuscarora Mountain Kittatinny Mountain and Blue Mountain tunnelsMajor junctionsWest endI 76 Toll Ohio Turnpike at the Ohio state lineMajor intersectionsI 79 US 19 in Cranberry Township I 376 US 22 in Monroeville I 70 US 119 PA Turnpike 66 in New Stanton I 99 US 220 in Bedford I 70 US 30 in Breezewood US 11 to I 81 near Carlisle I 83 near Harrisburg I 76 US 202 near Valley Forge I 476 Penna Turnpike NE Extension in Plymouth Meeting I 95 near BristolEast endI 95 Toll Pearl Harbor Extension on Delaware River Turnpike Toll Bridge at the New Jersey state lineLocationCountryUnited StatesStatePennsylvaniaCountiesLawrence Beaver Butler Allegheny Westmoreland Somerset Bedford Fulton Huntingdon Franklin Cumberland York Dauphin Lebanon Lancaster Berks Chester Montgomery BucksHighway systemPennsylvania State Route SystemInterstate US State Scenic Byways Legislative PA 75I 76 PA 76 PA 274I 276 PA 276 I 279I 280 PA 280Pennsylvania Historical MarkerDesignated1990 5 The highway runs east to west through the southern part of the state connecting the Pittsburgh Harrisburg and Philadelphia areas It crosses the Appalachian Mountains in central Pennsylvania passing through four tunnels The turnpike is part of the Interstate Highway System it is designated as part of Interstate 76 I 76 between the Ohio state line and Valley Forge I 70 concurrent with I 76 between New Stanton and Breezewood Interstate 276 I 276 between Valley Forge and Bristol Township and I 95 from Bristol Township to the New Jersey state line The road uses an all electronic tolling system tolls can be paid using E ZPass or toll by plate which uses automatic license plate recognition Historically cash tolls were collected using a combination of the ticket system and a barrier toll system but cash tolls were phased out between 2016 and 2020 Along the turnpike are 15 service plazas providing food and fuel to travelers During the 1930s the Pennsylvania Turnpike was designed to improve automobile transportation across the mountains of Pennsylvania using seven tunnels built for the abandoned South Pennsylvania Railroad in the 1880s The road opened in 1940 between Irwin and Carlisle It was one of the earlier long distance limited access highways in the United States and served as a precedent for additional limited access toll roads and the Interstate Highway System The Pennsylvania Turnpike was extended east to Valley Forge in 1950 and west to the Ohio state line in 1951 In 1954 the road was extended further east to the Delaware River and construction began on the Northeast Extension of the turnpike The mainline turnpike was finished in 1956 with the completion of the Delaware River Bridge During the 1960s an additional tube was bored at four of the two lane tunnels while the other three tunnels were bypassed these improvements made the entire length of the mainline turnpike four lanes wide Improvements continue to be made to the road rebuilding the original section to modern standards widening portions of the turnpike to six lanes and adding interchanges In 2018 an ongoing interchange project saw the redesignation of the easternmost three miles 4 8 km of the road from I 276 to I 95 Though still considered part of the turnpike mainline it is no longer signed with turnpike markers and uses I 95 s mileposts and exit numbers Contents 1 Route description 1 1 Ohio to Irwin 1 2 Irwin to Carlisle 1 3 Carlisle to Valley Forge 1 4 Valley Forge to New Jersey 1 5 Major bridges and tunnels 2 Tolls 2 1 Act 44 toll increases 3 Services 3 1 Emergency assistance and information 3 2 Service plazas 4 History 4 1 Planning 4 2 Design 4 3 Construction of first section 4 4 Opening of first section 4 5 Extensions 4 6 Route numbers 4 7 Speed limits 4 8 Tunnel modernization and realignment 4 9 Late 20th century 4 10 21st century 4 11 Slip ramps 4 12 Pennsylvania Turnpike Interstate 95 Interchange Project and redesignation 5 Future 5 1 Allegheny Mountain Tunnel bypass 5 2 New interchange in Penn Township 6 Exit list 7 In popular culture 8 See also 9 References 10 External linksRoute description EditThe turnpike runs east to west across Pennsylvania from the Ohio state line in Lawrence County east to the New Jersey state line in Bucks County It passes through the Pittsburgh Harrisburg and Philadelphia areas along with farmland and woodland The highway crosses the Appalachian Mountains in the central part of the state passing through four tunnels The PTC created in 1937 to construct finance operate and maintain the road controls the highway 6 In 2015 the roadway had an annual average daily traffic count ranging from a high of 120 000 vehicles between the Norristown interchange and I 476 to a low of 12 000 vehicles between the Ohio state line and the interchange with I 79 and U S Route 19 US 19 7 As part of the Interstate Highway System the turnpike is part of the National Highway System 8 a network of roads important to the country s economy defense and mobility 9 The Pennsylvania Turnpike is designated as a Blue Star Memorial Highway honoring those who have served in the United States Armed Forces the Garden Club Federation of Pennsylvania has placed Blue Star Memorial Highway markers at service plazas along the turnpike 10 11 In addition to the east west mainline the PTC also operates the Northeast Extension of the Pennsylvania Turnpike I 476 the Beaver Valley Expressway I 376 the Mon Fayette Expressway Pennsylvania Route 43 or PA 43 the Amos K Hutchinson Bypass PA 66 and the Southern Beltway PA 576 12 Ohio to Irwin Edit Westbound approaching the Pittsburgh interchange with I 376 US 22 in Monroeville The Pennsylvania Turnpike begins at the Ohio state line in Lawrence County beyond which the highway continues west as the Ohio Turnpike From the state line the turnpike heads southeast as a four lane freeway designated as I 76 through rural areas south of New Castle A short distance from the Ohio state line the eastbound lanes come to the all electronic Gateway toll gantry The highway then crosses into Beaver County where it reaches its first interchange with I 376 here the part called Beaver Valley Expressway in Big Beaver 13 14 15 After this interchange the turnpike passes under Norfolk Southern s Koppel Secondary rail line before it reaches the exit for PA 18 in Homewood Past PA 18 the highway crosses CSX s Pittsburgh Subdivision rail line the Beaver River and Norfolk Southern s Youngstown Line on the Beaver River Bridge 6 13 14 The road then enters Butler County where it comes to Cranberry Township 15 Here an interchange serves I 79 and US 19 The turnpike continues through a mix of rural land and suburban residential development north of Pittsburgh into Allegheny County 14 15 The road then approaches the Warrendale toll plaza where distance based tolling begins and continues southeast passing over the P amp W Subdivision rail line which is owned by CSX and operated by the Buffalo and Pittsburgh Railroad East of this point the turnpike has an interchange with PA 8 in Hampton Township The turnpike then comes to the Allegheny Valley exit in Harmar Township which provides access to PA 28 via Freeport Road 13 14 East of this interchange the road heads south with Canadian National s Bessemer Subdivision rail line parallel to the east of the road The highway crosses Norfolk Southern s Conemaugh Line the Allegheny River and the Allegheny Valley Railroad s Allegheny Subdivision line on the six lane Allegheny River Turnpike Bridge 13 14 16 After the Allegheny River crossing the turnpike returns to four lanes passing through the Oakmont Country Club before coming to a bridge over Canadian National s Bessemer Subdivision From here the railroad tracks run along the west side of the road before splitting further to the west The highway heads southeast to Monroeville an eastern suburb of Pittsburgh an interchange with I 376 US 22 Penn Lincoln Parkway provides access to Pittsburgh 13 14 East of Monroeville the turnpike continues through eastern Allegheny County before crossing into Westmoreland County 14 15 Here it heads south and passes over Norfolk Southern s Pittsburgh Line before it comes to the exit for US 30 near Irwin 13 14 Irwin to Carlisle Edit After the Irwin interchange the Pennsylvania Turnpike widens to six lanes and heads into rural areas west of Greensburg Curving southeast it reaches New Stanton where an interchange provides access to I 70 US 119 and the southern terminus of PA 66 Amos K Hutchinson Bypass The road narrows back to four lanes at this interchange and I 70 forms a concurrency with I 76 on the turnpike After New Stanton the road passes over the Southwest Pennsylvania Railroad s Radebaugh Subdivision line and winds southeast to the exit for PA 31 in Donegal which also provides access to PA 711 13 14 Continuing east past Donegal the turnpike crosses Laurel Hill into Somerset County 14 15 In this county the road continues southeast to Somerset and an interchange with PA 601 accessing US 219 and Johnstown before it crosses over CSX s S amp C Subdivision rail line East of Somerset the highway passes north of the Somerset Wind Farm before it reaches Allegheny Mountain 13 14 going under the mountain in the Allegheny Mountain Tunnel 6 13 14 Exiting the tunnel the turnpike winds down the mountain at a three percent grade which is the steepest grade on the turnpike 14 17 18 and heads into Bedford County passing through a valley 15 At Bedford an exit for US 220 Business US 220 Bus provides access to US 220 and the southern terminus of I 99 this exit also serves Altoona to the north 13 14 Eastbound at the Breezewood interchange where I 70 splits from I 76 East of Bedford the turnpike passes through The Narrows a gap in Evitts Mountain The turnpike US 30 and the Raystown Branch Juniata River all pass through the 650 foot wide 200 m narrows 14 17 The road winds through a valley south of the river before traversing Clear Ridge Cut near Everett 13 14 19 Further east at Breezewood I 70 leaves the turnpike this interchange is notably home to some of the only traffic lights on an Interstate Highway 13 14 After Breezewood I 76 continues along the turnpike heading northeast across Rays Hill into Fulton County 14 15 The turnpike continues east across Sideling Hill before reaching an interchange with US 522 in Fort Littleton After this interchange the highway parallels US 522 before curving east into Huntingdon County 14 15 The turnpike goes under Tuscarora Mountain through the Tuscarora Mountain Tunnel entering Franklin County 6 14 15 It then curves northeast into a valley to the exit for PA 75 in Willow Hill 13 14 Again heading east the road passes under Kittatinny Mountain through the Kittatinny Mountain Tunnel Shortly after exiting the tunnel the highway enters the Blue Mountain Tunnel under Blue Mountain 6 13 14 Leaving that tunnel the turnpike heads northeast along the base of Blue Mountain to an exit for PA 997 13 14 East of this interchange the road enters Cumberland County heading east through the Cumberland Valley on a stretch known as the straightaway 14 15 20 Further east the turnpike reaches Carlisle and an interchange with US 11 providing access to I 81 13 14 Carlisle to Valley Forge Edit Westbound past the PA 29 interchange in Charlestown Township Approaching Harrisburg the Pennsylvania Turnpike heads east through a mixture of rural land and suburban development passing over Norfolk Southern s Shippensburg Secondary rail line In Upper Allen Township the highway comes to the US 15 interchange accessing Gettysburg to the south and Harrisburg to the north The road continues east and passes over Norfolk Southern s Lurgan Branch rail line before it heads into York County where it reaches the interchange with I 83 serving Harrisburg its western suburbs and York to the south 13 14 15 East of I 83 the turnpike widens to six lanes and crosses over Norfolk Southern s Port Road Branch rail line the Susquehanna River Amtrak s Keystone Corridor rail line and Norfolk Southern s Royalton Branch rail line on the Susquehanna River Bridge Now in Dauphin County the road bypasses Harrisburg to the south 14 15 21 In Lower Swatara Township the turnpike reaches an interchange with the southern end of I 283 serving Harrisburg and its eastern suburbs and providing access to PA 283 the PTC headquarters are located adjacent to this interchange Here the road narrows back to four lanes and runs through suburban development near Middletown The roadway passes over the Middletown and Hummelstown Railroad and the Swatara Creek before it continues into rural areas 13 14 The turnpike crosses a corner of Lebanon County before entering Lancaster County 15 In Lancaster County the highway passes through Pennsylvania Dutch Country 22 and comes to an interchange with PA 72 accessing Lebanon to the north and Lancaster to the south Further east the turnpike passes over an East Penn Railroad line in Denver before it reaches an interchange with US 222 and PA 272 which serves the cities of Reading and Lancaster The route continues into Berks County and comes to an interchange with the southern terminus of I 176 a freeway to Reading and PA 10 in Morgantown that also provides access to PA 23 13 14 15 The turnpike then enters Chester County running southeast 13 14 15 to an exit for PA 100 north of Downingtown where it heads into the western suburbs of Philadelphia Continuing east it reaches an interchange with PA 29 near Malvern 13 14 The highway crosses into Montgomery County and comes to the Valley Forge interchange in King of Prussia where I 76 splits from the turnpike and heads southeast as the Schuylkill Expressway toward Philadelphia this interchange also provides access to US 202 and US 422 13 14 15 Valley Forge to New Jersey Edit See also Pennsylvania Turnpike Interstate 95 Interchange Project Interstate 276 TollLocationUpper Merion Township Bristol TownshipLength29 78 mi 23 47 93 km Existed1964 present Eastbound past the Mid County interchange with I 476 in Plymouth Meeting Starting at the Valley Forge interchange the turnpike is designated as I 276 and becomes a six lane road serving as a suburban commuter highway 13 14 24 The road comes to a bridge over SEPTA s Norristown High Speed Line and runs parallel to Norfolk Southern s Dale Secondary rail line which is located south of the road The turnpike crosses Norfolk Southern s Harrisburg Line the Schuylkill River and SEPTA s Manayunk Norristown Line on the Schuylkill River Bridge near Norristown A short distance later the road passes over the Schuylkill River Trail and Norfolk Southern s Morrisville Connecting Track on the Schuylkill River Bridge before the parallel Dale Secondary rail line heads further south from the road 6 13 14 In Plymouth Meeting an interchange with Germantown Pike provides access to Norristown before the roadway reaches the Mid County Interchange This interchange connects to I 476 which heads south as the Mid County Expressway commonly known as the Blue Route and north as the Northeast Extension of the turnpike connecting the mainline turnpike to the Lehigh Valley and the Pocono Mountains regions of Pennsylvania 13 14 After the Mid County Interchange the mainline turnpike heads east through the northern suburbs of Philadelphia In Fort Washington the highway passes over SEPTA s Lansdale Doylestown Line before it has an interchange with PA 309 At this point the road becomes parallel to Norfolk Southern s Morrisville Line which is located a short distance to the south of the road One mile 1 6 km later the turnpike has a westbound exit and entrance for Virginia Drive In Willow Grove the highway reaches the PA 611 exit before passing over SEPTA s Warminster Line 13 14 The turnpike continues through more suburban areas crossing into Bucks County and coming to a bridge over Norfolk Southern s Morrisville Line 14 15 Farther east the roadway passes over SEPTA s West Trenton Line In Bensalem Township the highway comes to a bridge over CSX s Trenton Subdivision rail line before reaching an interchange with US 1 which provides access to Philadelphia 13 14 Westbound in Upper Southampton Township The highway narrows back to four lanes before an eastbound exit and entrance with PA 132 A short distance later the turnpike arrives at the eastern end of the distance based toll system at the Neshaminy Falls main line toll plaza After passing through more suburbs the road reaches a partial interchange with I 95 where it crosses under I 295 with no access this interchange has access from the westbound turnpike to southbound I 95 and from northbound I 95 to the eastbound turnpike At this point I 276 ends and the Pennsylvania Turnpike becomes part of I 95 Here signage indicates the westbound turnpike as a left exit from southbound I 95 using I 95 milepost exit number 40 This is the only place where continuing on the mainline turnpike is signed as an exit 13 14 After joining I 95 the remaining three miles 4 8 km of road uses I 95 s mileposts and exit numbers and is not directly signed as the Pennsylvania Turnpike though it is still considered part of the mainline turnpike Continuing east the turnpike reaches its final interchange providing access to US 13 near Bristol Following this the road passes over an East Penn Railroad line before it comes to the westbound all electronic Delaware River Bridge toll gantry 13 14 After this the highway crosses the Delaware Canal and Amtrak s Northeast Corridor rail line before heading across the Delaware River into New Jersey on the Delaware River Turnpike Toll Bridge 6 13 14 At this point the Pennsylvania Turnpike ends and I 95 continues east north as the Pearl Harbor Memorial Extension of the New Jersey Turnpike which connects to the mainline of the New Jersey Turnpike 13 14 25 Major bridges and tunnels Edit West portal of the Allegheny Mountain Tunnel The Pennsylvania Turnpike incorporates several major bridges and tunnels along its route Four tunnels cross central Pennsylvania s Appalachian Mountains The 6 070 foot 1 850 m Allegheny Mountain Tunnel passes under Allegheny Mountain in Somerset County The Tuscarora Mountain Tunnel runs beneath Tuscarora Mountain at the border of Huntingdon and Franklin counties and is 5 236 feet 1 596 m long The Kittatinny Mountain and Blue Mountain tunnels are adjacent to each other in Franklin County and are 4 727 feet 1 441 m and 4 339 feet 1 323 m long respectively 6 13 Five bridges carry the turnpike over major rivers in the state The 1 545 foot long 471 m Beaver River Bridge crosses the Beaver River in Beaver County 6 13 The highway crosses the Allegheny River in Allegheny County on the 2 350 foot long 720 m Allegheny River Turnpike Bridge 13 16 and crosses the Susquehanna River between York and Dauphin counties on the 5 910 foot long 1 800 m Susquehanna River Bridge 13 21 In Montgomery County the turnpike crosses the Schuylkill River on the 1 224 foot long 373 m Schuylkill River Bridge At the New Jersey state line in Bucks County the highway is connected to the Pearl Harbor Memorial Extension of the New Jersey Turnpike by the 6 571 foot long 2 003 m Delaware River Turnpike Toll Bridge over the Delaware River 6 13 Tolls Edit Toll plaza at Somerset interchange before conversion to all electronic tolling The Pennsylvania Turnpike uses all electronic tolling with tolls payable by toll by plate which uses automatic license plate recognition to take a photo of the vehicle s license plate and mail a bill to the vehicle owner or E ZPass Between the Warrendale and Neshaminy Falls toll plazas on the mainline as well as on the Northeast Extension from Mid County to Wyoming Valley tolls are based on distance traveled 26 An eastbound mainline toll gantry is located at Gateway near the Ohio state line and a westbound mainline toll gantry is located at the Delaware River Bridge near the New Jersey state line both charging a flat toll 26 27 There is no toll between Gateway and Warrendale and between Neshaminy Falls and the Delaware River Bridge 26 As of 2023 update it costs a passenger vehicle 90 90 to travel the length of the mainline turnpike between Warrendale and Neshaminy Falls using toll by plate and 45 00 using E ZPass the eastbound Gateway toll gantry costs 14 40 with toll by plate and 7 10 with E ZPass for passenger vehicles while the westbound Delaware River Bridge toll gantry costs 9 20 using toll by plate and 6 90 using E ZPass 26 Since 2009 the turnpike has raised tolls once a year starting on January 1 to provide funding for increasing annual payments to the Pennsylvania Department of Transportation PennDOT as mandated by Act 44 28 The turnpike commission paid PennDOT 450 million annually of which 200 million went to non turnpike highway projects across the state and 250 million went to funding mass transit As part of Act 89 signed in 2013 the annual payments to PennDOT will end after 2022 35 years earlier than the original proposal under Act 44 but it is not known if the annual toll increases will continue after 2022 Act 89 has also redirected the entire 450 million annual payments to PennDOT toward funding mass transit 29 With the annual rise in tolls traffic has been shifting from the turnpike to local roads 30 Until March 2020 the Pennsylvania Turnpike used the ticket system of tolling between the Warrendale and Neshaminy Falls toll plazas as well as on the Northeast Extension from Mid County to Wyoming Valley 31 When entering the turnpike motorists received a ticket listing the toll for each exit the ticket was surrendered when exiting and the applicable toll was paid If the ticket was lost motorists were charged the maximum toll for that exit 32 Cash credit cards and E ZPass were accepted at traditional toll plazas 31 In 2010 McCormick Taylor and Wilbur Smith Associates were hired to conduct a feasibility study on converting the road to all electronic tolls 33 On March 6 2012 the turnpike commission announced that it was implementing this plan 34 The turnpike commission projected that it would save 65 million annually on labor costs by eliminating toll collectors 35 On January 3 2016 all electronic tolling was introduced in the westbound direction at the Delaware River Bridge mainline toll plaza while the eastern terminus of the ticket system was moved from the Delaware River Bridge to Neshaminy Falls 36 On October 27 2019 all electronic tolling was implemented at the eastbound Gateway mainline toll plaza 37 All electronic tolling was originally scheduled to be implemented on the entire length of the Pennsylvania Turnpike in the later part of 2021 38 However in March 2020 the turnpike made the switch early as a result of the COVID 19 pandemic 39 The all electronic tolling system on the turnpike will initially use toll booths at exits until mainline toll gantries between interchanges are constructed 38 40 Mainline toll gantries are planned to be in operation by 2025 41 As of 2020 update about 86 percent of vehicles along the Pennsylvania Turnpike use E ZPass for payment of tolls 42 Act 44 toll increases Edit The turnpike commission raised tolls by 25 percent on January 4 2009 to provide funds to PennDOT for road and mass transit projects as mandated by Act 44 28 43 This toll hike brought the rate to travel the turnpike to 0 074 per mile 0 046 km equivalent to 0 09 per mile 0 056 km in 2021 44 45 At this point an annual toll increase was planned 43 A three percent toll increase went into effect January 3 2010 bringing the rate to 0 077 per mile 0 048 km equivalent to 0 09 mi 0 056 km in 2021 44 46 47 The cash toll increased 10 percent on January 2 2011 and E ZPass tolls increased three percent 48 The new toll rate was 0 085 per mile 0 053 km equivalent to 0 1 mi 0 062 km in 2021 44 using cash and 0 079 per mile 0 049 km equivalent to 0 1 mi 0 062 km in 2021 44 using E ZPass 44 49 As part of this toll hike the turnpike commission initially planned to omit the toll amount from new tickets and Pennsylvania Auditor Jack Wagner wondered if the commission was trying to hide the increase 48 The commission later decided to include the tolls on new tickets 33 Cash tolls increased 10 percent on January 1 2012 while E ZPass tolls were unchanged from the previous year 50 With this increase the cash toll rate increased to 0 093 per mile 0 058 km equivalent to 0 11 mi 0 068 km in 2021 44 51 Tolls for both cash and E ZPass customers increased in January of each of the next eight years 52 Services EditEmergency assistance and information Edit The turnpike formerly had a call box every mile 1 6 km for its entire length 53 Call boxes were first installed between New Stanton and New Baltimore in December 1988 and in 1989 call boxes were extended along the length of the highway 54 In September 2017 the turnpike commission began removing the call boxes due to increased mobile phone usage making the call boxes obsolete 55 Motorists needing assistance may dial 11 on mobile phones First responder service is available to all turnpike users via the GEICO Safety Patrol program The free program checks for disabled motorists debris and accidents along the road and provides assistance 24 hours daily year round Each patrol vehicle covers a 20 to 25 mile 32 to 40 km stretch of the turnpike 56 57 Towing service is available from authorized service stations near the highway 58 and Pennsylvania State Police Troop T patrols the turnpike The troop s headquarters is in Highspire its turnpike substations are grouped into two sections the western section has substations in Gibsonia New Stanton Somerset and Everett while the eastern section has substations in Newville Bowmansville and King of Prussia the eastern section also has a substation at Pocono on the Northeast Extension 59 The PTC broadcasts road traffic and weather conditions over highway advisory radio transmitters at each exit on 1640 kHz AM with a range of approximately two miles 3 2 km 60 The 511PA travel information service provides alerts an interactive map weather information and traffic cameras to motorists There are variable message signs located along the roadway that provide information to motorists such as accidents construction weather and traffic congestion 61 Service plazas Edit Sideling Hill service plaza The Pennsylvania Turnpike has 15 service plazas on the main highway throughout the state as well as two on the Northeast Extension Each plaza has multiple fast food restaurants a Sunoco gas station and a 7 Eleven convenience store Other amenities include ATMs E ZPass sales free cellphone charging Pennsylvania Lottery sales picnic areas restrooms tourist information Travel Board information centers and Wi Fi The King of Prussia plaza has a welcome center and the New Stanton and Sideling Hill plazas feature seasonal farmers markets A few plazas offer E85 while New Stanton offers compressed natural gas all of them offer conventional gasoline and diesel fuel Select service plazas have electric vehicle charging stations The Sunoco and 7 Eleven locations as well as the Subway at North Midway are operated by 7 Eleven itself while the remaining restaurants and general upkeep of the service plazas are operated by Applegreen 62 Throughout the turnpike s history various plazas have been added or eliminated In the 1950s two original eastbound plazas at Laurel Hill and New Baltimore were replaced by the South Somerset plaza In 1968 the westbound Cove Valley plaza was replaced by the Sideling Hill plaza which serves both westbound and eastbound traffic as part of the bypass of the Rays Hill and Sideling Hill tunnels 63 Three westbound plazas at Denver Pleasant Valley and Mechanicsburg were closed in 1980 The eastbound Path Valley plaza closed in 1983 due to a lack of business since it was located only 15 miles 24 km east of the then newly constructed Sideling Hill plaza 64 Five plazas have closed since 2000 the Butler plaza closed in 2002 to make way for the Warrendale Toll Plaza 65 the eastbound Hempfield and South Neshaminy plazas were demolished in 2007 for additional lanes and a new slip ramp respectively 66 67 the eastbound Zelienople plaza closed in 2008 due to a lack of business since it was located on the free stretch of the turnpike from Ohio to Warrendale 68 and the westbound North Neshaminy plaza shut down in 2010 for an upcoming construction project 67 In 1990 the Brandywine now Peter J Camiel plaza was demolished and reconstructed the first such major project in the turnpike s history 69 Starting in 2006 the PTC and HMSHost started a system wide project in which all service plazas would be reconstructed or extensively renovated starting with Oakmont Plum which closed in 2006 and reopened in 2007 This was followed by the reconstruction of the North Somerset and Sideling Hill plazas 2007 2008 New Stanton 2008 2009 King of Prussia 2009 2010 Lawn and Bowmansville 2010 2011 South Somerset Blue Mountain and Cumberland Valley 2011 2012 South Midway and Highspire 2012 2013 Peter J Camiel 2013 2014 and Valley Forge and North Midway 2014 2015 70 The Art Sparks program was launched in 2017 as a partnership between the turnpike commission and the Pennsylvania Council on the Arts to install public art created by local students in the Arts in Education residency program in service plazas along the turnpike over the next five years The public art consists of a mural reflecting the area where the service plaza is located The first Art Sparks mural debuted at the Lawn service plaza in May 2017 71 72 In April 2019 the Sunoco A Plus locations began to be converted to 7 Eleven locations as part of a larger deal that saw 7 Eleven take over Sunoco s company owned convenience stores along the East Coast and Texas Sunoco continues to supply fuel to the locations 73 74 History EditThe Pennsylvania Turnpike was planned in the 1930s to improve transportation across the Appalachian Mountains of central Pennsylvania It used seven tunnels bored for the abandoned South Pennsylvania Railroad project during the 1880s 75 The highway opened in 1940 between Irwin and Carlisle as the first long distance controlled access highway in the United States 76 Following its completion other toll roads and the Interstate Highway System were built 77 The highway was extended east to Valley Forge in 1950 and west to the Ohio state line in 1951 78 79 It was completed east to the New Jersey state line the Delaware River in 1954 the Delaware River Bridge opened two years later 80 3 During the 1960s the entire highway was expanded to four lanes by adding a second tube at four of the tunnels and bypassing the other three 81 Other improvements have been made including the addition of interchanges the widening of portions of the highway to six lanes and the reconstruction of the original section A partial interchange with I 95 opened in September 2018 and will be expanded to a full interchange in the future 82 Planning Edit Before the turnpike there were other forms of transportation across the Appalachians Native Americans traveled across the mountains along wilderness trails later European settlers followed wagon roads to cross the state 83 The Philadelphia and Lancaster Turnpike opened between Lancaster and Philadelphia in 1794 the first successful turnpike in the United States The road was paved with logs an improvement on the dirt Native American trails 84 In 1834 the Main Line of Public Works opened as a system of canals railroads and cable railways across Pennsylvania to compete with the Erie Canal in New York 85 The Pennsylvania Railroad was completed between Pittsburgh and Philadelphia in 1854 86 During the 1880s the South Pennsylvania Railroad was proposed to compete with the Pennsylvania It received the backing of William Henry Vanderbilt head of the New York Central Railroad the Pennsylvania s chief rival Andrew Carnegie also provided financial support since he was unhappy with rates charged by the Pennsylvania Railroad 87 Construction began on the rival line in 1883 but stopped when the railroads reached an agreement in 1885 88 89 After construction halted the only vestiges of the South Pennsylvania were nine tunnels some roadbed and piers for a bridge over the Susquehanna River in Harrisburg 89 During the early 20th century the automobile gradually became the primary form of transportation 75 Motorists crossing the Pennsylvania mountains during the 1930s were limited to hilly winding roads such as the Lincoln Highway US 30 or the William Penn Highway US 22 which had grades exceeding nine percent 18 90 Due to their sharp curves and steep grades the roads were dangerous and caused many fatal accidents from skids 88 As a result of the challenge of crossing the Pennsylvania mountains by automobile William Sutherland of the Pennsylvania Motor Truck Association and Victor Lecoq of the Pennsylvania State Planning Commission proposed a toll highway in 1934 75 91 This highway would be a four lane limited access road modeled after the German autobahns and Connecticut s Merritt Parkway 88 92 93 The turnpike could also serve as a defense road 94 and construction costs could be reduced by using the abandoned tunnels of the South Pennsylvania Railroad project 75 Winding section east of Fort Littleton in 1942In 1935 Sutherland and Lecoq introduced their turnpike idea to state legislator Cliff Patterson who proposed a feasibility study on April 23 1935 The proposal passed and the Works Progress Administration WPA explored the possibility of building the road Its study estimated a cost of between 60 and 70 million equivalent to between 944 million and 1 1 billion in 2021 95 to build the turnpike Patterson introduced Bill 211 to the legislature calling for the establishment of the PTC The bill was signed into law by Governor George Howard Earle III on May 21 1937 75 and on June 4 the first commissioners were appointed 96 The highway was planned to run from US 30 in Irwin east of Pittsburgh east to US 11 in Middlesex west of Harrisburg a length of about 162 miles 261 km It would pass through nine tunnels along the way 97 The road would have four lanes with a median and no grade steeper than three percent Access to the highway would be controlled by entrance and exit ramps 97 There would be no at grade intersections driveways traffic lights crosswalks or at grade railroad crossings 98 Curves would be wide and road signage large The right of way for the turnpike would be 200 feet 61 m the road would be 24 feet 7 3 m wide with 10 foot 3 0 m shoulders and a 10 foot 3 0 m median Through the tunnels the road would have two lanes a 14 foot 4 3 m clearance and a 23 foot wide 7 0 m roadway 97 The turnpike s design would be uniform for its entire length 98 In February 1938 the commission began investigating proposals for 55 million in bonds to be issued for construction of the turnpike 99 A month later Van Ingen and Company purchased 60 million equivalent to 921 million in 2021 95 in bonds they would offer to the public 100 President Franklin D Roosevelt approved a 24 million equivalent to 368 million in 2021 95 grant from the WPA in April 1938 for construction of the road the commonwealth also contributed 29 million equivalent to 445 million in 2021 95 toward the project 101 The WPA grant received final approval 102 but plans were still made to sell bonds the first issue was planned for about 20 million equivalent to 307 million in 2021 95 The reduced bond issue was due to the grant from the WPA 103 In June the Reconstruction Finance Corporation RFC announced they would lend the commission sufficient funds to build the road 104 The RFC loan totaled 32 million equivalent to 491 million in 2021 95 with a 26 million equivalent to 399 million in 2021 95 grant from the Public Works Administration PWA providing 58 million equivalent to 890 million in 2021 95 for the turnpike s construction highway tolls would repay the RFC 105 In October 1938 the turnpike commission agreed with the RFC and PWA that the RFC would purchase 35 million equivalent to 537 million in 2021 95 in bonds in addition to the PWA grant 106 That month a banking syndicate purchased the entire bond amount from the RFC 107 The previous month a proposed railroad from Pittsburgh to Harrisburg using the former South Pennsylvania Railroad right of way that had been designated for the turnpike was turned down 108 Design Edit Laurel Hill Tunnel in 1942In building the turnpike boring the former railroad tunnels was completed Since the Allegheny Mountain Tunnel bore was in poor condition a new bore was drilled 85 feet 26 m to the south 109 The commission considered bypassing the Rays Hill and Sideling Hill tunnels but the cost of a bypass was considered too high 81 Crews used steam shovels to widen the tunnels portals 109 and temporary railroad tracks transported construction equipment in and out 110 Concrete was used in lining the tunnel portals 111 The tunnels include ventilation ducts drainage structures sidewalks lighting telephone and signal systems 112 Lighting was installed along the roadway approaching the tunnel portals 113 The tunnels bored through the seven mountains totaled 4 5 miles 7 2 km The tunnels were Laurel Hill Tunnel Allegheny Mountain Tunnel Rays Hill Tunnel Sideling Hill Tunnel Tuscarora Mountain Tunnel Kittatinny Mountain Tunnel and Blue Mountain Tunnel and the road became known as the tunnel highway 114 Many bridge designs were used for roads over the highway including the concrete arch bridge the through plate girder bridge and the concrete T beam bridge 115 116 117 Bridges used to carry the turnpike over other roads and streams included a concrete arch viaduct in New Stanton 118 At 600 feet 180 m the New Stanton viaduct was the longest bridge along the original section of the turnpike 119 Other turnpike bridges included plate girder bridges like the bridge over Dunnings Creek in the Bedford Narrows Smaller concrete T beam bridges were also built 120 121 A total of 307 bridges were constructed along the original section of the turnpike 119 Eleven interchanges were built along the turnpike most of which were trumpet interchanges in which all ramps merge at the toll booths 122 123 only the New Stanton Carlisle and Middlesex interchanges did not follow this design 122 Lighting was installed approaching interchanges along with acceleration and deceleration lanes 113 The road also featured guardrails consisting of steel panels attached to I beams 124 Large exit signs were used and road signs had cat s eye reflectors to increase visibility at night 124 125 Billboards were prohibited 126 In September 1940 the Pennsylvania Public Utility Commission ruled that trucks and buses would be allowed to use the highway 127 Since the first section of the highway was built through a rural part of the state food and gasoline were not readily available to motorists Because of this the commission decided to provide service plazas at 30 mile 48 km intervals The plazas would be constructed of native fieldstone resembling Colonial era architecture 128 129 In 1940 Standard Oil of Pennsylvania was awarded a contract for 10 Esso service stations along the turnpike 130 Eight of the service plazas would consist of service stations and a restaurant while the plazas at the halfway point in Bedford would be larger 129 130 The South Midway service plaza the largest contained a dining room lunch counter lounge and lodging for truckers a tunnel connected it to the smaller North Midway plaza 129 131 The remaining service plazas were smaller with a lunch counter Food service at the plazas was provided by Howard Johnson s After World War II the food facilities were enlarged 131 service stations sold gasoline repaired cars and provided towing service 132 Construction of first section Edit A view of the turnpike at an overpass in 1942 Before the first section groundbreaking in 1937 the turnpike commission sent workers to assess the former railroad tunnels In September of that year a contract was awarded to drain water from the tunnels 133 After this workers cleared rock slides and vegetation from the tunnel portals before evaluating the nine tunnels condition 134 135 It was decided that six of the nine former South Pennsylvania Railroad tunnels could be used for the roadway The Allegheny Mountain Tunnel was in too poor a condition for use and the Quemahoning and Negro Mountain tunnels would be bypassed with rock cuts through the mountains 135 The Quemahoning Tunnel had been completed and used by the Pittsburgh Westmoreland and Somerset Railroad 136 The Pennsylvania Turnpike groundbreaking was held on October 27 1938 near Carlisle Commission Chair Walter A Jones thrust the first shovel into the earth 137 Turnpike construction was on a tight schedule because completion of the road was originally planned by May 1 1940 After the groundbreaking contracts for finishing the former South Pennsylvania Railroad tunnels grading the turnpike s right of way constructing bridges and paving were awarded 18 By July 1939 the entire length of the turnpike was under contract 98 The first work to begin on the road was grading its right of way which involved a great deal of earthwork due to the mountainous terrain 137 Building the highway required the acquisition of homes farms and a coal mine by eminent domain 98 A tunnel was originally planned across Clear Ridge near Everett but the turnpike commission decided to build a cut into the ridge 19 Building the cut involved bulldozers excavating the mountain and explosives blasting the rock 138 Concrete culverts were built to carry streams and roads under the highway in the valley floor 139 The Clear Ridge cut was 153 feet 47 m deep the deepest highway cut at the time and was known as Little Panama after the Panama Canal 119 West of Clear Ridge cuts and fills were built for the turnpike to pass along the southern edge of Earlston 140 Considerable work was also involved in building the roadway up the three percent grade at the east end of Allegheny Mountain the steepest grade the turnpike traversed 141 The base of Evitts Mountain was blasted to carry the turnpike across Bedford Narrows along with US 30 the Raystown Branch of the Juniata River and a Pennsylvania Railroad branch line 17 In New Baltimore the turnpike commission had to purchase land from St John s Church which contained a cemetery as part of the agreement stairways were built on either side of the turnpike to provide access to the church 142 Paving began on August 31 1939 98 The roadway would have a concrete surface and concrete was poured directly onto the earth with no gravel roadbed 143 Concrete batch plants were set up along the road to aid in paving 144 Interchange ramps were paved with asphalt 121 The paving operations led to a delay in the projected opening of the highway by October 1939 the completion date was pushed back from May 1 to June 29 1940 since paving could not be done during the winter The commission rushed the paving attempting to increase the distance paved from one to five miles 1 6 to 8 0 km a day 112 Westbound at New Stanton interchange prior to construction of the connecting I 70 Completion was postponed to July 4 before being again postponed to late summer 1940 when rain delayed paving operations 145 Paving concluded by the end of the summer and on September 30 the turnpike commission announced that the road would open on October 1 1940 18 146 147 Since the turnpike was opened on short notice no ribbon cutting ceremony was held 147 On August 26 1940 a preview of the highway was organized by Commission Chair Jones It began the previous night with a banquet at The Hotel Hershey and proceeded west along the turnpike stopping at the Clear Ridge cut before lunch at the Midway service plaza The preview ended with dinner and entertainment at the Duquesne Club in Pittsburgh 146 148 That month a military motorcade traveled portions of the turnpike 149 The roadway took 770 000 short tons 700 kt of sand 1 200 000 short tons 1 100 kt of stone 50 000 short tons 45 kt of steel and more than 300 000 short tons 270 kt of cement to complete 114 It was built at a cost of 370 000 per mile 230 000 km equivalent to 5 67 million per mile 2 5 million km in 2021 95 150 A total of 18 000 men worked on the turnpike 19 died during its construction 151 When the highway was under construction in 1939 its proposed toll was 1 50 equivalent to 23 00 in 2021 95 for a one way car trip a round trip would cost 2 00 equivalent to 31 00 in 2021 95 Trucks would pay 10 00 equivalent to 155 00 in 2021 95 one way Varying tolls would be charged for motorists who did not travel the length of the turnpike 112 Upon its opening in 1940 automobile tolls were set at 1 50 equivalent to 23 00 in 2021 95 one way and 2 25 equivalent to 34 00 in 2021 95 round trip The tolls were to be used to pay off bonds to build the road and were to be removed when the bonds were paid 113 However tolls continue to be charged to finance improvements to the turnpike system 152 The toll rate was about 0 01 per mile 0 0062 km equivalent to 0 15 per mile 0 093 km in 2021 95 when the turnpike opened The ticket system was used to pay for tolls 153 This toll rate remained the same for the turnpike s first 25 years other toll roads such as the New York State Thruway and the Ohio Connecticut and Massachusetts turnpikes had a higher rate 154 Opening of first section Edit The Pennsylvania Turnpike opened at midnight on October 1 1940 between Irwin and Carlisle the day before the opening motorists lined up at the Irwin and Carlisle interchanges 76 Homer D Romberger a feed and tallow driver from Carlisle became the first motorist to enter the turnpike at Carlisle and Carl A Boe of McKeesport became the first motorist to enter at Irwin 155 Boe was flagged down by Frank Lorey and Dick Gangle the first hitchhikers along the turnpike 156 On October 6 the first Sunday after the turnpike s opening traffic was heavy with congestion at toll plazas tunnels and service plazas 157 During its first 15 days of operation the road saw over 150 000 vehicles 158 By the end of its first year the road earned 3 million equivalent to 45 9 million in 2021 95 in revenue from five million motorists exceeding the 2 67 million equivalent to 40 9 million in 2021 95 needed for operation and bond payments 159 160 With the onset of World War II revenue declined due to tire and gas rationing 161 after the war traffic again increased 162 West portal of Blue Mountain Tunnel viewed from Kittatinny Mountain Tunnel Left photo from 1942 right photo from 2017 When it opened the turnpike became the first long distance limited access road in the United States 77 It provided a direct link between the Mid Atlantic and Midwestern states and cut travel time between Pittsburgh and Harrisburg from nearly 6 to about 2 5 hours 113 163 The road was given the nicknames dream highway and the World s Greatest Highway by the turnpike commission 1 153 and was also known as the Granddaddy of the Pikes 164 Postcards and other souvenirs promoted the original stretch s seven tunnels through the Appalachians 165 The highway was considered a yardstick by which limited access highway construction would be measured 166 Commission Chair Jones called for more limited access roads to be built across the country for defense purposes 159 and the turnpike was a model for a proposed national network of highways planned during World War II 167 The Pennsylvania Turnpike led to the construction of other toll roads such as the New Jersey Turnpike and eventually the Interstate Highway System 77 It has been designated a National Historic Civil Engineering Landmark by the American Society of Civil Engineers 168 The concrete highway pavement began to fail several years after the road opened due to excessive transverse joint spacing and the lack of gravel between earth and concrete As a result in 1954 an eight year project began to repave the turnpike with a three inch 7 6 cm layer of asphalt between Irwin and Carlisle 169 77 Extensions Edit Westbound in Charlestown Township Before the first section of the Pennsylvania Turnpike opened the commission considered extending it east to Philadelphia primarily for defense purposes In 1939 the state legislature passed a bill allowing for an extension of the road to Philadelphia which was signed into law by Governor Arthur James in 1940 as Act 11 93 170 The extension was projected to cost between 50 and 60 million in 1941 equivalent to between 717 million and 861 million in 2021 95 170 Funding for the Philadelphia extension was in place in 1948 171 In July 1948 the turnpike commission offered 134 million equivalent to 1 22 billion in 2021 95 in bonds to pay for the extension which was projected to cost 87 million 172 The Philadelphia extension was to run from Carlisle east to US 202 in King of Prussia 78 173 From there the extension would connect to a state maintained freeway that would continue to Center City Philadelphia 174 Groundbreaking for the Philadelphia extension took place on September 28 1948 in York County Governor James H Duff and Commission Chair Thomas J Evans attended the ceremony 175 The extension would look similar to the original section of the turnpike but would use air entrained concrete poured onto stone 78 176 Transverse joints on the pavement were spaced at 46 foot 14 m intervals rather than the 77 foot 23 m ones on the original portion 78 Because it traversed through less mountainous terrain the extension did not require as much earthwork as the original section 177 It required the construction of large bridges including those that cross the Susquehanna River and the Swatara Creek 178 179 To save money the Susquehanna River Bridge was constructed with a four foot raised 1 2 m concrete median and no shoulders 178 This extension of the turnpike would use the same style of overpasses as the original section the steel deck bridge was also introduced 180 With the construction of the Philadelphia extension the Carlisle interchange was closed and the Middlesex interchange with US 11 was realigned to allow for the new extension it was renamed to the Carlisle interchange 177 The extension s completion was delayed by weather and a cement workers strike it was to have been finished by October 1 1950 the 10th anniversary of the opening of the first section 181 On October 23 1950 the Philadelphia extension was previewed in a ceremony led by Governor Duff 182 The extension opened to traffic on November 20 1950 the governor and Chair Evans cut the ribbon at the Valley Forge mainline toll plaza to the west of King of Prussia 78 183 In 1941 Governor James suggested building a western extension to Ohio 170 That June Act 54 was signed into law to build the extension 184 In 1949 the turnpike commission began looking into funding for this road which would run from Irwin to the Ohio state line near Youngstown Ohio bypassing Pittsburgh to the north 185 That September 77 million equivalent to 705 million in 2021 95 in bonds were sold to finance construction of the western extension 186 Groundbreaking for the extension took place on October 24 1949 187 It was scheduled to take place at the Brush Creek viaduct in Irwin with Governor Duff in attendance 188 Like the Philadelphia extension the western extension required the building of long bridges including those that cross the Beaver River and the Allegheny River 189 The overpasses along the road consisted of steel girder bridges and through plate girder bridges 190 Unlike the other segments the concrete arch bridge was not used for overpasses although it was used to carry the turnpike over other roads 191 On August 7 1951 the roadway opened between the Irwin and Pittsburgh interchanges 192 Ohio Governor Frank Lausche led a dedication ceremony on November 26 1951 193 The extension opened to the Gateway toll plaza near the Ohio state line on December 26 1951 79 194 At the time the highway ended in a cornfield Traffic followed a temporary ramp onto rural local roads until the connecting Ohio Turnpike could be built 79 193 On December 1 1954 the Ohio Turnpike opened 195 Westbound approaching the Mid County interchange with I 476 in Plymouth Meeting In 1951 plans to extend the turnpike east to New Jersey at the Delaware River to connect with the New Jersey Turnpike were made 196 The construction of the Delaware River extension was approved by Governor John S Fine in May of that year 197 A route for the extension which would bypass Philadelphia to the north was announced in 1952 It would cross the Delaware River on a bridge north of Bristol near Edgely where it would connect to a branch of the New Jersey Turnpike 198 That September the turnpike commission announced 65 million equivalent to 540 million in 2021 95 in bonds would be issued to finance the project 199 Work on the Delaware River extension began on November 20 1952 Governor Fine dug the first shovel into the earth at the groundbreaking ceremony 200 As a result of building the extension the Valley Forge mainline toll plaza was located farther east at the connection to the Schuylkill Expressway and would then become the Valley Forge interchange toll plaza 201 The Delaware River extension included a bridge over the Schuylkill River that was built to the same standards as the Susquehanna River Bridge 202 The construction of the Delaware River bridge required an amendment to the Pennsylvania Constitution which barred the state from forming compacts with other states On August 23 1954 the Delaware River Extension opened between King of Prussia and US 611 in Willow Grove 203 The remainder of the road to the Delaware River opened on November 17 1954 80 In April 1954 233 million equivalent to 1 89 billion in 2021 95 in bonds were issued to finance the building of the Delaware River Bridge and the Northeast Extension 204 Groundbreaking for the Delaware River Bridge connecting the Pennsylvania Turnpike to the New Jersey Turnpike took place on June 26 1954 in Florence New Jersey 80 The steel arch bridge which opened to traffic on May 23 1956 was funded jointly by the Pennsylvania Turnpike Commission and the New Jersey Turnpike Authority 3 205 Pennsylvania Governor George M Leader and New Jersey Governor Robert B Meyner were present at the opening ceremony 206 A mainline toll barrier was built to the west of the bridge marking the eastern end of the ticket system 207 This bridge was originally six lanes wide It contained no median but one was later installed and the bridge was reduced to four lanes 3 With the construction of the extensions and connecting turnpikes the highway was envisioned to be a part of a system of toll roads stretching from Maine to Chicago 208 When the Delaware River Bridge was completed in 1956 a motorist could drive from New York City to Indiana on limited access toll roads 207 By 1957 it was possible to drive from New York City to Chicago without encountering a traffic signal 209 On the turnpike extensions the service plazas were less frequent larger and further from the road 180 Gulf Oil operated service stations on the extensions and Howard Johnson s provided food service in sit down restaurants 210 211 Route numbers Edit Interstate 80SLocationNorth Beaver Township Upper Merion TownshipExisted1958 1964 Interstate 280LocationUpper Merion Township Bristol TownshipLength32 65 mi 23 52 55 km Existed1958 1964In August 1957 the Bureau of Public Roads added the roadway to the Interstate Highway System upon the recommendations of various state highway departments to include toll roads in the system 212 I 80 was planned to run along the turnpike from the Ohio state line to Harrisburg while I 80S would continue eastward toward Philadelphia I 70 was also planned to follow the turnpike between Pittsburgh and Breezewood 213 At a meeting of the Route Numbering Subcommittee on the US Numbered System on June 26 1958 it was decided to move the I 80 designation to an alignment further north while the highway between the Ohio state line and the Philadelphia area would become I 80S I 70 was still designated on the turnpike between Pittsburgh and Breezewood Between King of Prussia and Bristol the turnpike was designated I 280 214 215 Sign at the turnpike entrance at Valley Forge showing I 76 and I 276 designations for the mainline and I 476 designation for the Northeast Extension In April 1963 the state of Pennsylvania proposed renumbering I 80S to I 76 and I 280 to I 276 because the spurs of I 80S did not connect to I 80 in northern Pennsylvania The renumbering was approved by the Federal Highway Administration FHWA on February 26 1964 With this renumbering the turnpike would carry I 80S between the Ohio state line and Pittsburgh I 76 between Pittsburgh and King of Prussia I 70 between New Stanton and Breezewood and I 276 between King of Prussia and Bristol In 1971 the state of Ohio wanted to eliminate I 80S replacing it with a realigned I 76 The state of Pennsylvania disagreed with the change and recommended that I 80S become I 376 instead The Pennsylvania government later changed its mind and supported Ohio s plan to renumber I 80S as I 76 In December of that year the change was approved by the American Association of State Highway Officials As a result I 76 would follow the turnpike between the Ohio state line and King of Prussia 215 This change took effect on October 2 1972 216 With the completion of ramps connecting I 95 and the Pennsylvania Turnpike near Bristol on September 22 2018 the portion of the turnpike between the new interchange and the New Jersey state line became part of I 95 while the eastern terminus of I 276 was cut back to the new interchange 217 218 With the creation of the Interstate Highway System restaurants and gas stations were prohibited along Interstate Highways However when it joined the system the turnpike was grandfathered allowing it to continue operating its service plazas 219 Speed limits Edit 70 mph speed limit on Pennsylvania Turnpike 1942 2014 The turnpike had no enforced speed limit when it opened except for the tunnels which had a 35 mile per hour 56 km h speed limit Some drivers traveled as fast as 90 mph 140 km h on the road 153 In 1941 speed limits of 70 mph 110 km h for cars and 50 65 mph 80 105 km h for trucks were enacted 184 During World War II the turnpike adopted the national speed limit of 35 mph 56 km h 1 after the war the limit returned to 70 mph 110 km h 220 In 1953 the speed limit on the portion of the highway between the Ohio state line and Breezewood was lowered to 60 mph 97 km h to reduce the number of accidents but returned to 70 mph 110 km h when the measure proved ineffective 221 222 The limit on the turnpike was reduced to 65 mph 105 km h in 1956 for cars buses and motorcycles with other vehicles limited to 50 mph 80 km h 169 A minimum speed of 35 mph 56 km h was established in 1959 223 it was raised to 40 mph 64 km h in 1965 224 With the passage of the 1974 National Maximum Speed Law the speed limit on the turnpike was reduced to 55 mph 89 km h 225 It was again raised to 65 mph 105 km h in 1995 except for urban areas with a population greater than 50 000 the latter retained the 55 mile per hour 89 km h speed limit 226 In 2005 the turnpike commission approved raising the speed limit to 65 mph 105 km h for the entire length of the turnpike except the tunnels mainline toll plazas and the winding portion near the Allegheny Mountain Tunnel which retained the 55 mile per hour 89 km h limit 227 On July 22 2014 the speed limit increased to 70 mph 110 km h between the Blue Mountain and Morgantown interchanges 228 On March 15 2016 the PTC approved raising the speed limit on the remainder of the turnpike to 70 mph 110 km h excluding sections that are posted with a 55 mile per hour 89 km h speed limit 229 230 On May 3 2016 the speed limit increased to 70 mph 110 km h on the 65 mile per hour 105 km h sections of the toll road The speed limit remains 55 mph 89 km h at construction zones the tunnels mainline toll plazas the winding portion near the Allegheny Mountain Tunnel and the section between Bensalem and the Delaware River Bridge 231 232 233 Tunnel modernization and realignment Edit Eastern portal of the Sideling Hill Tunnel As traffic levels increased bottlenecks at the two lane tunnels on the Pennsylvania Turnpike became a major problem By the late 1950s traffic jams formed at the tunnels especially during the summer months in the middle of the year 234 In 1959 four senators urged state officials to work with the turnpike commission to study ways to reduce the traffic jams 235 That year the commission began studies aimed at resolving the traffic jams at the Laurel Hill and Allegheny Mountain tunnels studies for the other tunnels followed 236 At the conclusion of the studies the turnpike commission planned to make the entire turnpike at least four lanes by either adding a second tube at the tunnels or bypassing them 81 The new and upgraded tunnel tubes would feature white tiles fluorescent lighting and upgraded ventilation 154 The turnpike commission announced plans to build a second bore at the Allegheny Mountain Tunnel and a four lane bypass of the Laurel Hill Tunnel in 1960 A bypass was planned for the Laurel Hill Tunnel because traffic would be more quickly and less expensively relieved than it would by boring another tunnel 237 In 1962 the commission approved these two projects 238 That August 21 million equivalent to 146 million in 2021 95 in bonds were sold to finance the two projects 239 The Laurel Hill Tunnel was bypassed using a deep cut to the north it would feature a wide median truck climbing lanes and a 145 foot deep 44 m cut into the mountain 154 240 Groundbreaking for the new alignment took place on September 6 1962 241 This bypass opened to traffic on October 30 1964 at a cost of 7 5 million equivalent to 50 8 million in 2021 95 154 240 Work on boring the second tube at Allegheny Mountain Tunnel also began on September 6 1962 240 The former South Pennsylvania Railroad tunnel was considered but was again rejected because of its poor condition 242 On March 15 1965 the new tube opened to traffic after which the original tube was closed to allow updates to be made It reopened on August 25 1966 240 243 The construction of the second tube at Allegheny Mountain cost 12 million equivalent to 77 7 million in 2021 95 154 The Abandoned Pennsylvania Turnpike In 1965 the turnpike commission announced plans to build second tubes at the Tuscarora Kittatinny and Blue Mountain tunnels while a 13 5 mile 21 7 km bypass of the Rays Hill and Sideling Hill tunnels would be built 244 A bypass of these two tunnels was considered in the 1930s but at the time was determined to be too expensive 81 An early 1960s study concluded that a bypass would be the best option to handle traffic at Rays Hill and Sideling Hill 81 245 This bypass of the two tunnels would have a 36 foot wide 11 m median with a steel barrier in the middle 63 The commission sold 77 5 million equivalent to 502 million in 2021 95 in bonds in January 1966 to finance this project 246 Construction of the bypass of the Rays Hill and Sideling Hill tunnels involved building a cut across both hills 247 248 The new alignment began at the Breezewood interchange where a portion of the original turnpike was used to access US 30 249 In building the cut across Rays Hill a portion of US 30 had to be realigned 247 The cut over Sideling Hill passes over the Sideling Hill Tunnel 248 The new alignment ends a short distance east of the Cove Valley service plaza on the original segment The turnpike bypass of Rays Hill and Sideling Hill tunnels opened to traffic on November 26 1968 81 When the highway was realigned to bypass the Rays Hill and Sideling Hill tunnels the Cove Valley service plaza on the original section was closed and replaced with the Sideling Hill service plaza the only service plaza on the main turnpike serving travelers in both directions 63 After traffic was diverted to the new alignment the former stretch of roadway passing through the Rays Hill and Sideling Hill tunnels became known as the Abandoned Pennsylvania Turnpike The turnpike commission continued to maintain the tunnels for a few years but eventually abandoned them The abandoned stretch deteriorated signs and guardrails were removed pavement started crumbling trees grew in the median and vandals and nature began taking over the tunnels The turnpike commission still performed some maintenance on the abandoned stretch and used it for testing pavement marking equipment 250 In 2001 the turnpike commission turned over a significant portion of the abandoned section to the Southern Alleghenies Conservancy bicycles and hikers could use the former roadway 251 The abandoned stretch of the turnpike is the longest stretch of abandoned freeway in the United States 81 Meanwhile studies concluded that a parallel tunnel was the most economical option at the Tuscarora Kittatinny and Blue Mountain tunnels Work on the new tube at the Tuscarora Mountain Tunnel began on April 11 1966 while construction began at the Kittatinny and Blue Mountain tunnels a week later 243 The parallel tubes at these three tunnels would open on November 26 1968 the same day as the bypass of the Rays Hill and Sideling Hill tunnels The original tubes were subsequently remodeled 81 Both the new and remodeled tunnels would have fluorescent lighting white tile walls and 13 foot wide 4 0 m lanes 252 The portals of the new tunnels were designed to resemble those of the original tunnels Reconstruction of the original Tuscarora Mountain Tunnel was completed in October 1970 while work on refurbishing the original Kittatinny and Blue Mountain tunnels was finished on March 18 1971 253 With the completion of these projects the entire length of the mainline highway was at least four lanes wide 254 Late 20th century Edit Westbound past the Bensalem interchange with US 1 The roadway s median while initially thought to be wide enough was considered too narrow by 1960 The turnpike commission installed median barriers at curves and high accident areas starting in the 1950s 255 In 1960 it began to install 100 miles 160 km of median barrier along the turnpike 256 Work was completed in December 1965 at a cost of 5 million equivalent to 33 3 million in 2021 95 6 In October 1963 work began on replacing the New Stanton interchange which required left turns across traffic on the ramps and was frequently congested The new grade separated interchange opened on November 12 1964 and provided access to I 70 at the western end of the turnpike stretch of I 70 I 76 257 A new interchange serving I 283 and PA 283 opened at Harrisburg East in 1969 Due to the realignment of US 222 to a four lane freeway a new Reading interchange was proposed 258 This was opened on April 10 1974 259 In 1968 the turnpike commission proposed converting the section of the road between Morgantown and the Delaware River Bridge from a ticket to a barrier system 258 The project was canceled in 1971 due to a decline in revenue caused by the completion of I 80 253 In 1969 the turnpike commission announced a 75 percent toll hike the first such increase for cars 260 This rise in tolls which took place September 1 of that year brought the toll rate to 0 02 per mile 0 012 km equivalent to 0 12 per mile 0 075 km in 2021 95 261 In 1969 the turnpike commission said that because of increasing traffic it was necessary to widen the turnpike It proposed doubling the number of lanes from four to eight the portion in the Philadelphia area was to be 10 lanes wide Cars and trucks would be carried on separate roadways under this plan 262 The roadway would also have an 80 mile per hour 130 km h speed limit and holographic road signs This widening would have kept much of the routing intact but significant realignments were proposed between the Allegheny Mountain and Blue Mountain tunnels 263 Because of the 1 1 billion equivalent to 5 2 billion in 2021 95 cost and the 1973 oil crisis that resulted in the imposition of a 55 mile per hour 89 km h speed limit this plan was not implemented 245 By the 1970s the Pennsylvania Turnpike started to see a decline in the volume of traffic because of the opening of I 80 which provided a shorter route across the northern part of the state and the 1973 oil crisis which led to a decline in long distance travel 259 264 In the late 1970s the turnpike commission proposed truck climbing lanes east of the Allegheny Mountain Tunnel near New Baltimore and near the Laurel Hill Bypass 265 These were completed on December 2 1981 266 In 1978 as the Howard Johnson s exclusive contract to provide food service was ending the turnpike commission considered bids for competitors to provide food service 267 That year Aramark was awarded a contract for food service at two plazas ending the Howard Johnson s monopoly 268 The highway became the first toll road in the country to offer more than one fast food chain at its service plazas 269 At this time gas stations along the turnpike were operated by Gulf Oil Exxon and ARCO 268 Hardee s also opened restaurants at the service plazas in 1980 to compete with Howard Johnson s 270 With this the turnpike became the first road in the world to offer fast food at its service plazas 271 The remaining Howard Johnson s restaurants were phased out throughout the 1980s 272 Additionally a toll increase of 22 percent was announced in 1978 effective August 1 of that year this raised the rate to 0 022 per mile 0 014 km equivalent to 0 073 per mile 0 045 km in 2021 95 261 273 Eastbound approaching the Willow Grove interchange with PA 611 The portion of the turnpike in the Philadelphia area had become a congested commuter road by the 1980s 24 In 1983 funding was approved to widen the turnpike to six lanes between the Valley Forge and Philadelphia interchanges 274 This planned project was put on hold because of disagreements between Governor Dick Thornburgh and the turnpike commission members and differences between the commissioners 275 276 The Pennsylvania Legislature approved the project in 1985 the road would be widened between the Norristown and Philadelphia interchanges 277 278 Construction on the widening began on March 10 1986 279 and was completed on November 23 1987 with a ribbon cutting at the Philadelphia interchange The widening project cost 120 million equivalent to 567 million in 2021 95 280 An interchange to serve the New Cumberland Defense Depot near Harrisburg was planned in the 1980s 281 In 1992 the turnpike commission decided not to build it because it would instead build a connector road to the depot between PA 114 and Old York Road that would parallel the turnpike 282 Burger King and McDonald s opened on the Pennsylvania Turnpike in 1983 269 This marked a transition from sit down to fast food dining on the turnpike by popular demand 271 The Marriott Corporation purchased the remaining Howard Johnson s restaurants in 1987 incorporating it into its Host Hotels amp Resorts division and replacing them with restaurants such as Roy Rogers and Bob s Big Boy 272 In 1986 a toll hike of 30 percent was planned and the new rates went into effect on January 2 1987 261 283 With this increase the toll rate was 0 031 per mile 0 019 km equivalent to 0 064 per mile 0 040 km in 2021 95 261 Motorists originally stopped at booths to receive toll tickets from turnpike staff but in 1987 ticket machines replaced human workers 284 Plans to build an interchange connecting to the north end of I 476 Mid County Expressway were made the turnpike commission approved a contract to build the interchange in March 1989 285 That June a losing bidder decided to challenge the turnpike commission saying it violated female and minority contracting rules regarding the percentage of these employees that were used for the project Under this rule bidders were supposed to have at least 12 percent of contracts to minority owned companies and at least four percent to female owned companies The losing bidder had 12 4 percent of the contracts to minority companies and 4 2 percent to female owned companies while the winning bidder had 6 1 percent and 3 7 percent respectively The turnpike commission decided to rebid the contract but was sued by the original contractor This dispute delayed the construction of the interchange 286 The contract was rebid in November 1989 after the Supreme Court of Pennsylvania permitted it 287 The interchange between I 476 and the turnpike mainline was completed in November 1992 the ramps to the Northeast Extension opened a month later 288 289 An official ribbon cutting took place on December 15 1992 290 In September 1990 the Morgantown interchange was relocated to provide a direct connection to I 176 the overhead interchange lights at the new exit were a nuisance to nearby residents 291 292 An interchange was also proposed in 1990 with PA 743 between Elizabethtown and Hershey but a study in 1993 determined that it would not improve traffic flow on area roads 293 294 The turnpike commission celebrated the highway s 50th anniversary in 1990 Over 300 000 equivalent to 558 086 in 2021 95 was spent to promote the turnpike through various means including a videotape souvenirs and a private party attended by politicians and companies that work with the turnpike 295 Gulf Oil LP the modern day successor to the original Gulf Oil after Standard Oil of California now Chevron bought Gulf in 1984 replaced the Exxon stations on the turnpike in 1990 296 Sunoco took over operation of the gas stations from Gulf Oil LP in 1993 outbidding Shell US 297 In 1995 a farmers market was introduced to the Sideling Hill service plaza 298 An electronic toll collection system was proposed in 1990 where a motorist would create an account and use an electronic device which would be read from an electronic tollbooth the motorist would be billed later 299 The multi state electronic tolling system E ZPass was planned to go into effect by 1998 300 301 however implementation of the system was postponed until 2000 302 Another 30 percent toll increase went into effect on June 1 1991 to fund expansion projects bringing the rate to 0 04 per mile 0 025 km equivalent to 0 07 per mile 0 043 km in 2021 95 303 304 Westbound in Upper Allen Township Plans were made in 1993 to build a direct interchange between the turnpike and I 79 in Cranberry Township Butler County 305 A contract was awarded to build this interchange in November 1995 306 In 1997 transportation officials agreed upon a design for the interchange 307 The project also included moving the western end of the ticket system to a new toll plaza in Warrendale The interchange project was delayed by a dispute with Marshall and Pine townships in Allegheny County who wanted to prevent construction of the toll plaza as they thought it would cause noise air and light pollution 308 Marshall Township eventually agreed to allow the toll plaza be built 309 Groundbreaking for the new interchange took place on February 22 2002 310 The westbound Butler service plaza was closed because the Warrendale toll plaza was to be located at its site 311 On June 1 2003 the plaza opened and the Gateway toll plaza became a flat rate toll plaza while all the exit toll plazas west of Warrendale closed 312 The direct interchange between the turnpike and I 79 connecting to US 19 opened on November 12 2003 The project cost 44 million equivalent to 63 million in 2021 95 313 In 1996 plans were made to reconstruct the Irwin to Carlisle section of the turnpike along with the western part to the Ohio state line 314 A rebuilding project was proposed for the original section of the roadway in 1998 The first portion planned for construction was a five mile 8 0 km stretch east of the Donegal interchange a contract was awarded in June 1998 315 This project involved the replacement of overpasses widening of the median and the complete repaving of the road 315 316 The rebuilding was due for completion in 2014 with a projected cost of 5 million per mile 3 1 million km equivalent to 5 71 million per mile 3 7 million km in 2021 95 317 During the reconstruction the turnpike commission used a humorous advertising campaign called Peace Love and the Pennsylvania Turnpike It ran for 90 days in 2001 and used tie dyed billboards that resembled those from the 1970s and carried phrases such as Rome wasn t built in a day and Spread the love Let someone merge 318 In 1996 a study on improving the Allegheny Mountain Tunnel by either building another tube or by constructing a bypass was carried out 319 320 Based on the study the turnpike commission planned to replace the deteriorating tunnel with a cut through the mountain 320 The plans were put on hold in 2001 because it would cost 93 7 million equivalent to 139 million in 2021 95 It resurrected the project in 2009 321 The nearby Mountain Field and Stream Club prefers that the tunnels be improved or a new tube built rather than building the bypass These improvements are needed because the Allegheny Mountain Tunnel is narrow and deteriorating with disintegrating ceiling slabs and outdated lighting and ventilation 322 Construction began in 1998 to improve the bridge over the Schuylkill River in Montgomery County The work involved building a new bridge adjacent to the existing bridge the new bridge was wide enough to accommodate a future widening to six lanes This project was completed in 2000 323 A study began in 1999 to widen the road to six lanes between Valley Forge and Norristown 324 In October 2004 work began on widening this stretch of road 325 which was completed in November 2008 at a cost of 330 million equivalent to 414 million in 2021 95 326 21st century Edit Eastbound at the Valley Forge interchange where I 76 splits from the turnpike and I 276 begins In 2000 the turnpike commission announced plans to build a new bridge a segmental concrete bridge wider than the original over the Susquehanna River 327 In 2004 work began on building the new six lane bridge which cost 150 million equivalent to 209 million in 2021 95 On May 16 2007 a ribbon cutting took place to mark the completion of the westbound direction of the bridge which opened to traffic the following day 21 328 The eastbound direction of the bridge opened a month later 329 In October 2000 the turnpike commission announced the road would be switching from sequential exit numbering to distance based exit numbering At first both exit numbers would exist but the old numbers would be phased out 330 331 Work began on posting the new exit numbers in 2001 332 On December 2 2000 E ZPass debuted on the turnpike between Harrisburg West and the Delaware River Bridge 333 334 335 By December 15 2001 E ZPass could be used on the entire length of the Pennsylvania Turnpike 336 337 Commercial vehicles were allowed to use the system beginning on December 14 2002 338 On June 1 2003 the Warrendale toll plaza became the west end of the ticket system the Gateway toll plaza became a flat rate plaza and toll booths at the New Castle Beaver Valley and Cranberry interchanges were closed 312 Express E ZPass lanes opened at the Warrendale toll plaza in June 2004 which allowed motorists to travel through the toll plaza at highway speeds 339 On August 1 2004 tolls increased by 42 percent to a rate of 0 059 per mile 0 037 km equivalent to 0 082 per mile 0 051 km in 2021 95 to provide money for road construction 340 On November 24 2004 the day before Thanksgiving 2 000 Teamsters Union employees went on the first strike in the turnpike s history after contract negotiations failed Since this is usually one of the busiest travel days in the US to avoid traffic jams tolls were waived for the rest of the day 341 Beginning on November 25 2004 turnpike management personnel collected flat rate cash passenger tolls of 2 and commercial tolls of 15 on the ticketed system while E ZPass customers were charged the lesser amount of the toll or the flat rate 342 The strike ended after seven days when both sides reached an agreement on November 30 2004 normal toll collection resumed December 1 2004 343 In 2004 proposals to widen the highway to six lanes between Downingtown and Valley Forge were made 344 In 2007 the western terminus of the widening project was scaled back from Downingtown to the proposed PA 29 slip ramp 345 Plans for the widening were presented to the public in 2009 346 Later that year the widening was put on hold because of engineering problems 347 The widening plans resumed in 2010 348 Work was due to begin in 2013 with completion in 2015 349 In October 2012 the project was postponed a year because of delays in the approval of permits 350 The widening project between the PA 29 and Valley Forge interchanges was split into two phases one running between the PA 252 overpass and the Valley Forge interchange and the other between the PA 29 interchange and the PA 252 overpass 351 Construction on widening the section between the PA 252 overpass and the Valley Forge interchange began on September 27 2021 with completion expected in May 2025 352 The stairs to St John s Church in New Baltimore in 2010 In 2005 the turnpike commission announced plans to convert the Gateway toll plaza to eastbound only in 2006 to reduce congestion and facilitate construction of Express E ZPass lanes 353 The Express E ZPass lanes at Gateway opened in July 2007 354 Plans were made to build a new pair of bridges over the Allegheny River in 2005 355 Work began in May 2007 and a dedication ceremony was held on October 23 2009 16 The bridges which cost 194 million equivalent to 242 million in 2021 95 opened to traffic the following day and the old bridge was demolished on July 13 2010 356 357 Plans were made to widen the highway to six lanes between Irwin and New Stanton in 2005 358 Work on the project began in January 2006 it added a third lane in each direction replaced several bridges and realigned a portion of the turnpike and was completed in November 2011 359 As part of the project in January 2007 the Hempfield service plaza was permanently closed 66 HMSHost the successor to Marriott s former Host Marriott division received a 2006 contract to reconstruct the turnpike service plazas 360 Improvements to the plazas to cost 150 million equivalent to 197 million in 2021 95 will include a food court layout and improved restrooms Sunoco continues operating gas stations at the renovated service plazas Most of the plazas were completely rebuilt although the exterior structure of South Midway s building was retained when it reopened in May 2013 due to its historical significance of being the flagship service plaza on the original section 70 361 Four service plazas were slated to be closed as part of the deal with HMSHost 362 Three plazas Hempfield South Neshaminy and North Neshaminy closed due to construction projects to the turnpike itself 66 67 363 while the Zelienople service plaza which was originally slated to stay open closed due to its underuse 364 365 Westbound past the Virginia Drive interchange in Fort Washington In November 2006 Governor Ed Rendell and former Pennsylvania House Speaker John Perzel raised the idea of leasing the turnpike longterm to a private group to raise money to improve other infrastructure in the state Such a lease was speculated to raise up to 30 billion equivalent to 39 4 billion in 2021 95 for the state 366 In October 2007 34 companies submitted 14 proposals to lease the turnpike 367 On May 19 2008 a record 12 8 billion equivalent to 16 4 billion in 2021 95 proposal by the Spanish firm Abertis and Citigroup of New York City to lease the turnpike was submitted 368 The consortium withdrew the offer on September 30 2008 as they reasoned the proposal would not be approved in the state legislature 369 In 2007 as part of a project to widen a section of the turnpike in Somerset and Bedford counties to six lanes that will last from 2016 to 2020 the turnpike commission announced that it would remove the steps leading to St John s Church in New Baltimore because they are a safety hazard 370 371 In 2015 a pilot program started at exit 189 Willow Hill that used automated payment machines that accept credit and debit cards 372 In October 2016 the turnpike began accepting credit cards as payment at all cash toll booths 373 In 2019 the turnpike commission announced plans to launch a smartphone app for paying tolls 374 The Pennsylvania Turnpike used traffic lights as feedback signals for E ZPass users since it was launched on the roadway in 2001 On March 17 2017 the PTC announced that they would begin removing the feedback signals as part of upgrading the toll equipment the feedback signals are being removed because they do not conform to federal signage guidelines 375 Slip ramps Edit The westbound Virginia Drive slip ramp in Fort Washington In 1996 the turnpike commission considered adding slip ramps in the Philadelphia area in which electronic toll collection technology would be used 376 Construction began on a westbound E ZPass only slip ramp at Virginia Drive exit 340 in Fort Washington in early 2000 335 it opened on December 2 2000 having cost 5 1 million equivalent to 7 74 million in 2021 95 333 335 Work on the eastbound slip ramp at PA 132 exit 352 in Bensalem Township began in 2009 377 the ramp opened on November 22 2010 This slip ramp which cost 7 4 million equivalent to 9 11 million in 2021 95 has access to and from the eastbound direction of the turnpike and was built to provide improved access to Parx Casino and Racing 378 While all slip ramps were initially reserved for E ZPass users they opened to all traffic following the conversion of the turnpike to cashless tolling in 2020 26 Other slip ramps were planned in the Philadelphia area at PA 29 near the Great Valley Corporate Center and at PA 252 in Valley Forge in the 1990s Residents opposed the PA 29 exit 320 ramp fearing it would spoil the rural area 379 In 1999 the turnpike commission canceled plans to build a slip ramp at PA 252 and instead focussed on building one at PA 29 380 The turnpike commission approved funding for the PA 29 ramp in 2002 381 The project was put on hold in 2009 because of engineering and design problems in widening the adjacent portion of the turnpike 347 It was announced that the turnpike commission would approve construction of the slip ramp at PA 29 in August 2010 and construction began in March 2011 382 383 The interchange which has access to and from both directions of the turnpike opened on December 11 2012 Governor Tom Corbett cut the ribbon 383 384 A slip ramp was also planned in 2000 to connect to Lafayette Street in Norristown as part of a revitalization plan for the community 385 The project would involve extending Lafayette Street to the new ramp 386 This proposed slip ramp is projected to cost 160 million equivalent to 243 million in 2021 95 Montgomery County officials have proposed a surcharge for the new exit in to help pay for the project 387 Work on engineering and environmental approval for the extension of Lafayette Street occurred in 2008 and acquisition of land began in 2011 Construction of the extension of Lafayette Street began in 2013 and was completed in 2014 388 On January 7 2015 the turnpike commission committed 45 million equivalent to 50 9 million in 2021 95 to building this interchange 389 The turnpike commission s Fiscal Year 2017 Capital Plan included 66 million equivalent to 72 5 million in 2021 95 for the interchange at Lafayette Street The design phase of the interchange began in 2017 with preliminary engineering taking place in 2018 and 2019 390 In 2013 Montgomery County officials announced they were considering adding more slip ramps along the turnpike to ease traffic congestion 391 The Pennsylvania Turnpike Corridor Reinvestment Project was released in 2015 with the project planning to construct additional interchanges along the Pennsylvania Turnpike in Montgomery County in order to revitalize business parks adjacent to the roadway 392 Proposed locations for new interchanges include PA 63 near Willow Grove Henderson Road in Upper Merion Township and Lafayette Street Ridge Pike near Norristown and Plymouth Meeting In addition there are plans to add eastbound ramps at the existing Virginia Drive interchange add additional ramps at the Valley Forge interchange connecting to First Avenue and Moore Road in King of Prussia add an additional ramp at the Fort Washington interchange connecting to Commerce Drive and modernize the Willow Grove interchange 393 Pennsylvania Turnpike Interstate 95 Interchange Project and redesignation Edit Main article Pennsylvania Turnpike Interstate 95 Interchange Project Looking west at the split where the Pennsylvania Turnpike westbound exits I 95 southbound Plans to build a direct interchange between the Pennsylvania Turnpike and I 95 in Bristol Township to allow a connection between the portions of I 95 in Pennsylvania and along the New Jersey Turnpike were first proposed in 1978 394 395 The two roads did not have an interchange because earlier laws since repealed prohibited federal funds from being used to build connections to toll roads 212 In 1982 the federal government mandated that the interchange be built in Pennsylvania 396 A gap existed in I 95 because of the unbuilt Somerset Freeway segment in central New Jersey 394 Under the plan I 95 would be rerouted to follow the turnpike between the new interchange and the New Jersey state line 397 In addition the interchange would serve as the new terminus of an extended I 295 398 399 The area s residents who thought the interchange would lead to a decline in their quality of life opposed this plan 400 An environmental impact statement EIS was released in 2003 401 The interchange received environmental approval in 2004 the preliminary design was completed in 2008 and the final design followed 82 402 403 The project involved building a high speed interchange between the two roadways The turnpike commission will also widen the existing four lane road to six lanes east of the Bensalem interchange A new toll plaza was built east of the Street Road interchange at Neshaminy Falls to mark the eastern end of the ticket system that consists of high speed E ZPass lanes along with ticket and cash booths and the former Delaware River Bridge toll barrier was converted to a westbound all electronic facility A new bridge will also be built over the Delaware River Work on the project began in late 2010 the replacement of two bridges over the turnpike was completed in 2011 398 Groundbreaking for the interchange with I 95 took place on July 30 2013 with Governor Corbett in attendance 404 Construction of the first stage of the interchange began in late 2014 405 The flyover ramps between northbound I 95 and the eastbound turnpike and between the westbound turnpike and southbound I 95 opened on September 22 2018 217 Work on the new mainline toll plaza and widening of the turnpike between I 95 and the Delaware River also began in 2013 with completion in 2016 398 Once funding is available construction is expected to begin on completion of the movements between the turnpike I 95 and I 295 along with the widening of the turnpike between the Bensalem interchange and I 95 Work on building a new Delaware River Bridge is planned to begin in 2025 at the earliest 406 The first stage of the project which includes the new toll plaza widening and the flyover ramps between I 95 and the turnpike is to cost 420 million The flyover ramps are expected to cost 142 9 million with 100 million coming from federal funds and the remainder from the turnpike commission The PTC is borrowing money from foreign investors in order to provide funding for the project The commission entered into a partnership with the Delaware Valley Regional Center DVRC in 2014 to raise half of the funds needed to construct the interchange The EB 5 visa program will allow the commission through the DVRC to save about 35 million over traditional borrowing costs over five years 407 The remaining stages of the project are unfunded with a projected total cost of 1 1 billion for the entire project 405 The connector was finished in 2018 and completed I 95 which runs from Florida north to Maine That highway is part of the Interstate Highway System and serves over 110 million people in over 10 percent of the total US land area The development began as part of the Federal Aid Highway Act in 1956 408 Future EditAllegheny Mountain Tunnel bypass Edit Long term plans call for major maintenance to be performed on the twin Allegheny Mountain Tunnels however this presents a major problem for traffic 409 On October 22 2013 the PTC announced plans to replace the tunnels the older of which was 73 years old that year with either new tunnel or a bypass due to the age and condition of the twin tunnels and the need for additional capacity 410 Approximately 11 million vehicles drive through the tunnel every year 411 On December 24 2014 the PTC announced it was going forward with plans to replace the Allegheny Mountain Tunnel Six options are being considered three of which would include building bypasses via rock blasting as was done with the Laurel Hill Tunnel while the other three would involve boring two new tunnels presumably three lanes each to accommodate the PTC s long term plans to widen the entire mainline turnpike to six lanes except at the existing tunnels If the PTC goes through with building new tunnels the existing Allegheny Mountain Tunnels would be shut down Although the projected costs for building a bypass would be less than half that of boring new tunnels and would also require 3 million less for annual maintenance on each tunnel the Mountain Field and Stream Club a local hunting group that owns 1 000 acres 400 ha of land around the tunnel opposed the bypass options the group had also opposed plans to replace the tunnels in 2001 412 In February 2020 the PTC decided that the tunnel would be bypassed via a new roadway to the south Such a plan is expected to be cheaper and have a lesser environmental impact than constructing a new tunnel The project is currently under environmental review design is expected to take three to four years and construction will take another three years The bypass will cost 332 4 million 413 New interchange in Penn Township Edit On July 16 2019 the PTC voted to allocate 30 million to its 10 Year Capital Plan for a new interchange from the turnpike to PA 130 in Penn Township between current exits 57 and 67 414 According to a Southwestern Pennsylvania Commission study PA 130 would need to be widened to account for the additional traffic costing about 38 million and bringing the total project cost to about 68 million 415 The interchange would utilize cashless tolling either through the electronic E ZPass system or a camera system in which the turnpike would take a photo of the driver s license plate and mail them an invoice 416 The project would also need coordination between the turnpike commission and PennDOT which maintains PA 130 417 The project is supported by the Westmoreland County Chamber of Commerce 418 On October 28 2021 it was announced that design work on the interchange would begin The interchange between the turnpike and PA 130 is projected to be completed in 2026 419 Exit list EditCountyLocation 420 mi 14 421 kmOld exit 422 New exit 421 Name 421 DestinationsNotesLawrenceNorth Beaver Township0 000 00 I 76 Toll west Ohio Turnpike west OhioOhio state line western terminus1 432 30Gateway Toll Gantry toll eastbound only E ZPass or toll by plate BeaverBig Beaver10 7017 221A10New Castle I 376 Toll New Castle PittsburghI 376 exit 26 indirect access to PA 35112 8720 71213Beaver Valley PA 18 Ellwood City Beaver FallsBeaver River13 0 13 320 9 21 4Beaver River BridgeButlerCranberry Township28 4745 82328Cranberry I 79 US 19 Pittsburgh ErieI 79 exit 77 formerly called the Perry Highway Interchange 423 AlleghenyMarshall Township31 0049 89Warrendale Toll Plaza western end of distance based toll system Hampton Township39 1062 93439Butler Valley PA 8 Pittsburgh ButlerHarmar Township47 7376 81548Allegheny Valley PA 28 New Kensington PittsburghAccess via Freeport Road indirect access to PA 910Allegheny River47 8 48 276 9 77 6Allegheny River BridgePlum49 3079 34Oakmont Plum service plaza eastbound Monroeville56 4490 83657Pittsburgh I 376 west US 22 Pittsburgh MonroevilleI 376 exit 85 eastern terminus of I 376 eastern terminus of US 22 Bus WestmorelandPenn Township62 84101 13 PA 130Proposed interchangeNorth Huntingdon Township67 22108 18767Irwin US 30 Irwin Greensburg McKeesportGreensburg signed eastbound McKeesport signed westboundNew Stanton75 39121 33875New Stanton I 70 west to US 119 PA Turnpike 66 north Greensburg Wheeling WVI 70 exit 58 PA 66 exit 0B western end of I 70 overlap southern terminus of PA 66Hempfield Township77 60124 89New Stanton service plaza westbound Donegal Township90 69145 95991Donegal PA 31 PA 711 Ligonier UniontownSomersetSomerset109 91176 8810110Somerset US 219 Somerset JohnstownAccess via PA 601Somerset Township112 30 112 40180 73 180 89North Somerset service plaza westbound South Somerset service plaza eastbound Stonycreek Alleghenytownship line122 7 123 9197 5 199 4Allegheny Mountain TunnelBedfordBedford Township145 50234 1611146Bedford I 99 US 220 Bedford AltoonaAccess via US 220 Bus 147 30237 06North Midway service plaza westbound South Midway service plaza eastbound East Providence Township161 50259 9112161Breezewood US 30 to I 70 east Everett BaltimoreEastern end of I 70 overlap Everett signed westboundFultonTaylor Township172 30277 29Sideling Hill service plaza both directions Dublin Township179 44288 7813180Fort Littleton US 522 McConnellsburg Mount UnionHuntingdon Franklincounty lineDublin Metaltownship line187 3 188 3301 4 303 0Tuscarora Mountain TunnelFranklinMetal Township188 59303 5114189Willow Hill PA 75 Willow Hill Fort LoudonFannett Lurgantownship line198 5 199 4319 5 320 9Kittatinny Mountain TunnelLurgan Township199 5 200 3321 1 322 4Blue Mountain Tunnel201 29323 9415201Blue Mountain PA 997 Shippensburg ChambersburgCumberlandHopewell Township202 50325 89Blue Mountain service plaza westbound West Pennsboro Township219 10352 61Cumberland Valley service plaza eastbound Middlesex Township226 54364 5816226Carlisle I 81 US 11 Carlisle Harrisburg ChambersburgHarrisburg signed eastbound Chambersburg signed westbound indirect access to I 81 exit 52 via US 11Upper Allen Township236 22380 1617236Gettysburg Pike US 15 Gettysburg HarrisburgYorkFairview Township241 87389 2518242Harrisburg West I 83 York Baltimore HarrisburgI 83 exit 39BSusquehanna River246 5 247 3396 7 398 0Susquehanna River BridgeDauphinLower Swatara Township247 38398 1219247Harrisburg East I 283 north PA 283 Harrisburg HersheySouthern terminus of I 283249 70401 85Highspire service plaza eastbound Dauphin Lebanoncounty lineConewago South Londonderrytownship line258 80416 50Lawn service plaza westbound LancasterRapho Township266 45428 8120266Lebanon Lancaster PA 72 Lebanon LancasterEast Cocalico Township286 09460 4221286Reading US 222 PA 272 Reading Ephrata LancasterAccess via Colonel Howard Boulevard which also has an interchange with Lesher Road Ephrata signed eastbound Lancaster signed westboundBrecknock Township289 90466 55Bowmansville service plaza eastbound BerksCaernarvon Township22 Morgantown PA 10 Morgantown ReadingReplaced by newer exit in 1996298 33480 1222298Morgantown I 176 north PA 10 to PA 23 Morgantown ReadingSouthern terminus of I 176ChesterWallace Township304 80490 53Peter J Camiel service plaza westbound Uwchlan Township311 93502 0023312Downingtown PA 100 Pottstown West ChesterCharlestown East Whiteland Tredyffrin township tripoint319 33513 91 320SR 29 PA 29 Phoenixville MalvernNo trucksTredyffrin Township324 50522 23Valley Forge service plaza eastbound MontgomeryUpper Merion Township326 62525 6424326Valley Forge I 76 east to US 202 I 476 US 422 Philadelphia Valley ForgeEastern end of I 76 overlap western end of I 276 I 476 signed eastbound US 422 signed westbound328 40528 51King of Prussia service plaza westbound Schuylkill River331 7 331 9533 8 534 1Schuylkill River BridgePlymouth Township333 28536 3625333NorristownNorristownAccess via Germantown Pike and Plymouth Road eastbound signed to I 476 south334 5538 3 I 476 Toll north Northeast Extension Allentown334 5538 325A20Mid County I 476 south Chester PhiladelphiaWestbound exit and eastbound entrance eastbound exit and westbound entrance via Norristown interchange exit number corresponds to I 476 milepostsUpper Dublin Township338 36544 5426339Fort Washington PA 309 Philadelphia Ambler339 80546 8626A 335 340Virginia DriveVirginia DriveWestbound exit and entrance no trucks indirect access to PA 152Upper Moreland Township342 91551 8627343Willow Grove PA 611 Doylestown JenkintownBucksBensalem Township351 49565 6728351Bensalem US 1 to I 95 south Philadelphia TrentonFormerly called the Philadelphia Interchange 424 I 95 signed eastbound351 89566 31 352Street Road PA 132 Street Road Eastbound exit and entrance no trucks352 67567 57Neshaminy Falls Toll Plaza eastern end of distance based toll system Bristol Township41 166 1 I 95 south PhiladelphiaWestbound exit and eastbound entrance eastern end of I 276 and Pennsylvania Turnpike signage western end of I 95 overlap exits follow I 95 mileage continuation of Pennsylvania Turnpike signed as exit 40 from I 95 southbound42 468 229 35842 US 13 Levittown BristolFormerly called the Delaware Valley Interchange 424 exit number follows I 95 mileage42 969 0Delaware River Bridge Toll Gantry toll westbound only E ZPass or toll by plate Delaware River42 9 43 769 0 70 3Delaware River Turnpike Toll Bridge43 770 3 I 95 north Pearl Harbor Extension to N J Turnpike New YorkNew Jersey state line eastern terminus1 000 mi 1 609 km 1 000 km 0 621 mi Concurrency terminus Electronic toll collection Closed former Incomplete access Route transition UnopenedIn popular culture EditThe Pennsylvania Turnpike appeared in the Russian film Brother 2 425 The turnpike is used as a backdrop in the 2009 film adoption of Cormac McCarthy s novel The Road 425 The song You re My Home by Billy Joel contains the lyric Home could be the Pennsylvania Turnpike 425 Country music composer George Vaughn Horton wrote Pennsylvania Turnpike I Love You So as performed by Dick Todd 425 The lyrics to the song Probable Cause by Why reference the Pennsylvania Turnpike as the setting of the song 426 See also Edit U S Roads portal Pennsylvania portalList of toll roads in the United StatesReferences Edit a b c Dakelman Mitchell E amp Schorr Neal A 2004 The Pennsylvania Turnpike Images of America Mount Pleasant SC Arcadia Publishing p 69 ISBN 0 7385 3532 X OCLC 55992362 75 Years of Turnpike History Pennsylvania Turnpike Commission Retrieved August 3 2015 a b c d Dakelman amp Schorr 2004 p 104 Pennsylvania State Roads GIS data set Pennsylvania Department of Transportation January 2012 Archived from the original on January 20 2013 Retrieved October 11 2012 Pennsylvania Historical and Museum Commission PHMC Historical Markers Search Searchable database Commonwealth of Pennsylvania Retrieved October 16 2019 a b c d e f g h i j k The Pennsylvania Turnpike Pennsylvania Turnpike Commission 1981 Pennsylvania Department of Transportation 2015 Pennsylvania Traffic Volume Map PDF Map Pennsylvania Department of Transportation Archived from the original PDF on October 25 2017 Retrieved January 3 2018 Federal Highway Administration 2010 National Highway System Pennsylvania PDF Map Federal Highway Administration Retrieved October 14 2012 Natzke Stefan Neathery Mike amp Adderly Kevin June 20 2012 What is the National Highway System National Highway System Federal Highway Administration Archived from the original on September 24 2012 Retrieved July 1 2012 History and Current Status of The Blue Star Memorial Highways National Remember our Troops Campaign Archived from the original on January 6 2015 Retrieved November 3 2013 Blue Star Marker to be Placed at New Stanton Service Plaza Pennsylvania Turnpike Commission June 1 2010 Archived from the original on March 14 2016 Retrieved November 3 2013 Pennsylvania Turnpike Commission TRIP Travel Conditions Map Map Pennsylvania Turnpike Commission Archived from the original on September 22 2014 Retrieved September 21 2014 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad ae af ag ah ai aj Pennsylvania Turnpike Commission The Pennsylvania Turnpike Simplified Map PDF Map Pennsylvania Turnpike Commission Archived from the original PDF on October 17 2015 Retrieved August 3 2015 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad ae af ag ah ai aj ak al am an ao ap aq Google September 6 2012 overview of Pennsylvania Turnpike Map Google Maps Google Retrieved September 6 2012 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q ADC Map 2003 Pennsylvania State Road Atlas Alexandria Virginia ADC Map pp 54 56 68 78 82 84 ISBN 0875303714 a b c Schmitz Jon October 24 2009 Turnpike Bridge Over Allegheny Set To Open Second Span To Be Ready In Nov 2010 Pittsburgh Post Gazette p B 1 a b c Dakelman amp Schorr 2004 p 63 a b c d Dakelman amp Schorr 2004 p 29 a b Dakelman amp Schorr 2004 p 31 Dakelman amp Schorr 2004 p 64 a b c Photo of new Pennsylvania Turnpike bridge over Susquehanna River The Patriot News Harrisburg PA May 18 2007 p A01 Dakelman amp Schorr 2004 p 94 a b Route Log Auxiliary Routes of the Eisenhower National System Of Interstate and Defense Highways Table 2 Federal Highway Administration October 31 2002 Retrieved October 17 2012 a b Dakelman amp Schorr 2004 p 123 Interstate 95 straight line diagram PDF New Jersey Department of Transportation Retrieved March 26 2007 a b c d e 2023 Toll Schedule PDF Pennsylvania Turnpike Commission 2023 Retrieved January 8 2023 PA Turnpike Toll By Plate What is it Pennsylvania Turnpike Commission Retrieved January 3 2016 a b McCormack Lauren January 3 2009 Turnpike toll hike coming Sunday The Phoenix Phoenixville PA p 3 Pennsylvania Turnpike to raise tolls in 2015 Pittsburgh Post Gazette March 27 2014 Retrieved May 14 2014 Boehm Eric January 6 2013 Tolls climbing traffic declining as Pa Turnpike officials chase revenue The Reporter Lansdale PA Retrieved January 6 2013 a b 2019 Toll Schedule PDF Pennsylvania Turnpike Commission 2019 Retrieved January 7 2019 Traffic Rules and Regulations Pennsylvania Turnpike Commission Retrieved August 3 2015 a b Mattar George December 29 2010 Turnpike considers getting rid of cash tolls The Intelligencer Doylestown PA p 1 Thompson Charles March 6 2012 Caution All E Z Pass turnpike ahead The Patriot News Harrisburg PA p A1 Nussbaum Paul March 13 2012 Pa Turnpike looks at much higher non E ZPass rates The Philadelphia Inquirer p A1 Behrman Elizabeth January 1 2016 Toll over Pennsylvania Turnpike s Delaware Bridge will be cashless Greensburg Tribune Review Retrieved January 3 2016 Blazina Ed October 24 2019 Pa Turnpike begins cashless tolling Sunday at Ohio border Route 66 bypass Pittsburgh Post Gazette Retrieved October 26 2019 a b Blazina Ed November 2 2019 Pa Turnpike won t take cash by fall 2021 The Philadelphia Inquirer Retrieved November 3 2019 Tierney Jacob June 2 2020 Pennsylvania Turnpike to lay off 500 employees make cashless tolling permanent TribLive Retrieved June 2 2020 Blazina Ed November 29 2020 Pennsylvania Turnpike to build new toll plaza but with no booths in North Hills Pittsburgh Post Gazette Retrieved November 30 2020 Kratz Alyssa December 2 2022 Pennsylvania Turnpike to implement open road tolling by 2025 York PA WPMT TV Retrieved January 1 2023 Southwick Ron July 21 2020 Pa Turnpike raising tolls again in 2021 those without E ZPass will pay much more PennLive Retrieved January 15 2021 a b Turnpike costs take 25 hike for travelers Last increase was in 2004 Butler Eagle January 4 2009 p 2 a b c d e f 1634 1699 McCusker J J 1997 How Much Is That in Real Money A Historical Price Index for Use as a Deflator of Money Values in the Economy of the United States Addenda et Corrigenda PDF American Antiquarian Society 1700 1799 McCusker J J 1992 How Much Is That in Real Money A Historical Price Index for Use as a Deflator of Money Values in the Economy of the United States PDF American Antiquarian Society 1800 present Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis Consumer Price Index estimate 1800 Retrieved April 16 2022 Rauhut Marcus January 4 2009 Turnpike tolls rise 25 percent Sunday Public Opinion Chambersburg PA Pa Turnpike users now paying more Bucks County Courier Times Associated Press January 3 2010 p 1 Schmitz Jon July 16 2010 Turnpike To Become Costliest Toll Road E ZPass Customers Will Get Price Break Over Those Paying Cash Pittsburgh Post Gazette p A1 a b DeStefano Carla January 2 2011 Turnpike rate increase takes effect Herald Standard Uniontown PA p A2 Samuel Peter July 29 2013 Penn Pike to up E ZPass tolls 2 cash tolls 12 Jan 1 2014 TollRoadsnews Archived from the original on January 7 2014 Retrieved January 7 2014 Your wallet could slim down in the new year The Patriot News Harrisburg PA January 2 2012 p A1 Urgo Jacqueline L January 10 2012 The toll that higher tolls will take The Philadelphia Inquirer p A2 PA Turnpike tolls increased on Sunday Philadelphia PA WPVI TV January 7 2019 Retrieved January 7 2019 Emergency Call Boxes Pennsylvania Turnpike Commission Archived from the original on June 11 2016 Retrieved September 11 2017 Cupper 1990 p 45 PA Turnpike Call Box Removal Begins Next Week Press release Pennsylvania Turnpike Commission September 8 2017 Archived from the original on September 11 2017 Retrieved September 11 2017 Safety Patrol Program Pennsylvania Turnpike Commission Retrieved November 10 2021 PA Turnpike Commission Announces GEICO as New Sponsor of Roadway Safety Patrol Press release Pennsylvania Turnpike Commission Retrieved November 10 2021 If Your Vehicle Breaks Down Pennsylvania Turnpike Commission Retrieved August 3 2015 Pennsylvania State Police Troop T Pennsylvania State Police Retrieved January 8 2018 HAR Transmissions Now Broadcast at Every PA Turnpike Interchange Pennsylvania Turnpike Commission July 3 2000 Archived from the original on August 19 2003 Retrieved April 14 2009 Advanced Travelers Information System Pennsylvania Turnpike Commission Retrieved November 26 2021 Service Plazas Pennsylvania Turnpike Commission Retrieved November 26 2021 a b c Dakelman amp Schorr 2004 p 116 From Days Gone Bay The Fulton County News Archived from the original on September 3 2014 Retrieved June 29 2014 Butler Service Plaza Closes to Make Way for Toll Plaza Pennsylvania Turnpike Commission February 28 2002 Archived from the original on July 4 2015 Retrieved June 29 2014 a b c Hempfield Plaza to Close Permanently To Allow for Widening of Pa Turnpike Between Irwin and New Stanton Exits Pennsylvania Turnpike Commission January 31 2007 Archived from the original on January 20 2013 Retrieved October 8 2012 a b c PA Turnpike s South Neshaminy Service Plaza To Be Closed Pennsylvania Turnpike Commission June 29 2007 Archived from the original on January 20 2013 Retrieved October 8 2012 McCarthy Ken November 9 2008 Closing Zelienople turnpike plaza could hurt tourism some say Pittsburgh Post Gazette Retrieved June 29 2014 Nussbaum Paul November 22 1990 A Milestone In Ugliness But If You Need To Stop The Philadelphia Inquirer Retrieved June 29 2014 a b Service Plazas Tentative Reconstruction Schedule Pennsylvania Turnpike Commission Archived from the original on July 3 2015 Retrieved August 29 2015 Art Sparks Pennsylvania Turnpike Commission Retrieved June 8 2017 New arts program will connect student artists to PA Turnpike Press release Pennsylvania Turnpike Commission March 30 2017 Archived from the original on April 2 2017 Retrieved June 8 2017 Pennsylvania Turnpike Facebook April 1 2019 Archived from the original on February 26 2022 Retrieved April 7 2019 Kezar Korri January 25 2018 7 Eleven completes 3 3B purchase after agreeing to divest stores American City Business Journals Retrieved January 18 2021 a b c d e Dakelman amp Schorr 2004 p 21 a b Cupper 1990 p 16 a b c d Dakelman amp Schorr 2004 p 84 a b c d e Dakelman amp Schorr 2004 p 88 a b c Dakelman amp Schorr 2004 p 100 a b c Dakelman amp Schorr 2004 p 103 a b c d e f g h Dakelman amp Schorr 2004 p 109 a b Project Overview PA Turnpike I 95 Interchange Project Retrieved November 14 2015 Dakelman amp Schorr 2004 p 12 Cupper 1990 p 2 Dakelman amp Schorr 2004 p 13 Cupper 1990 p 3 Dakelman amp Schorr 2004 p 14 a b c Van Dyke Warren July 4 1937 Pennsylvania Plans 164 mile Highway The New York Times p I9 a b Dakelman amp Schorr 2004 p 11 Dakelman amp Schorr 2004 p 22 Cupper 1990 p 6 Dakelman amp Schorr 2004 p 23 a b Dakelman amp Schorr 2004 p 24 New Highway Held A Military Artery The New York Times October 17 1937 p 45 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad ae af ag ah ai aj ak al am an ao ap aq ar as at au av aw ax Johnston Louis Williamson Samuel H 2023 What Was the U S GDP Then MeasuringWorth Retrieved January 1 2023 United States Gross Domestic Product deflator figures follow the Measuring Worth series Cupper 1990 p 7 a b c Lyman Washington Lauren D August 7 1938 Super Road to Cut Time The New York Times p 138 a b c d e Cupper 1990 p 11 Pennsylvania Now Ready for Bids On Big Bond Issue The Wall Street Journal February 9 1938 p 9 60 000 000 Pennsylvania Turnpike Bonds Soon to Be Reoffered to the Public Here The New York Times March 12 1938 p 25 Approves Big Road Grant The New York Times April 9 1938 p 3 Pennsylvania Gets Road Grant The New York Times April 15 1938 p 13 Market Activity Aids Pennsylvania Road Bond Plans The Wall Street Journal April 28 1938 p 3 To Aid Super Highway The New York Times June 12 1938 p 36 PWA RFC To Build a Super Highway The New York Times July 31 1938 p 1 Finance 162 Mile Highway The New York Times October 12 1938 p 44 Funds for Super Highway The New York Times February 9 1939 p 33 Petition to Build a Railroad Denied The New York Times October 2 1938 p 74 a b Dakelman amp Schorr 2004 p 40 Dakelman amp Schorr 2004 p 42 Dakelman amp Schorr 2004 p 43 a b c Winfield Robert October 15 1939 Nation s Newest Super Highway Is Rushed The New York Times p 151 a b c d Cleveland Reginald M October 6 1940 Drivers Dream Road Is Ready The New York Times p 143 a b Longfellow Rickie The Abandoned Pennsylvania Turnpike Back in Time Highway History Federal Highway Administration Retrieved April 14 2009 Dakelman amp Schorr 2004 p 48 Dakelman amp Schorr 2004 p 50 Dakelman amp Schorr 2004 p 53 Dakelman amp Schorr 2004 p 54 a b c Cupper 1990 p 13 Dakelman amp Schorr 2004 p 55 a b Dakelman amp Schorr 2004 p 56 a b Dakelman amp Schorr 2004 p 65 Cupper 1990 p 12 a b Dakelman amp Schorr 2004 p 61 Dakelman amp Schorr 2004 p 62 A Road Of Beauty The New York Times September 7 1940 p 9 Trucks and Buses to Use Pennsylvania Turnpike The New York Times September 20 1940 p 33 Dakelman amp Schorr 2004 p 60 a b c Building Auto Stations The New York Times May 26 1940 p RE2 a b New Esso Stations The Wall Street Journal May 13 1940 p 7 a b Dakelman amp Schorr 2004 p 76 Dakelman amp Schorr 2004 p 77 Dakelman amp Schorr 2004 p 25 Dakelman amp Schorr 2004 p 26 a b Dakelman amp Schorr 2004 p 27 Cupper 1990 p 5 a b Dakelman amp Schorr 2004 p 30 Dakelman amp Schorr 2004 p 32 Dakelman amp Schorr 2004 p 34 Dakelman amp Schorr 2004 p 37 Dakelman amp Schorr 2004 p 39 Dakelman amp Schorr 2004 p 75 Dakelman amp Schorr 2004 p 58 Dakelman amp Schorr 2004 p 57 Super Highways The New York Times July 7 1940 p E8 a b Dakelman amp Schorr 2004 p 68 a b Cupper 1990 p 15 Turnpike Hailed by First Riders The New York Times August 27 1940 p 42 Dakelman amp Schorr 2004 p 67 Schmitt F E January 5 1939 South Penn Experiment Engineering News Record New York McGraw Hill Publishing Company 122 1 11 Retrieved December 28 2008 Nussbaum Paul September 23 1990 The Turnpike Turns 50 After Five Decades The State s Key Highway Is Still Crowded Narrow And Very Successful The Philadelphia Inquirer p C1 Moran Robert and Rich Heidorn Jr October 26 1997 Why You Pay To Cross Pa Tollbooths Could Have Come Down Jobs And Power Prevented That The Philadelphia Inquirer p A01 a b c Kilgore Bernard October 14 1940 New Pennsylvania Pike Fulfills Its Early Publicity of Dream Highway The Wall Street Journal p 19 a b c d e Ingraham Joseph C October 17 1965 A Penny A Mile The New York Times p XX1 Whelan Frank August 5 1990 Turnpike Turns 50 The Morning Call Allentown PA p B3 Cupper 1990 p 17 Cupper 1990 p 20 Cleveland Reginald M November 3 1940 At The Wheel The New York Times p 154 a b Pennsylvania Turnpike Earns 3 000 000 in First Year The Wall Street Journal October 2 1941 p 13 Turnpike One Year Old The New York Times October 12 1941 p XX3 Penna Turnpike Revenues Show Wide Drop From 1941 The Wall Street Journal August 18 1942 p 6 Highway Traffic Rises The New York Times August 10 1945 p 15 Cupper 1990 p 18 Weingroff Richard F Summer 1996 Three States Claim First Interstate Highway Public Roads Washington DC Federal Highway Administration 60 1 ISSN 0033 3735 Retrieved February 16 2008 Henry Lowman S Summer 1998 America s Tunnel Highway Turnpike Traveler Pennsylvania Turnpike Commission p 4 Archived from the original on August 27 2014 Retrieved August 19 2007 High Speed Roads of Future Depicted The New York Times February 17 1939 p 21 Estill A K February 16 1944 Express Highways The Wall Street Journal p 1 Penna Turnpike America s first superhighway a 160 mile long concrete marvel was opened 50 years ago today Lancaster New Era Associated Press October 1 1990 p C16 a b Cupper 1990 p 33 a b c Davies Lawrence E March 23 1941 Study Link to Turnpike The New York Times p XX3 Superhighway Project Set The New York Times June 11 1948 p 36 Pennsylvania to Sell New Bonds to Extend Automobile Turnpike The Wall Street Journal July 27 1948 p 7 Pennsylvania Turnpike Extension Financing Set Through 4 Firms The Wall Street Journal June 10 1948 p 6 Pennsylvania Turnpike Revenue Issue Largest Ever Offered on Market Aug 11 The New York Times August 2 1948 p 25, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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