fbpx
Wikipedia

Virginia State Route 168

State Route 168 is a primary state highway in the South Hampton Roads region of the U.S. state of Virginia. It runs from the border with North Carolina (where it continues as North Carolina Highway 168 towards the Outer Banks) through the independent cities of Chesapeake and Norfolk where it ends in the Ocean View area near the Hampton Roads Bridge-Tunnel.

State Route 168

Route information
Maintained by VDOT
Length30.11 mi[1] (48.46 km)
Existed1933–present
Major junctions
South end NC 168 near Moyock, NC
Major intersections
North end US 60 in Norfolk
Location
CountryUnited States
StateVirginia
Highway system
View north along SR 168 at US 58 in Norfolk

SR 168 consists of three sections with different characteristics. From North Carolina to the junction with Interstate 64 and Interstate 464, SR 168 is mostly built to freeway standards as a major road into North Carolina; part of it — the Chesapeake Expressway — is a toll road. From I-64 north into downtown Norfolk, SR 168 is a local road; I-464 carries most through traffic. The rest of SR 168, from downtown Norfolk north to Ocean View, is Tidewater Drive, an arterial road with some interchanges, built to carry traffic to the Hampton Roads Bridge-Tunnel before Interstate 64 opened.

SR 168 was originally constructed in the 1930s on the north side of Hampton Roads as Merrimack Trail, mainly as a bypass of U.S. Route 60 from Newport News past Williamsburg (now State Route 143). It was extended across Hampton Roads (via the Newport News-Pine Beach (Norfolk) Ferry) in the mid-1940s, but did not move onto its current alignment to North Carolina until 1957, when the Hampton Roads Bridge-Tunnel opened. As the new freeway (Interstate 64) opened past Williamsburg, SR 168 was shifted to it; it was truncated to its current extent around 1980.

History edit

The SR 168 designation was applied in the 1933 renumbering to three individual roadways: State Route 529 (northwest from Newport News towards Lee Hall), State Route 532 (Newport News to Hampton via Shell Road), and State Route 533 (King Street from Rip Rap Road — then State Route 513 — south into Hampton). Another piece, from Hampton east on Pembroke Avenue towards Buckroe Beach, was added to the state highway system in 1932,[2] and was extended to Buckroe Beach in 1936.[3] In the 1930s, SR 168 was extended northwest to State Route 53 (now State Route 30) near Barhamsville. It used Jefferson Avenue and 35th Street in Newport News and Shell Road, Newport News Avenue, Back River Road, Rip Rap Road, King Street, and Pembroke Avenue in Hampton; see State Route 143 (Barhamsville to Hampton) and State Route 351 (Hampton to Buckroe Beach) for more history. It intersected U.S. Route 60 at Anderson's Corner, near Toano in James City County.

Route 168 was part of a system of state-funded highway improvements after World War II which preceded the federally funded Interstate Highway System in Virginia. It provided substantial traffic relief to a number of heavily traveled older U.S. highways, notably including U.S. Route 60 on the Virginia Peninsula and U.S. Route 460 in the Cities of Norfolk and South Norfolk and U.S. Route 17 in Norfolk County (now City of Chesapeake) in South Hampton Roads.

North Carolina to Willoughby Spit edit

In Chesapeake, the route originally ran along New Green Sea Road, now known as Battlefield Boulevard, due to its proximity from the Battle of Great Bridge.[4] This arterial is now bypassed by several roads: the Chesapeake Expressway (a toll road completed in 2001), the Great Bridge Bypass (a bypass route constructed in 1980 and improved through the 1990s), and the Oak Grove Connector (a link from the Great Bridge Bypass to Interstate 464 completed in 1999). From the north end of the Oak Grove Connector, Route 168 overlaps Interstate 64 until it rejoins Battlefield Boulevard. The sections of the boulevard bypassed by the mentioned roads are now designated State Route 168 Business.

From I-64 in Chesapeake, Route 168 follows several roads until it crosses into the City of Norfolk and eventually runs along Tidewater Drive (following the path of the earlier Cottage Toll Road) until reaching its terminus at West Ocean View Avenue (U.S. Route 60) near Fourth View Street in the Willoughby Spit area.

Crossing the mouth of Hampton Roads edit

The Route 168 designation formerly continued northwesterly along West Ocean View Avenue and crossed the Hampton Roads Ferry System from Willoughby Bay to Old Point Comfort in the Town of Phoebus in Elizabeth City County (communities which were consolidated into the newly enlarged City of Hampton in 1952).

When it first opened to traffic on November 1, 1957, the Hampton Roads Bridge-Tunnel originally carried the VA-168 designation (as a toll facility). The Route 168 signage and tolls were both removed when the crossing was expanded in 1976 as part of the federally funded Interstate 64 improvements, which included four-laning the crossing.

On the Virginia Peninsula edit

The SR 168 designation also formerly applied to a routing on the Virginia Peninsula from Anderson's Corner near Toano west of Williamsburg to the Hampton Roads Ferry landing at Old Point Comfort near Fort Monroe. Known as the Merrimack Trail, the road was a major additional highway which was built in the years prior to the creation of the Interstate Highway System, and was replaced as a major through route by Interstate 64, in segments as that new road was completed.

Small portions of the roadway on the Peninsula originally signed as SR 168 became portions of State Route 30 (from Anderson's Corner to Croaker) and Interstate 64 (Exit 231 to Exit 238). However, most of it from Exit 238 on I-64 east was redesignated as State Route 143, which continues to serve as an alternative to U.S. Route 60 most of its length. After Interstate 64 was completed on the Peninsula, both Routes 60 and 143 with many at-grade intersections and businesses became more major conduits for local traffic than through-traffic routes.

Major intersections edit

CountyLocationmi[1]kmExitDestinationsNotes
City of Chesapeake0.000.00 
 
NC 168 south (Caratoke Highway) – Nags Head
North Carolina state line; southern terminus
11.6Old Battlefield Road to Ballahack Roadformer SR 193 west
1.792.88 
 
 
SR 168 Bus. north (Battlefield Boulevard) / Gallbush Road
Southern end of freeway; southern terminus of SR 168 Bus.
Toll Plaza - Cars $4 ($9 on summer weekends)[5]
4.717.585 
 
SR 168 Bus. (Battlefield Boulevard)
Northbound exit and southbound entrance
7.6512.318Hillcrest Parkwaysigned as exits 8A (west) and 8B (east) southbound
9.8615.8710Hanbury Roadsigned as exits 10A (west) and 10B (east)
11.3618.2811  SR 165 (Mt. Pleasant Road) – Great Bridgesigned as exits 11A (south) and 11B (north) southbound
12 
 
SR 190 east (Kempsville Road)
Northbound exit only (other access is at exit 13)
13.8522.2913A–B 
 
  SR 168 Bus. (Battlefield Boulevard) / SR 190 – Great Bridge
signed as exits 13A (north) and 13B (south)
15B 
 
US 17 south – Elizabeth City
15.6725.22  
 
 
 
 
 
 
I-64 / US 17 north (Hampton Roads Beltway inner loop) / I-464 north to I-664 north – Portsmouth, Suffolk, Richmond, Norfolk
south end of I-64 overlap; SR 168 north follows exit 15A; SR 168 south follows exit 291B; I-464 exit 1
16.4926.54  
 
 
I-64 (Hampton Roads Beltway outer loop) / SR 168 Bus. south (Battlefield Boulevard) – Virginia Beach, Great Bridge
north end of I-64 overlap; SR 168 north follows exit 290A
17.3127.86  US 13 (Military Highway)Interchange
19.7531.78Campostella Road / to Liberty Street (SR 246) / to Border Roadinterchange; southbound exit and northbound entrance
City of Norfolk20.6233.18  SR 407 (Indian River Road)
20.8833.60 
 
 
 
US 460 west / SR 166 south / SR 337 Alt. south (Wilson Road)
Southern end of US 460 / SR 166 / SR 337 Alt. concurrency; no left turn northbound
Campostella Bridge over Eastern Branch Elizabeth River
21.6134.78 
 
 
 
  I-264 east to I-64 / Chesapeake Bay Bridge-Tunnel – Virginia Beach, Airport
I-264 exit 11
21.9135.26 
 
SR 166 north (Park Avenue)
Northern end of SR 166 concurrency
22.3135.90 
 
 
 
 
US 460 east (Brambleton Avenue / SR 337 east) to I-264 west / Tidewater Drive (SR 337 west) – Portsmouth, Berkley
Northern end of US 460 / SR 337 Alt. concurrency
22.6236.40  US 58 (Virginia Beach Boulevard)
Princess Anne Road (SR 404 east)Western terminus of SR 404
  SR 247 (Lafayette Boulevard)
26.5042.65  I-64 (Hampton Roads Beltway) / Terminal Boulevard / Chesapeake Boulevard – Hampton, Richmond, Naval Base, Virginia BeachExit 277 (I-64)
27.0643.55  SR 165 (Little Creek Road)interchange
29.3647.25  
 
US 460 (Granby Street) to I-64 – Ocean View, Willoughby
interchange; south end of US 60 Alt. overlap (northbound only)
Peach Tree Streetinterchange; southbound exit and northbound entrance
 
 
 
Mason Creek Road to US 60 east – Ocean View, Willoughby
north end of US 60 Alt. overlap (northbound only); south end of US 60 west overlap (northbound only)
30.1148.46 
 
 
 
US 60 west (4th View Street) to I-64 (Hampton Roads Tunnel)
Northern terminus; north end of US 60 west overlap (northbound only)
1.000 mi = 1.609 km; 1.000 km = 0.621 mi

Chesapeake Expressway edit

 

 

Chesapeake Expressway

LocationChesapeake, Virginia
Length12.06 mi[1] (19.41 km)

The Chesapeake Expressway is the name of the portion of SR 168 that is mostly a toll road in Chesapeake built chiefly to facilitate tourist traffic from the Hampton Roads cities en route to the Outer Banks of North Carolina. The freeway standards, the expressway travels from the US 17, I-64, and I-464 interchange in northern Chesapeake southward to near the North Carolina border in the far southern part of the city. The one toll plaza is located near Indian Creek Road with the freeway portion ending at Battlefield Boulevard (SR 168 Bus.) a short distance south of there. SR 168 then continues southward as an expressway until it meets NC 168 at the state line.

Construction began in 1999 and the road fully opened in 2001. As of 2021, tolls for a 2-axle passenger vehicle are $9.00[6] during weekends between Memorial Day and Labor Day, and $4.00 at all other times (tolls were previously $2.00 and then $3.00 at all times). E-ZPass is accepted.

State Route 168 Business edit

 

 

State Route 168 Business

LocationChesapeake, Virginia
Length14.40 mi[1] (23.17 km)
 
View north along SR 168 Bus. at SR 165 in Chesapeake

State Route 168 Business is a 14.40-mile (23.17 km)[1] business route of SR 168. The entire length is also known as Battlefield Boulevard. This was originally a part of SR 168 before the Chesapeake Expressway was completed. This highway is often used to avoid the toll on the main expressway—drivers travelling North make a left turn at VA 168 Business, then enter the expressway at Hillcrest Parkway.

Great Bridge Bridge edit

The Great Bridge Bridge is a double-leaf rolling bascule drawbridge that carries Battlefield Blvd (SR 168 Bus.) and spans the Atlantic Intracoastal Waterway in Chesapeake, Virginia. It was constructed in 2004 by the Army Corps of Engineers and is operated by the City of Chesapeake. It has a mean daily traffic of 35,000 vehicles.

Major intersections edit

The entire route is in the independent city of Chesapeake.

CountyLocationmi[1]kmDestinationsNotes
City of Chesapeake0.000.00  SR 168 (Battlefield Boulevard / Chesapeake Expressway) – Norfolk, Nags HeadSouthern terminus
 
 
SR 168 south (Chesapeake Expressway)
Access from SR 168 northbound / to SR 168 southbound only, exit 5 (SR 168)
8.1313.08 
 
SR 168 south (Chesapeake Expressway)
Only access to southbound SR 168 from SR 168 Bus. southbound
8.4113.53 
 
Hanbury Road to SR 168
10.1116.27 
 
SR 165 north (Mt. Pleasant Road)
Southern end of SR 165 concurrency
10.3716.69 
 
SR 165 south (Cedar Road)
Northern end of SR 165 concurrency
11.6118.68  SR 190 (Great Bridge Boulevard / Kempsville Road)
Great Bridge Bridge over the Atlantic Intracoastal Waterway
11.7818.96  SR 168 (Great Bridge Bypass) – Nags Head, Norfolk, SuffolkExit 13 (SR 168)
14.4023.17  
 
I-64 (Hampton Roads Beltway) / SR 168 north – Virginia Beach, Suffolk, Richmond
Exit 290 (I-64) & 1 (I-464); northern terminus
1.000 mi = 1.609 km; 1.000 km = 0.621 mi

Campostella Bridge edit

Campostella Bridge
Carries    US 460 / SR 168 / SR 166 Vehicles, Pedestrians
CrossesElizabeth River
LocaleNorfolk, Virginia
OwnerCity of Norfolk
ID number0020936
Characteristics
Total length2,482 feet (757 m)
Width94.2 feet (28.7 m)
History
Opened1986
Statistics
Daily traffic34,000
References
"Virginia Bridge Information".

The part of SR 168 that crosses the Elizabeth River utilizes the six-lane Campostella Bridge. The bridge is also the route carrier for US 460. Owned and operated by the city of Norfolk, it serves as an alternate route to the Berkley Bridge, which also crosses the same span of water on Interstate 264.

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d e f "2005 Virginia Department of Transportation Jurisdiction Report - Daily Traffic Volume Estimates - Norfolk Maintenance Area" (PDF). (374 KiB)
  2. ^ State Highway Commission of Virginia (July 27–29, 1932). "Minutes of Meeting" (PDF) (Report). Richmond: Commonwealth of Virginia. p. 20.
  3. ^ State Highway Commission of Virginia (August 12, 1936). "Minutes of Meeting" (PDF) (Report). Richmond: Commonwealth of Virginia. p. 25.
  4. ^ Saewitz, Mike (2007-10-12). "What's in a name? Battlefield Boulevard, Chesapeake". The Virginian-Pilot. Tribune Publishing. Retrieved 2020-03-18.
  5. ^ "Home". chesapeakeexpressway.com.
  6. ^ "City of Chesapeake Virginia | The Chesapeake Expressway". www.chesapeakeexpressway.com. Retrieved 2016-06-16.

External links edit

KML is from Wikidata
  • Chesapeake Expressway official website

virginia, state, route, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, challenged, removed, find, sources, news, newspapers, books, scholar, jstor, jan. This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Virginia State Route 168 news newspapers books scholar JSTOR January 2007 Learn how and when to remove this message State Route 168 is a primary state highway in the South Hampton Roads region of the U S state of Virginia It runs from the border with North Carolina where it continues as North Carolina Highway 168 towards the Outer Banks through the independent cities of Chesapeake and Norfolk where it ends in the Ocean View area near the Hampton Roads Bridge Tunnel State Route 168Route informationMaintained by VDOTLength30 11 mi 1 48 46 km Existed1933 presentMajor junctionsSouth endNC 168 near Moyock NCMajor intersectionsI 64 I 464 in Chesapeake I 264 in NorfolkNorth endUS 60 in NorfolkLocationCountryUnited StatesStateVirginiaHighway systemVirginia Routes Interstate US Primary Secondary Byways History HOT lanes SR 167 SR 169 View north along SR 168 at US 58 in Norfolk SR 168 consists of three sections with different characteristics From North Carolina to the junction with Interstate 64 and Interstate 464 SR 168 is mostly built to freeway standards as a major road into North Carolina part of it the Chesapeake Expressway is a toll road From I 64 north into downtown Norfolk SR 168 is a local road I 464 carries most through traffic The rest of SR 168 from downtown Norfolk north to Ocean View is Tidewater Drive an arterial road with some interchanges built to carry traffic to the Hampton Roads Bridge Tunnel before Interstate 64 opened SR 168 was originally constructed in the 1930s on the north side of Hampton Roads as Merrimack Trail mainly as a bypass of U S Route 60 from Newport News past Williamsburg now State Route 143 It was extended across Hampton Roads via the Newport News Pine Beach Norfolk Ferry in the mid 1940s but did not move onto its current alignment to North Carolina until 1957 when the Hampton Roads Bridge Tunnel opened As the new freeway Interstate 64 opened past Williamsburg SR 168 was shifted to it it was truncated to its current extent around 1980 Contents 1 History 1 1 North Carolina to Willoughby Spit 1 2 Crossing the mouth of Hampton Roads 1 3 On the Virginia Peninsula 2 Major intersections 3 Chesapeake Expressway 4 State Route 168 Business 4 1 Great Bridge Bridge 4 2 Major intersections 5 Campostella Bridge 6 References 7 External linksHistory editThe SR 168 designation was applied in the 1933 renumbering to three individual roadways State Route 529 northwest from Newport News towards Lee Hall State Route 532 Newport News to Hampton via Shell Road and State Route 533 King Street from Rip Rap Road then State Route 513 south into Hampton Another piece from Hampton east on Pembroke Avenue towards Buckroe Beach was added to the state highway system in 1932 2 and was extended to Buckroe Beach in 1936 3 In the 1930s SR 168 was extended northwest to State Route 53 now State Route 30 near Barhamsville It used Jefferson Avenue and 35th Street in Newport News and Shell Road Newport News Avenue Back River Road Rip Rap Road King Street and Pembroke Avenue in Hampton see State Route 143 Barhamsville to Hampton and State Route 351 Hampton to Buckroe Beach for more history It intersected U S Route 60 at Anderson s Corner near Toano in James City County Route 168 was part of a system of state funded highway improvements after World War II which preceded the federally funded Interstate Highway System in Virginia It provided substantial traffic relief to a number of heavily traveled older U S highways notably including U S Route 60 on the Virginia Peninsula and U S Route 460 in the Cities of Norfolk and South Norfolk and U S Route 17 in Norfolk County now City of Chesapeake in South Hampton Roads North Carolina to Willoughby Spit edit In Chesapeake the route originally ran along New Green Sea Road now known as Battlefield Boulevard due to its proximity from the Battle of Great Bridge 4 This arterial is now bypassed by several roads the Chesapeake Expressway a toll road completed in 2001 the Great Bridge Bypass a bypass route constructed in 1980 and improved through the 1990s and the Oak Grove Connector a link from the Great Bridge Bypass to Interstate 464 completed in 1999 From the north end of the Oak Grove Connector Route 168 overlaps Interstate 64 until it rejoins Battlefield Boulevard The sections of the boulevard bypassed by the mentioned roads are now designated State Route 168 Business From I 64 in Chesapeake Route 168 follows several roads until it crosses into the City of Norfolk and eventually runs along Tidewater Drive following the path of the earlier Cottage Toll Road until reaching its terminus at West Ocean View Avenue U S Route 60 near Fourth View Street in the Willoughby Spit area Crossing the mouth of Hampton Roads edit The Route 168 designation formerly continued northwesterly along West Ocean View Avenue and crossed the Hampton Roads Ferry System from Willoughby Bay to Old Point Comfort in the Town of Phoebus in Elizabeth City County communities which were consolidated into the newly enlarged City of Hampton in 1952 When it first opened to traffic on November 1 1957 the Hampton Roads Bridge Tunnel originally carried the VA 168 designation as a toll facility The Route 168 signage and tolls were both removed when the crossing was expanded in 1976 as part of the federally funded Interstate 64 improvements which included four laning the crossing On the Virginia Peninsula edit The SR 168 designation also formerly applied to a routing on the Virginia Peninsula from Anderson s Corner near Toano west of Williamsburg to the Hampton Roads Ferry landing at Old Point Comfort near Fort Monroe Known as the Merrimack Trail the road was a major additional highway which was built in the years prior to the creation of the Interstate Highway System and was replaced as a major through route by Interstate 64 in segments as that new road was completed Small portions of the roadway on the Peninsula originally signed as SR 168 became portions of State Route 30 from Anderson s Corner to Croaker and Interstate 64 Exit 231 to Exit 238 However most of it from Exit 238 on I 64 east was redesignated as State Route 143 which continues to serve as an alternative to U S Route 60 most of its length After Interstate 64 was completed on the Peninsula both Routes 60 and 143 with many at grade intersections and businesses became more major conduits for local traffic than through traffic routes Major intersections editCountyLocationmi 1 kmExitDestinationsNotes City of Chesapeake0 000 00 nbsp nbsp NC 168 south Caratoke Highway Nags HeadNorth Carolina state line southern terminus 11 6Old Battlefield Road to Ballahack Roadformer SR 193 west 1 792 88 nbsp nbsp nbsp SR 168 Bus north Battlefield Boulevard Gallbush RoadSouthern end of freeway southern terminus of SR 168 Bus Toll Plaza Cars 4 9 on summer weekends 5 4 717 585 nbsp nbsp SR 168 Bus Battlefield Boulevard Northbound exit and southbound entrance 7 6512 318Hillcrest Parkwaysigned as exits 8A west and 8B east southbound 9 8615 8710Hanbury Roadsigned as exits 10A west and 10B east 11 3618 2811 nbsp SR 165 Mt Pleasant Road Great Bridgesigned as exits 11A south and 11B north southbound 12 nbsp nbsp SR 190 east Kempsville Road Northbound exit only other access is at exit 13 13 8522 2913A B nbsp nbsp nbsp SR 168 Bus Battlefield Boulevard SR 190 Great Bridgesigned as exits 13A north and 13B south 15B nbsp nbsp US 17 south Elizabeth City 15 6725 22 nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp I 64 US 17 north Hampton Roads Beltway inner loop I 464 north to I 664 north Portsmouth Suffolk Richmond Norfolksouth end of I 64 overlap SR 168 north follows exit 15A SR 168 south follows exit 291B I 464 exit 1 16 4926 54 nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp I 64 Hampton Roads Beltway outer loop SR 168 Bus south Battlefield Boulevard Virginia Beach Great Bridgenorth end of I 64 overlap SR 168 north follows exit 290A 17 3127 86 nbsp US 13 Military Highway Interchange 19 7531 78Campostella Road to Liberty Street SR 246 to Border Roadinterchange southbound exit and northbound entrance City of Norfolk20 6233 18 nbsp SR 407 Indian River Road 20 8833 60 nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp US 460 west SR 166 south SR 337 Alt south Wilson Road Southern end of US 460 SR 166 SR 337 Alt concurrency no left turn northbound Campostella Bridge over Eastern Branch Elizabeth River 21 6134 78 nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp I 264 east to I 64 Chesapeake Bay Bridge Tunnel Virginia Beach AirportI 264 exit 11 21 9135 26 nbsp nbsp SR 166 north Park Avenue Northern end of SR 166 concurrency 22 3135 90 nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp US 460 east Brambleton Avenue SR 337 east to I 264 west Tidewater Drive SR 337 west Portsmouth BerkleyNorthern end of US 460 SR 337 Alt concurrency 22 6236 40 nbsp US 58 Virginia Beach Boulevard Princess Anne Road SR 404 east Western terminus of SR 404 nbsp SR 247 Lafayette Boulevard 26 5042 65 nbsp I 64 Hampton Roads Beltway Terminal Boulevard Chesapeake Boulevard Hampton Richmond Naval Base Virginia BeachExit 277 I 64 27 0643 55 nbsp SR 165 Little Creek Road interchange 29 3647 25 nbsp nbsp nbsp US 460 Granby Street to I 64 Ocean View Willoughbyinterchange south end of US 60 Alt overlap northbound only Peach Tree Streetinterchange southbound exit and northbound entrance nbsp nbsp nbsp Mason Creek Road to US 60 east Ocean View Willoughbynorth end of US 60 Alt overlap northbound only south end of US 60 west overlap northbound only 30 1148 46 nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp US 60 west 4th View Street to I 64 Hampton Roads Tunnel Northern terminus north end of US 60 west overlap northbound only 1 000 mi 1 609 km 1 000 km 0 621 mi Concurrency terminus Incomplete access TolledChesapeake Expressway edit nbsp nbsp Chesapeake ExpresswayLocationChesapeake VirginiaLength12 06 mi 1 19 41 km The Chesapeake Expressway is the name of the portion of SR 168 that is mostly a toll road in Chesapeake built chiefly to facilitate tourist traffic from the Hampton Roads cities en route to the Outer Banks of North Carolina The freeway standards the expressway travels from the US 17 I 64 and I 464 interchange in northern Chesapeake southward to near the North Carolina border in the far southern part of the city The one toll plaza is located near Indian Creek Road with the freeway portion ending at Battlefield Boulevard SR 168 Bus a short distance south of there SR 168 then continues southward as an expressway until it meets NC 168 at the state line Construction began in 1999 and the road fully opened in 2001 As of 2021 update tolls for a 2 axle passenger vehicle are 9 00 6 during weekends between Memorial Day and Labor Day and 4 00 at all other times tolls were previously 2 00 and then 3 00 at all times E ZPass is accepted State Route 168 Business edit nbsp nbsp State Route 168 BusinessLocationChesapeake VirginiaLength14 40 mi 1 23 17 km nbsp View north along SR 168 Bus at SR 165 in Chesapeake State Route 168 Business is a 14 40 mile 23 17 km 1 business route of SR 168 The entire length is also known as Battlefield Boulevard This was originally a part of SR 168 before the Chesapeake Expressway was completed This highway is often used to avoid the toll on the main expressway drivers travelling North make a left turn at VA 168 Business then enter the expressway at Hillcrest Parkway Great Bridge Bridge edit The Great Bridge Bridge is a double leaf rolling bascule drawbridge that carries Battlefield Blvd SR 168 Bus and spans the Atlantic Intracoastal Waterway in Chesapeake Virginia It was constructed in 2004 by the Army Corps of Engineers and is operated by the City of Chesapeake It has a mean daily traffic of 35 000 vehicles Major intersections edit The entire route is in the independent city of Chesapeake CountyLocationmi 1 kmDestinationsNotes City of Chesapeake0 000 00 nbsp SR 168 Battlefield Boulevard Chesapeake Expressway Norfolk Nags HeadSouthern terminus nbsp nbsp SR 168 south Chesapeake Expressway Access from SR 168 northbound to SR 168 southbound only exit 5 SR 168 8 1313 08 nbsp nbsp SR 168 south Chesapeake Expressway Only access to southbound SR 168 from SR 168 Bus southbound 8 4113 53 nbsp nbsp Hanbury Road to SR 168 10 1116 27 nbsp nbsp SR 165 north Mt Pleasant Road Southern end of SR 165 concurrency 10 3716 69 nbsp nbsp SR 165 south Cedar Road Northern end of SR 165 concurrency 11 6118 68 nbsp SR 190 Great Bridge Boulevard Kempsville Road Great Bridge Bridge over the Atlantic Intracoastal Waterway11 7818 96 nbsp SR 168 Great Bridge Bypass Nags Head Norfolk SuffolkExit 13 SR 168 14 4023 17 nbsp nbsp nbsp I 64 Hampton Roads Beltway SR 168 north Virginia Beach Suffolk RichmondExit 290 I 64 amp 1 I 464 northern terminus 1 000 mi 1 609 km 1 000 km 0 621 mi Concurrency terminus Incomplete accessCampostella Bridge editCampostella BridgeCarries nbsp nbsp nbsp US 460 SR 168 SR 166 Vehicles PedestriansCrossesElizabeth RiverLocaleNorfolk VirginiaOwnerCity of NorfolkID number0020936CharacteristicsTotal length2 482 feet 757 m Width94 2 feet 28 7 m HistoryOpened1986StatisticsDaily traffic34 000References Virginia Bridge Information The part of SR 168 that crosses the Elizabeth River utilizes the six lane Campostella Bridge The bridge is also the route carrier for US 460 Owned and operated by the city of Norfolk it serves as an alternate route to the Berkley Bridge which also crosses the same span of water on Interstate 264 References edit a b c d e f 2005 Virginia Department of Transportation Jurisdiction Report Daily Traffic Volume Estimates Norfolk Maintenance Area PDF 374 KiB State Highway Commission of Virginia July 27 29 1932 Minutes of Meeting PDF Report Richmond Commonwealth of Virginia p 20 State Highway Commission of Virginia August 12 1936 Minutes of Meeting PDF Report Richmond Commonwealth of Virginia p 25 Saewitz Mike 2007 10 12 What s in a name Battlefield Boulevard Chesapeake The Virginian Pilot Tribune Publishing Retrieved 2020 03 18 Home chesapeakeexpressway com City of Chesapeake Virginia The Chesapeake Expressway www chesapeakeexpressway com Retrieved 2016 06 16 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Virginia State Route 168 KML file edit help Template Attached KML Virginia State Route 168KML is from Wikidata Chesapeake Expressway official website lt SR 26 Two digit State Routes1923 1933 SR 28 gt Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Virginia State Route 168 amp oldid 1212098696, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.