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New York State Route 47

New York State Route 47 (NY 47) was a 19.34-mile (31.12 km) long state highway around Rochester in New York, in the United States. It formed a semicircle through the inner suburbs of Rochester, following expressways west and east of the city and surface streets south of Rochester. The western terminus of the route was at an interchange with NY 104 west of the city limits in Greece. The eastern terminus was at an intersection with Culver Road in Irondequoit close to Lake Ontario. In between its western and eastern extents, NY 47 met Interstate 490 (I-490) twice. The limited-access highway portions of the route were known as the Rochester Outer Loop (or Outer Loop) in contrast to the Inner Loop around downtown Rochester.

New York State Route 47

Rochester Outer Loop
Map of Rochester with NY 47 highlighted in red
Route information
Maintained by NYSDOT and the city of Rochester
Length19.34 mi[1][2] (31.12 km)
Existedc. 1937[3][4]–March 18, 1980[5]
Major junctions
West end NY 104 in Greece
Major intersections I-490 in Rochester
East endCulver Road in Irondequoit
Location
CountryUnited States
StateNew York
CountiesMonroe
Highway system

NY 47 was originally routed along surface streets through the city when it was assigned c. 1937. It began at NY 31 in Gates and followed Howard Road and Brooks Avenue southeast into Rochester, where it continued eastward on Genesee Park Boulevard and Elmwood Avenue. NY 47 remained on the latter through Brighton to an area known as Twelve Corners. At this point, the route turned north onto Winton Road and followed that street through the eastern fringe of the city to Irondequoit, where NY 47 ended at a junction with U.S. Route 104 (US 104, now NY 404). The Outer Loop was constructed in stages, beginning with the portion of the Sea Breeze Expressway north of Ridge Road in the early 1950s. From that point on, construction progressed in a generally clockwise fashion around the city.

By the late 1960s and early 1970s, the Outer Loop was complete from NY 383 to US 104 west of the city and from modern I-590 exit 1 to the lakeshore east of Rochester. NY 47 followed the loop from US 104 south to NY 383 and from Elmwood Avenue north to modern NY 590 exit 8; north of that point, the expressway was part of US 104 and NY 18. NY 47 was extended northward along the remainder of the Sea Breeze Expressway in 1970. On March 18, 1980, the NY 47 designation was removed and replaced with several others, primarily I-390, I-590, NY 390, and NY 590.

Route description edit

 
Sign assembly on Elmwood Avenue at Winton Road. The empty upper portion was where signage for NY 47 was once mounted.

NY 47 followed a half-circle routing around the city of Rochester, beginning northwest of downtown in the town of Greece and proceeding generally counterclockwise around the city before ending northeast of downtown at the Lake Ontario shoreline in Irondequoit. The limited-access highway portions of NY 47 were named the "Rochester Outer Loop" (or "Outer Loop") in contrast to the Inner Loop around downtown Rochester.[6] This moniker remains in use to this day, now referring to the designations that have since replaced NY 47 along the loop.[5] Conceptually, NY 104 completes the Outer Loop along the north side of the city. However, only the section east of the Genesee River is expressway, leaving NY 104 from modern NY 390 to the Veterans Memorial Bridge as the only at-grade portion of the loop.[7] The at-grade portion of NY 47 along Scottsville Road and Elmwood Avenue was known as the "Rochester Bypass" prior to the completion of the Outer Loop.[8] The alignment described within this section is of NY 47 upon its removal in 1980.

Western expressway edit

NY 47 began at an interchange with NY 104 (now the interchange between NY 390 and NY 104) in Greece one mile (1.6 km) west of the Rochester city limits.[9] Although, at the time, the freeway terminated just north of the interchange, the interchange itself was roughly complete, with only ramps to and from future NY 390 north of the interchange missing.[10] NY 47 followed the modern NY 390 alignment south to I-490, where NY 47 continued onto what is now I-390. The routings of NY 47 and current I-390 were identical to NY 383 (Scottsville Road) in Chili, where NY 47 was forced to grade level via a partially constructed interchange, as modern I-390 had yet to be constructed in the area southeast of NY 383.[9][11]

At-grade edit

 
NY 47's final eastern terminus was at this intersection with Culver Road in Irondequoit (shown as it was in March 2008). This part of NY 47 became NY 590.

Off the expressway and now at-grade, NY 47 turned north onto NY 383, forming a short concurrency with NY 383 into Rochester. At Elmwood Avenue, NY 47 and NY 383 departed Scottsville Road and proceeded eastward on Elmwood Avenue. Two blocks to the east, at an intersection with South Plymouth Avenue, NY 383 split from NY 47, following Plymouth Avenue into downtown Rochester. NY 47 remained routed on Elmwood Avenue, crossing the Genesee River and passing north of Strong Memorial Hospital prior to intersecting NY 15 (Mount Hope Avenue) in the shadow of Mount Hope Cemetery. East of NY 15, NY 47 progressed along Elmwood Avenue, intersecting several local streets before entering Brighton.[9]

Within Brighton, NY 47 continued on Elmwood Avenue through "Twelve Corners", intersecting NY 31 (Monroe Avenue) at the location, to what is now I-590. At the northbound entrance ramp of the modern interchange between I-590 and Elmwood Avenue, NY 47 separated from the latter, entering the freeway. While what is now I-590 was constructed and open from Winton Road to I-490, it had no signed designation between Winton and Elmwood.[9]

Eastern expressway edit

NY 47 followed modern I-590 northward through Brighton to the Can of Worms, where NY 47 met I-490 for the second time.[9] Due to the way the interchange was designed at the time, traffic continuing on NY 47 across I-490 had to merge with I-490 traffic for roughly 1,000 feet (305 m) before exiting I-490 onto the other portion of NY 47.[12] North of I-490, NY 47 followed the length of what is now NY 590 through Brighton, Rochester, and Irondequoit to Culver Road at the Lake Ontario shoreline.[9]

History edit

Original alignment edit

 
Old NY 47 in red and blue, and NY 940L in blue

When NY 47 was first commissioned in the Rochester area c. 1937,[3][13] it was routed along previously unnumbered roadways, with its northwest terminus located at the intersection of NY 31 (Lyell Avenue) and Howard Road in Gates. NY 47 took Howard Road south, passing through Gates Center and intersecting NY 33 before crossing the then-New York Central Railroad main line (now the CSX Transportation-owned Rochester Subdivision) at-grade. The route remained on Howard Road until the intersection of Howard Road and Chili Avenue (NY 33A), which also included Brooks Avenue at this juncture of time. NY 47 turned east onto Brooks Avenue and proceeded toward the Greater Rochester International Airport, joining the current routing of NY 204 at Beahan Road (now Old Beahan Road).[13][14]

 
The intersection of Elmwood Avenue and Winton Road at Twelve Corners in Brighton. NY 47 entered on Elmwood from the left and turned north here onto Winton.

NY 47 followed the entire alignment of NY 204 to what is now I-390 and continued on Brooks Avenue into Rochester to Genesee Park Boulevard. Route 47 turned south onto the street, which circles around the southwestern quadrant of the city, and followed its length to Genesee Street, where it turned south for a short distance before resuming its eastward alignment on Elmwood Avenue. The route remained on Elmwood Avenue into Brighton, where it turned north onto South Winton Road at Twelve Corners. At Highland Avenue, NY 47 reentered Rochester and became North Winton Road at East Avenue (NY 96). The route remained on Winton through Rochester and Irondequoit before terminating at Empire Boulevard (then US 104, now NY 404) just west of Irondequoit Bay.[13][14]

Expressway realignments edit

East of Rochester edit

In the early 1950s, construction began on the Sea Breeze Expressway, a mostly limited-access highway linking the Lake Ontario shoreline to the proposed I-490 east of Rochester. The first portion of the road, a divided highway extending from East Ridge Road in Irondequoit to Culver Road just west of the Irondequoit Bay Outlet, was opened to traffic by 1954 as a realignment of NY 18.[15][16] Construction on a limited-access extension south to Empire Boulevard (three blocks west of NY 47's western terminus) began at some point between 1956 and 1958[17][18] and was completed by 1960 as a realignment of US 104.[19] Another extension of the highway south to the partially complete I-490 in Brighton was completed c. 1961[19][20] and largely became part of a rerouted NY 47 by the following year. At the time, NY 47 left the expressway at Blossom Road and followed it west to Winton Road, where it rejoined its original routing.[21]

 
Winton Road (former NY 47) at NY 96 in Rochester

By 1964, construction was underway on a new expressway leading south from I-490 at the Can of Worms to Elmwood Avenue east of Twelve Corners.[22] The highway was completed c. 1965, at which time NY 47 was realigned to follow the Sea Breeze Expressway and the new expressway south through the Can of Worms to its end at a partial interchange with Elmwood Avenue (now I-590 exit 3). It continued west on Elmwood Avenue to Twelve Corners, where it reconnected to its old alignment at Winton Road.[22][23]

West of Rochester edit

The first realignment of NY 47 west of the city occurred c. 1962 when it was rerouted between Chili and Elmwood Avenues to bypass the then-Rochester–Monroe County Airport to the south. Instead of turning east onto Brooks Avenue as it did prior to 1962, the route continued south on Beahan Road to Scottsville Road (NY 383), where it turned to overlap NY 383 north to Elmwood Avenue. At the time, Beahan Road connected directly to Scottsville Road (via modern Old Beahan Road) as the primary runway southwest of the airport had yet to be extended to its present length.[20][21] By 1962, construction was underway on a new limited-access highway paralleling NY 47 (Howard Road) to the east between NY 31 and NY 33.[21] Within two years, work had begun on an extension of the highway south along the Erie Canal to Scottsville Road. Farther east, construction was underway on a new highway leading south from I-490 to Elmwood Avenue east of Twelve Corners.[22]

 
Reference marker for NY 47 on NY 590 in Irondequoit

All of the limited-access highway between NY 31 and NY 383 opened to traffic c. 1965. NY 47 was reconfigured to begin a half-mile (0.8 km) to the east of Howard Road at modern NY 390 exit 21 and follow the new highway southeastward to its temporary end at what is now I-390 exit 17 east of the airport. At this point, NY 47 joined its pre-1965 routing and followed NY 383 northeastward into the city limits.[22][23] By 1968, construction was underway on a northward extension of the expressway to US 104 in Greece.[24] It was completed and opened to traffic by 1971.[9]

Extensions and deletion edit

NY 47 was officially extended on both ends on January 1, 1970, to terminate at Lake Ontario on opposite sides of Rochester. In Greece, the designation officially followed what is now NY 390 north to the Lake Ontario State Parkway;[25] however, the portion between US 104 and the parkway had yet to be constructed.[9] To the east in Irondequoit, NY 47 was stretched northward along the Sea Breeze Expressway to Culver Road,[25] resulting in overlaps with both US 104 and NY 18. At the time, the overlap with US 104 existed only between Empire Boulevard and the Keeler Street Expressway, which became the new alignment of the route through Irondequoit after its completion in 1969.[24][26] The overlap with US 104 was eliminated entirely the following year when that route was realigned onto a new expressway alignment between NY 47 and Webster that traversed Irondequoit Bay via the newly built Irondequoit Bay Bridge.[9] The overlap with NY 18 was eliminated c. 1973 when NY 18 was truncated to its current eastern terminus in Kodak Park.[8][27]

 
Old, rusted reference marker for NY 940L along Howard Road (former NY 47) in Gates

On March 18, 1980, the NY 47 designation was eliminated and split into four other routes.[5] From NY 104 in Greece to I-490, NY 47 became NY 390. The section from I-490 south to NY 383 was designated as part of I-390;[28] however, it would not connect to the existing portion of I-390 south of Rochester until 1981, when the interchange between I-390 and I-590 was completed.[26] The segment of NY 47 from Elmwood Avenue north to the Can of Worms became part of I-590, which continued southwest along the freeway to Winton Road. From the Can of Worms to Lake Ontario, NY 47 was redesignated NY 590.[28]

Off the expressways, the former alignments of NY 47 now carry several designations. Howard Road, bypassed by the 1960s realignment in Gates, is still maintained by the New York State Department of Transportation as NY 940L, an unsigned reference route 2.37 miles (3.81 km) in length.[1] Beahan Road, also bypassed by the same 1960s rerouting, was reconfigured into its current alignment by 1971 due to an expansion by the airport.[11] The section of Beahan Road that carried NY 47 is currently maintained by Monroe County as part of County Route 164 (CR 164), the county's unsigned designation for all of Beahan Road.[29][30] The portion of NY 47 on Elmwood Avenue from the Rochester city line to I-590 is also maintained by Monroe County as part of CR 87.[31] Lastly, the segments of Winton Road outside of the Rochester city limits are now part of CR 98.[31] The remainder of c. 1980 NY 47 and the former alignments of the route are currently locally maintained.

Major intersections edit

The entire route was in Monroe County.

Locationmi[1][2]kmDestinationsNotes
Town of Greece0.000.00  NY 104Now exit 24 (NY 390)
Rochester3.094.97  NY 31Now exit 21 (NY 390)
3.575.75  I-490Now exit 20 (I-390 / NY 390)
Chili4.927.92  NY 33ANow exit 19 (I-390)
5.639.06  NY 204Now exit 18 (I-390)
6.3410.20 
 
NY 383 south
Western terminus of NY 47 / NY 383 overlap; now exit 17 (I-390)
Rochester7.0611.36 
 
NY 383 north
Eastern terminus of NY 47 / NY 383 overlap
7.9512.79  NY 15
Brighton10.7217.25  NY 31
Rochester12.6020.28  I-490Can of Worms; now exit 5 (I-590 / NY 590)
13.7622.14  NY 286Western terminus of NY 286; now exit 7 (NY 590)
Irondequoit15.1224.33  NY 404Western terminus of NY 404; now exit 8 (NY 590)
16.6226.75  NY 104Now exit 10 (NY 590)
17.0827.49East Ridge RoadFormer routing of NY 18 and US 104
19.3431.12Culver RoadFormer routing of NY 18
1.000 mi = 1.609 km; 1.000 km = 0.621 mi

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b c "2008 Traffic Data Report for New York State" (PDF). New York State Department of Transportation. June 16, 2009. pp. 303, 306, 321–322, 351. Retrieved December 7, 2009.
  2. ^ a b "Monroe County Inventory Listing" (CSV). New York State Department of Transportation. October 1, 2009. Retrieved December 7, 2009.
  3. ^ a b Road Map – New York (Map). Cartography by H.M. Gousha Company. Shell Oil Company. 1936.
  4. ^ "Autoists Get Road Report". The Rochester Democrat and Chronicle. April 23, 1937. p. 13. Retrieved February 13, 2020 – via Newspapers.com.  
  5. ^ a b c New York State Department of Transportation (January 2017). Official Description of Highway Touring Routes, Bicycling Touring Routes, Scenic Byways, & Commemorative/Memorial Designations in New York State (PDF). Retrieved January 9, 2017.
  6. ^ New York (Map) (1977–78 ed.). Cartography by General Drafting. Exxon. 1977.
  7. ^ New York State Map (Map). Cartography by Map Works. I Love New York. 2009.
  8. ^ a b New York (Map) (1973 ed.). Cartography by H.M. Gousha Company. Shell Oil Company. 1973.
  9. ^ a b c d e f g h i New York (Map). Cartography by General Drafting. Humble Oil & Refining Company. 1971.
  10. ^ Rochester West Quadrangle – New York – Monroe Co (Map). 1:24,000. 7.5 Minute Series (Topographic). United States Geological Survey. 1978. Retrieved December 31, 2009.
  11. ^ a b West Henrietta Quadrangle – New York – Monroe Co (Map). 1:24,000. 7.5 Minute Series (Topographic). United States Geological Survey. 1978. Retrieved December 31, 2009.
  12. ^ Rochester East Quadrangle – New York – Monroe Co (Map). 1:24,000. 7.5 Minute Series (Topographic). United States Geological Survey. 1978. Retrieved December 31, 2009.
  13. ^ a b c Shell Road Map – New York (Map). Cartography by H.M. Gousha Company. Shell Oil Company. 1937.
  14. ^ a b Thibodeau, William A. (1938). The ALA Green Book (1938–39 ed.). Automobile Legal Association.
  15. ^ New York (Map). Cartography by Rand McNally and Company. Sunoco. 1952.
  16. ^ New York with Special Maps of Putnam–Rockland–Westchester Counties and Finger Lakes Region (Map) (1955–56 ed.). Cartography by General Drafting. Esso. 1954.
  17. ^ New York with Special Maps of Putnam–Rockland–Westchester Counties and Finger Lakes Region (Map) (1957 ed.). Cartography by General Drafting. Esso. 1956.
  18. ^ New York with Special Maps of Putnam–Rockland–Westchester Counties and Finger Lakes Region (Map) (1958 ed.). Cartography by General Drafting. Esso. 1958.
  19. ^ a b New York and New Jersey Tourgide Map (Map). Cartography by Rand McNally and Company. Gulf Oil Company. 1960.
  20. ^ a b New York and Metropolitan New York (Map) (1961–62 ed.). Cartography by H.M. Gousha Company. Sunoco. 1961.
  21. ^ a b c New York with Sight-Seeing Guide (Map). Cartography by General Drafting. Esso. 1962.
  22. ^ a b c d New York and Metropolitan New York (Map). Cartography by Rand McNally and Company. Sinclair Oil Corporation. 1964.
  23. ^ a b New York (Map). Rand McNally and Company. 1965.
  24. ^ a b New York (Map) (1969–70 ed.). Cartography by General Drafting. Esso. 1968.
  25. ^ a b State of New York Department of Transportation (January 1, 1970). Official Description of Touring Routes in New York State (PDF). Retrieved December 31, 2009.
  26. ^ a b National Bridge Inventory, a database compiled by the United States Department of Transportation Federal Highway Administration, available at www.nationalbridges.com. Accessed December 9, 2007.
  27. ^ New York and New Jersey Tourgide Map (Map) (1972 ed.). Cartography by Rand McNally and Company. Gulf Oil Company. 1972.
  28. ^ a b New York (Map). Rand McNally and Company. 1985. Rochester inset. ISBN 0-528-91040-X.
  29. ^ West Henrietta Digital Raster Quadrangle (Map). 1:24,000. New York State Department of Transportation. 1997. Retrieved December 31, 2009.
  30. ^ Rochester West Digital Raster Quadrangle (Map). 1:24,000. New York State Department of Transportation. 1997. Retrieved December 31, 2009.
  31. ^ a b Rochester East Digital Raster Quadrangle (Map). 1:24,000. New York State Department of Transportation. 1997. Retrieved December 31, 2009.

External links edit

KML is from Wikidata
  • New York State Route 47 at New York Routes

york, state, route, this, article, about, most, recent, alignment, removed, 1980, previous, alignments, disambiguation, mile, long, state, highway, around, rochester, york, united, states, formed, semicircle, through, inner, suburbs, rochester, following, expr. This article is about the most recent alignment of NY 47 removed in 1980 For previous alignments of NY 47 see New York State Route 47 disambiguation New York State Route 47 NY 47 was a 19 34 mile 31 12 km long state highway around Rochester in New York in the United States It formed a semicircle through the inner suburbs of Rochester following expressways west and east of the city and surface streets south of Rochester The western terminus of the route was at an interchange with NY 104 west of the city limits in Greece The eastern terminus was at an intersection with Culver Road in Irondequoit close to Lake Ontario In between its western and eastern extents NY 47 met Interstate 490 I 490 twice The limited access highway portions of the route were known as the Rochester Outer Loop or Outer Loop in contrast to the Inner Loop around downtown Rochester New York State Route 47Rochester Outer LoopMap of Rochester with NY 47 highlighted in redRoute informationMaintained by NYSDOT and the city of RochesterLength19 34 mi 1 2 31 12 km Existedc 1937 3 4 March 18 1980 5 Major junctionsWest endNY 104 in GreeceMajor intersectionsI 490 in RochesterEast endCulver Road in IrondequoitLocationCountryUnited StatesStateNew YorkCountiesMonroeHighway systemNew York Highways Interstate US State Reference Parkways NY 46A NY 48 NY 47 was originally routed along surface streets through the city when it was assigned c 1937 It began at NY 31 in Gates and followed Howard Road and Brooks Avenue southeast into Rochester where it continued eastward on Genesee Park Boulevard and Elmwood Avenue NY 47 remained on the latter through Brighton to an area known as Twelve Corners At this point the route turned north onto Winton Road and followed that street through the eastern fringe of the city to Irondequoit where NY 47 ended at a junction with U S Route 104 US 104 now NY 404 The Outer Loop was constructed in stages beginning with the portion of the Sea Breeze Expressway north of Ridge Road in the early 1950s From that point on construction progressed in a generally clockwise fashion around the city By the late 1960s and early 1970s the Outer Loop was complete from NY 383 to US 104 west of the city and from modern I 590 exit 1 to the lakeshore east of Rochester NY 47 followed the loop from US 104 south to NY 383 and from Elmwood Avenue north to modern NY 590 exit 8 north of that point the expressway was part of US 104 and NY 18 NY 47 was extended northward along the remainder of the Sea Breeze Expressway in 1970 On March 18 1980 the NY 47 designation was removed and replaced with several others primarily I 390 I 590 NY 390 and NY 590 Contents 1 Route description 1 1 Western expressway 1 2 At grade 1 3 Eastern expressway 2 History 2 1 Original alignment 2 2 Expressway realignments 2 2 1 East of Rochester 2 2 2 West of Rochester 2 3 Extensions and deletion 3 Major intersections 4 See also 5 References 6 External linksRoute description edit nbsp Sign assembly on Elmwood Avenue at Winton Road The empty upper portion was where signage for NY 47 was once mounted NY 47 followed a half circle routing around the city of Rochester beginning northwest of downtown in the town of Greece and proceeding generally counterclockwise around the city before ending northeast of downtown at the Lake Ontario shoreline in Irondequoit The limited access highway portions of NY 47 were named the Rochester Outer Loop or Outer Loop in contrast to the Inner Loop around downtown Rochester 6 This moniker remains in use to this day now referring to the designations that have since replaced NY 47 along the loop 5 Conceptually NY 104 completes the Outer Loop along the north side of the city However only the section east of the Genesee River is expressway leaving NY 104 from modern NY 390 to the Veterans Memorial Bridge as the only at grade portion of the loop 7 The at grade portion of NY 47 along Scottsville Road and Elmwood Avenue was known as the Rochester Bypass prior to the completion of the Outer Loop 8 The alignment described within this section is of NY 47 upon its removal in 1980 Western expressway edit Main articles Interstate 390 and New York State Route 390 NY 47 began at an interchange with NY 104 now the interchange between NY 390 and NY 104 in Greece one mile 1 6 km west of the Rochester city limits 9 Although at the time the freeway terminated just north of the interchange the interchange itself was roughly complete with only ramps to and from future NY 390 north of the interchange missing 10 NY 47 followed the modern NY 390 alignment south to I 490 where NY 47 continued onto what is now I 390 The routings of NY 47 and current I 390 were identical to NY 383 Scottsville Road in Chili where NY 47 was forced to grade level via a partially constructed interchange as modern I 390 had yet to be constructed in the area southeast of NY 383 9 11 At grade edit nbsp NY 47 s final eastern terminus was at this intersection with Culver Road in Irondequoit shown as it was in March 2008 This part of NY 47 became NY 590 Off the expressway and now at grade NY 47 turned north onto NY 383 forming a short concurrency with NY 383 into Rochester At Elmwood Avenue NY 47 and NY 383 departed Scottsville Road and proceeded eastward on Elmwood Avenue Two blocks to the east at an intersection with South Plymouth Avenue NY 383 split from NY 47 following Plymouth Avenue into downtown Rochester NY 47 remained routed on Elmwood Avenue crossing the Genesee River and passing north of Strong Memorial Hospital prior to intersecting NY 15 Mount Hope Avenue in the shadow of Mount Hope Cemetery East of NY 15 NY 47 progressed along Elmwood Avenue intersecting several local streets before entering Brighton 9 Within Brighton NY 47 continued on Elmwood Avenue through Twelve Corners intersecting NY 31 Monroe Avenue at the location to what is now I 590 At the northbound entrance ramp of the modern interchange between I 590 and Elmwood Avenue NY 47 separated from the latter entering the freeway While what is now I 590 was constructed and open from Winton Road to I 490 it had no signed designation between Winton and Elmwood 9 Eastern expressway edit Main articles Interstate 590 and New York State Route 590 NY 47 followed modern I 590 northward through Brighton to the Can of Worms where NY 47 met I 490 for the second time 9 Due to the way the interchange was designed at the time traffic continuing on NY 47 across I 490 had to merge with I 490 traffic for roughly 1 000 feet 305 m before exiting I 490 onto the other portion of NY 47 12 North of I 490 NY 47 followed the length of what is now NY 590 through Brighton Rochester and Irondequoit to Culver Road at the Lake Ontario shoreline 9 History editOriginal alignment edit nbsp Old NY 47 in red and blue and NY 940L in blue When NY 47 was first commissioned in the Rochester area c 1937 3 13 it was routed along previously unnumbered roadways with its northwest terminus located at the intersection of NY 31 Lyell Avenue and Howard Road in Gates NY 47 took Howard Road south passing through Gates Center and intersecting NY 33 before crossing the then New York Central Railroad main line now the CSX Transportation owned Rochester Subdivision at grade The route remained on Howard Road until the intersection of Howard Road and Chili Avenue NY 33A which also included Brooks Avenue at this juncture of time NY 47 turned east onto Brooks Avenue and proceeded toward the Greater Rochester International Airport joining the current routing of NY 204 at Beahan Road now Old Beahan Road 13 14 nbsp The intersection of Elmwood Avenue and Winton Road at Twelve Corners in Brighton NY 47 entered on Elmwood from the left and turned north here onto Winton NY 47 followed the entire alignment of NY 204 to what is now I 390 and continued on Brooks Avenue into Rochester to Genesee Park Boulevard Route 47 turned south onto the street which circles around the southwestern quadrant of the city and followed its length to Genesee Street where it turned south for a short distance before resuming its eastward alignment on Elmwood Avenue The route remained on Elmwood Avenue into Brighton where it turned north onto South Winton Road at Twelve Corners At Highland Avenue NY 47 reentered Rochester and became North Winton Road at East Avenue NY 96 The route remained on Winton through Rochester and Irondequoit before terminating at Empire Boulevard then US 104 now NY 404 just west of Irondequoit Bay 13 14 Expressway realignments edit East of Rochester edit In the early 1950s construction began on the Sea Breeze Expressway a mostly limited access highway linking the Lake Ontario shoreline to the proposed I 490 east of Rochester The first portion of the road a divided highway extending from East Ridge Road in Irondequoit to Culver Road just west of the Irondequoit Bay Outlet was opened to traffic by 1954 as a realignment of NY 18 15 16 Construction on a limited access extension south to Empire Boulevard three blocks west of NY 47 s western terminus began at some point between 1956 and 1958 17 18 and was completed by 1960 as a realignment of US 104 19 Another extension of the highway south to the partially complete I 490 in Brighton was completed c 1961 19 20 and largely became part of a rerouted NY 47 by the following year At the time NY 47 left the expressway at Blossom Road and followed it west to Winton Road where it rejoined its original routing 21 nbsp Winton Road former NY 47 at NY 96 in Rochester By 1964 construction was underway on a new expressway leading south from I 490 at the Can of Worms to Elmwood Avenue east of Twelve Corners 22 The highway was completed c 1965 at which time NY 47 was realigned to follow the Sea Breeze Expressway and the new expressway south through the Can of Worms to its end at a partial interchange with Elmwood Avenue now I 590 exit 3 It continued west on Elmwood Avenue to Twelve Corners where it reconnected to its old alignment at Winton Road 22 23 West of Rochester edit The first realignment of NY 47 west of the city occurred c 1962 when it was rerouted between Chili and Elmwood Avenues to bypass the then Rochester Monroe County Airport to the south Instead of turning east onto Brooks Avenue as it did prior to 1962 the route continued south on Beahan Road to Scottsville Road NY 383 where it turned to overlap NY 383 north to Elmwood Avenue At the time Beahan Road connected directly to Scottsville Road via modern Old Beahan Road as the primary runway southwest of the airport had yet to be extended to its present length 20 21 By 1962 construction was underway on a new limited access highway paralleling NY 47 Howard Road to the east between NY 31 and NY 33 21 Within two years work had begun on an extension of the highway south along the Erie Canal to Scottsville Road Farther east construction was underway on a new highway leading south from I 490 to Elmwood Avenue east of Twelve Corners 22 nbsp Reference marker for NY 47 on NY 590 in Irondequoit All of the limited access highway between NY 31 and NY 383 opened to traffic c 1965 NY 47 was reconfigured to begin a half mile 0 8 km to the east of Howard Road at modern NY 390 exit 21 and follow the new highway southeastward to its temporary end at what is now I 390 exit 17 east of the airport At this point NY 47 joined its pre 1965 routing and followed NY 383 northeastward into the city limits 22 23 By 1968 construction was underway on a northward extension of the expressway to US 104 in Greece 24 It was completed and opened to traffic by 1971 9 Extensions and deletion edit NY 47 was officially extended on both ends on January 1 1970 to terminate at Lake Ontario on opposite sides of Rochester In Greece the designation officially followed what is now NY 390 north to the Lake Ontario State Parkway 25 however the portion between US 104 and the parkway had yet to be constructed 9 To the east in Irondequoit NY 47 was stretched northward along the Sea Breeze Expressway to Culver Road 25 resulting in overlaps with both US 104 and NY 18 At the time the overlap with US 104 existed only between Empire Boulevard and the Keeler Street Expressway which became the new alignment of the route through Irondequoit after its completion in 1969 24 26 The overlap with US 104 was eliminated entirely the following year when that route was realigned onto a new expressway alignment between NY 47 and Webster that traversed Irondequoit Bay via the newly built Irondequoit Bay Bridge 9 The overlap with NY 18 was eliminated c 1973 when NY 18 was truncated to its current eastern terminus in Kodak Park 8 27 nbsp Old rusted reference marker for NY 940L along Howard Road former NY 47 in Gates On March 18 1980 the NY 47 designation was eliminated and split into four other routes 5 From NY 104 in Greece to I 490 NY 47 became NY 390 The section from I 490 south to NY 383 was designated as part of I 390 28 however it would not connect to the existing portion of I 390 south of Rochester until 1981 when the interchange between I 390 and I 590 was completed 26 The segment of NY 47 from Elmwood Avenue north to the Can of Worms became part of I 590 which continued southwest along the freeway to Winton Road From the Can of Worms to Lake Ontario NY 47 was redesignated NY 590 28 Off the expressways the former alignments of NY 47 now carry several designations Howard Road bypassed by the 1960s realignment in Gates is still maintained by the New York State Department of Transportation as NY 940L an unsigned reference route 2 37 miles 3 81 km in length 1 Beahan Road also bypassed by the same 1960s rerouting was reconfigured into its current alignment by 1971 due to an expansion by the airport 11 The section of Beahan Road that carried NY 47 is currently maintained by Monroe County as part of County Route 164 CR 164 the county s unsigned designation for all of Beahan Road 29 30 The portion of NY 47 on Elmwood Avenue from the Rochester city line to I 590 is also maintained by Monroe County as part of CR 87 31 Lastly the segments of Winton Road outside of the Rochester city limits are now part of CR 98 31 The remainder of c 1980 NY 47 and the former alignments of the route are currently locally maintained Major intersections editThe entire route was in Monroe County Locationmi 1 2 kmDestinationsNotes Town of Greece0 000 00 nbsp NY 104Now exit 24 NY 390 Rochester3 094 97 nbsp NY 31Now exit 21 NY 390 3 575 75 nbsp I 490Now exit 20 I 390 NY 390 Chili4 927 92 nbsp NY 33ANow exit 19 I 390 5 639 06 nbsp NY 204Now exit 18 I 390 6 3410 20 nbsp nbsp NY 383 southWestern terminus of NY 47 NY 383 overlap now exit 17 I 390 Rochester7 0611 36 nbsp nbsp NY 383 northEastern terminus of NY 47 NY 383 overlap 7 9512 79 nbsp NY 15 Brighton10 7217 25 nbsp NY 31 Rochester12 6020 28 nbsp I 490Can of Worms now exit 5 I 590 NY 590 13 7622 14 nbsp NY 286Western terminus of NY 286 now exit 7 NY 590 Irondequoit15 1224 33 nbsp NY 404Western terminus of NY 404 now exit 8 NY 590 16 6226 75 nbsp NY 104Now exit 10 NY 590 17 0827 49East Ridge RoadFormer routing of NY 18 and US 104 19 3431 12Culver RoadFormer routing of NY 18 1 000 mi 1 609 km 1 000 km 0 621 mi Concurrency terminusSee also edit nbsp U S roads portalReferences edit a b c 2008 Traffic Data Report for New York State PDF New York State Department of Transportation June 16 2009 pp 303 306 321 322 351 Retrieved December 7 2009 a b Monroe County Inventory Listing CSV New York State Department of Transportation October 1 2009 Retrieved December 7 2009 a b Road Map New York Map Cartography by H M Gousha Company Shell Oil Company 1936 Autoists Get Road Report The Rochester Democrat and Chronicle April 23 1937 p 13 Retrieved February 13 2020 via Newspapers com nbsp a b c New York State Department of Transportation January 2017 Official Description of Highway Touring Routes Bicycling Touring Routes Scenic Byways amp Commemorative Memorial Designations in New York State PDF Retrieved January 9 2017 New York Map 1977 78 ed Cartography by General Drafting Exxon 1977 New York State Map Map Cartography by Map Works I Love New York 2009 a b New York Map 1973 ed Cartography by H M Gousha Company Shell Oil Company 1973 a b c d e f g h i New York Map Cartography by General Drafting Humble Oil amp Refining Company 1971 Rochester West Quadrangle New York Monroe Co Map 1 24 000 7 5 Minute Series Topographic United States Geological Survey 1978 Retrieved December 31 2009 a b West Henrietta Quadrangle New York Monroe Co Map 1 24 000 7 5 Minute Series Topographic United States Geological Survey 1978 Retrieved December 31 2009 Rochester East Quadrangle New York Monroe Co Map 1 24 000 7 5 Minute Series Topographic United States Geological Survey 1978 Retrieved December 31 2009 a b c Shell Road Map New York Map Cartography by H M Gousha Company Shell Oil Company 1937 a b Thibodeau William A 1938 The ALA Green Book 1938 39 ed Automobile Legal Association New York Map Cartography by Rand McNally and Company Sunoco 1952 New York with Special Maps of Putnam Rockland Westchester Counties and Finger Lakes Region Map 1955 56 ed Cartography by General Drafting Esso 1954 New York with Special Maps of Putnam Rockland Westchester Counties and Finger Lakes Region Map 1957 ed Cartography by General Drafting Esso 1956 New York with Special Maps of Putnam Rockland Westchester Counties and Finger Lakes Region Map 1958 ed Cartography by General Drafting Esso 1958 a b New York and New Jersey Tourgide Map Map Cartography by Rand McNally and Company Gulf Oil Company 1960 a b New York and Metropolitan New York Map 1961 62 ed Cartography by H M Gousha Company Sunoco 1961 a b c New York with Sight Seeing Guide Map Cartography by General Drafting Esso 1962 a b c d New York and Metropolitan New York Map Cartography by Rand McNally and Company Sinclair Oil Corporation 1964 a b New York Map Rand McNally and Company 1965 a b New York Map 1969 70 ed Cartography by General Drafting Esso 1968 a b State of New York Department of Transportation January 1 1970 Official Description of Touring Routes in New York State PDF Retrieved December 31 2009 a b National Bridge Inventory a database compiled by the United States Department of Transportation Federal Highway Administration available at www nationalbridges com Accessed December 9 2007 New York and New Jersey Tourgide Map Map 1972 ed Cartography by Rand McNally and Company Gulf Oil Company 1972 a b New York Map Rand McNally and Company 1985 Rochester inset ISBN 0 528 91040 X West Henrietta Digital Raster Quadrangle Map 1 24 000 New York State Department of Transportation 1997 Retrieved December 31 2009 Rochester West Digital Raster Quadrangle Map 1 24 000 New York State Department of Transportation 1997 Retrieved December 31 2009 a b Rochester East Digital Raster Quadrangle Map 1 24 000 New York State Department of Transportation 1997 Retrieved December 31 2009 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to New York State Route 47 KML file edit help Template Attached KML New York State Route 47KML is from Wikidata New York State Route 47 at New York Routes Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title New York State Route 47 amp oldid 1093105365, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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