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Special routes of U.S. Route 30

Several special routes of U.S. Route 30 exist. In order from west to east they are as follows.


Special routes of U.S. Route 30
Highway system

Existing

St. Helens business loop

 

 

U.S. Highway 30 Business

LocationSt. Helens, Oregon
Existed2012–present

U.S. Route 30 Business (US 30 Bus.) in St. Helens, Oregon uniquely uses "Interstate Business Loop" shields.[1] This route was designated and is maintained by the local government and does not appear in the official state highways list unlike other business routes.[2]

Portland bypass

 

 

U.S. Highway 30 Bypass

LocationPortland, Oregon

U.S. Route 30 Bypass serves as a bypass of Portland, Oregon, following several streets through the city's northern neighborhoods. It is designated as the Northeast Portland Highway No. 123 by the Oregon state government.[3]

The bypass route terminates to the west at US 30 in northwest Portland and crosses the Willamette River on the St. Johns Bridge. It travels northeast through Cathedral Park on Philadelphia Avenue, Ivanhoe Street, and Richmond Avenue before turning east onto Lombard Street. The route follows Lombard Street across Portland's northern residential neighborhoods, intersecting Oregon Route 99W, I-5, and Oregon Route 99E. Near Portland International Airport, it dips southeast onto Killingsworth Street before an interchange with I-205. The route then leaves Portland on Sandy Boulevard and continues through Fairview before reaching its eastern terminus at an interchange with I-84 and US 30 in Wood Village.[4]

US 30 Bypass was established in the 1930s and designated as a state highway in 1937.[5] The bypass route originally ended at the intersection of Killingsworth Street and Sandy Boulevard in eastern Portland, as the latter carried US 30.[6] In 1955, US 30 was relocated to the new Banfield Expressway (now I-84) and US 30 Bypass was extended along its former alignment to Wood Village.[7][8] Portions of the bypass on Lombard Street were widened to four lanes in 1965 by eliminating on-street parking.[9]

Ontario business loop

 

 

U.S. Highway 30 Business

LocationOntario, Oregon

U.S. Route 30 Business is a business route signed in the Ontario, Oregon area. This road is part of the Olds Ferry-Ontario Highway No. 455.

Green River business loop

 

 

U.S. Highway 30 Business

LocationGreen River, Wyoming

U.S. Route 30 Business is a business route signed in the Green River, Wyoming area. This road is entirely overlapped with Interstate 80 Business Loop.

Rock Springs business loop

 

 

U.S. Highway 30 Business

LocationRock Springs, Wyoming

U.S. Route 30 Business is a business route signed in the Rock Springs, Wyoming area. Like the one in Green River, the road is entirely overlapped with the Interstate 80 Business Loop.

Rawlins business loop

 

 

U.S. Highway 30 Business

LocationRawlins, Wyoming

U.S. Route 30 Business is a business route signed in the Rawlins, Wyoming area. Like the ones in Green River and Rock Springs, the road is entirely overlapped with the Interstate 80 Business Loop.

Marshalltown business loop

 

 

U.S. Highway 30 Business

LocationMarshalltown, Iowa
Existed1997–present

U.S. Route 30 Business is a business route that runs along Iowa Avenue in Marshalltown, Iowa. The route runs on the former alignment of US 30 through the town, a 1950s-era bypass of Marshalltown that was bypassed in 1997 by a freeway 34 mile (1.2 km) south of the original bypass.[10][11]

Toledo–Tama business loop

 

 

U.S. Highway 30 Business

LocationToledoTama, Iowa
Existed2011–present

U.S. Route 30 Business (US 30) is a business route located in Toledo and Tama. In the early 2010s, a new freeway was built for US 30 between the two cities. When the freeway opened, the business route was designated along the old route.

Cedar Rapids emergency route

 

 

U.S. Highway 30 Emergency

LocationCedar Rapids, Iowa
Existed1985–present

U.S. Route 30 Emergency is an emergency bypass of a segment of the US 30 freeway bypass of Cedar Rapids, Iowa. Since the Cedar Rapids bypass of US 30 was completed in 1985, on occasion, traffic has had to be rerouted off the road. The bypass's proximity to the Union Pacific Railroad mainline resulted in an elevated roadway between Edgewood Road and Sixth Street SW. When strong winds come from the south, fog produced by an Archer Daniels Midland plant adjacent to the highway billows over the road making driving dangerous. The Iowa DOT set up an emergency detour from Edgewood Road SW north to 16th Avenue SW east to 6th Street SW back to US 30. The frequency of fog-related detours has decreased in recent years due to improved technology and the plant's expansion and relocation of cooling towers away from the highway.[12]

Van Wert business loop

 

 

U.S. Route 30 Business

LocationVan Wert, Ohio

U.S. Route 30 Business is a locally-designated business loop that follows the original route of US 30 and the Lincoln Highway through downtown Van Wert, Ohio.

Dalton alternate route

 

 

U.S. Route 30 Alternate

LocationDalton, Ohio
Existed1963–present

U.S. Route 30 Alternate is a 3-mile (4.8 km) alternate route through downtown Dalton, Ohio. It follows the original route of US 30 through town, while the mainline designation follows a 4-lane bypass.

Bedford business loop

 

 

U.S. Route 30 Business

LocationBedford, Pennsylvania
Existed1970–present
 
US 30 Bus. westbound past US 30 near Bedford

U.S. Route 30 Business is a 3-mile (4.8 km) business loop through the borough of Bedford, Pennsylvania. In 1970, US 30 became a freeway around the town, to avoid congestion for travellers along the Pennsylvania Turnpike or U.S. Route 220 (today also Interstate 99), a pair of area freeways from which Bedford was a major travel stop. After the creation of the bypass, the original path of US 30 along Pitt Street became a business route, travelling as a narrow two-lane stretch through the town, with a four-lane segment near some light industrial development before its eastern terminus.

Everett business loop

 

 

U.S. Route 30 Business

LocationEverett, Pennsylvania
Existed1982–present
 
US 30 Bus. eastbound in Everett

U.S. Route 30 Business is a 2-mile (3.2 km) business loop through the borough of Everett, Pennsylvania. In 1982, a freeway bypass was constructed around the town because of its low-speed limits and lack of opportunities for highway widening. As a result, the original alignment of US 30 became a business route. It is two lanes through the small, crowded town. Near the eastern edge of the routing, alternate third passing lines are provided, as the road traverses a county park and a golf course.

Chester County business loop

 

 

U.S. Route 30 Business

LocationChester County, Pennsylvania
Length18.79 mi[13] (30.24 km)
Existed1963–present

U.S. Route 30 Business (US 30 Bus.) is a 19-mile (31 km) business route of US 30 in Chester County, Pennsylvania. The route follows the former alignment of US 30 between Sadsbury Township and East Whiteland Township, passing through Coatesville, Downingtown, and Exton. US 30 follows a freeway bypass between these two points.[14][15] The present alignment of US 30 Bus. was originally part of a turnpike called the Philadelphia and Lancaster Turnpike that was completed in 1794.[16][17] The state took over the turnpike in the beginning of the 20th century.[17] In 1913, present-day US 30 Bus. was incorporated into the Lincoln Highway, an auto trail that ran from San Francisco to New York City.[18] The Lincoln Highway through Pennsylvania became Pennsylvania Route 1 (PA 1) in 1924.[19][20] US 30 was designated concurrent with PA 1 west of Philadelphia in 1926, with the PA 1 designation removed two years later.[20][21][22][23][24] US 30 was widened into a multilane road through Chester County in the 1930s.[25] In the 1960s, US 30 was moved to a freeway bypass around Coatesville and Downingtown, with US 30 Bus. designated onto the former alignment of US 30.[26] In 1995, US 30 Bus. was extended east when US 30 was extended to bypass Exton.[27][28]

Downingtown business loop alternate truck route

 

 

U.S. Route 30 Business Alternate Truck

LocationDowningtown, Pennsylvania
Existed2013–present

U.S. Route 30 Business Alternate Truck (US 30 Bus. Alt. Truck) is a truck route of US 30 Bus. around a weight-restricted bridge over the East Branch Brandywine Creek in Downingtown, Pennsylvania, on which trucks over 36 tons and combination loads over 40 tons are prohibited. The route follows US 322, the US 30 freeway, and PA 113. US 30 Bus. Alt. Truck runs concurrent with US 322 Alt. Truck along US 30 and PA 113.[29][30]

Former

Portland business loop

 

 

U.S. Highway 30 Business

LocationPortland, Oregon
Length5.56 mi[31] (8.95 km)

U.S. Route 30 Business was a 5.56-mile-long (8.95 km)[31] business route for U.S. Route 30 in eastern Portland, Oregon, running along Burnside Street and Sandy Boulevard. Unlike a standard business route, neither end was at US 30 - the west end was at Oregon Route 99E (Martin Luther King Boulevard and Grand Avenue; Pacific Highway East) at the east end of the Burnside Bridge, and the east end was at U.S. Route 30 Bypass (Northeast Portland Highway) at the Interstate 205 interchange. It crossed US 30, which is concurrent with Interstate 84, at around its midpoint. The whole route was the Sandy Boulevard Highway No. 59 (see Oregon highways and routes) until July 10, 2003, when it was given to the city (along with an adjacent part of Route 99E a month later).[32] The US 30 Business designation was removed from what had become a city street on July 5, 2007.[33]

Though the west end was just south of an interchange with US 30/I-84, there are no ramps pointing in the correct direction. The reason for this strange end is that US 30 originally exited I-84 there and ran south on Route 99E, and then turned west onto the Burnside Bridge through downtown. (It continued along Burnside Street, 18th Avenue/19th Avenue, Vaughn Street, Wardway Street and St. Helens Road.) When US 30 was realigned to use Interstate 5 and Interstate 405 around the north side of downtown, US 30 Business remained the same (except for a one-block extension west from Route 99E northbound, resulting in a milepost of -0.05 for the west end at Route 99E southbound).

Major intersections
The entire route was in Portland, Multnomah County.

mi[31]kmDestinationsNotes
−0.05−0.080 
 
 
To I-5 south / Burnside Bridge to Naito Parkway – Salem
Continuation beyond OR 99E
−0.05−0.080 
 
OR 99E south (Southeast Martin Luther King Jr. Boulevard)
0.000.00 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
OR 99E north (Northeast Grand Avenue) to I-5 north / I-84 east / US 30 east – Oregon City, Salem
0.360.58East Burnside Street
1.893.04   
 
I-84 / US 30 (Banfield Expressway) to I-5 – Portland City Center
4.527.27  OR 213 (Northeast 82nd Avenue)
5.518.87 
 
 
 
US 30 Byp. (Columbia Boulevard, Sandy Boulevard) to I-205
1.000 mi = 1.609 km; 1.000 km = 0.621 mi

Portland alternate route

 

 

U.S. Highway 30 Alternate

LocationPortlandTroutdale
Existed1930s–1960s

U.S. Route 30 Alternate was an alternate of U.S. Route 30. The route began at U.S. 30 at the intersection of Bunside and Sandy, and ran along Burnside Street, Gilham Avenue, Thorburn Street, Washington Street and Stark Street (alternately known as Baseline Road due to being the baseline of the Willamette Stone), before rejoining U.S. 30 at the intersection of Stark and Crown Point Highway.[34][35] It stemmed from the desire by the city of Gresham, Oregon to be connected to U.S. 30. The route existed in maps from the 1920s, 1930s and 1940s, but has long since been deleted.

Idaho-Utah-Wyoming southern route

 

U.S. Route 30S

LocationBurley, IdahoGranger, Wyoming
Existed1926–1970s

U.S. Route 30 South or US 30S was initially a split route, and later an alternate route, of US Route 30 between Burley, Idaho and Granger, Wyoming. US 30S followed the general route of today's Interstate 84 across Idaho and western Utah, and Interstate 80 across eastern Utah and Wyoming. The route was decommissioned in the 1970s.

In the initial proposals for the US Highway System, all of US Route 30 was to follow the Lincoln Highway, with the western terminus at Salt Lake City, Utah. The Lincoln Highway Association was upset as refinements to the initial proposal modified the route of US 30 to break from the Lincoln Highway in Wyoming and proceed to the Pacific Northwest, as they were assured that the Lincoln Highway would have a single numerical designation. Utah was upset at these modifications, as they would completely remove the US 30 routing in that state. Wyoming, Nevada, Idaho and Utah all made conflicting proposals for the route. As a compromise, a split route was approved.[36] In the approved U.S. Highway System numbering plan in 1926, US Route 30 split between Idaho and Wyoming. US 30N, the northern route, passed directly from Wyoming to Idaho, while a southern route entered Utah.[21] Eventually the northern route became mainline US Route 30, leaving US 30S as an alternate route.

In the state of Utah's route logs, US Route 30S is acknowledged as late as 1970 in numerous highway transfer resolutions as segments of interstates 80 and 80N were completed. However, all references to US 30S are gone from the state's highway resolutions by the time the state requested a designation change of I-80N to its modern designation of I-84 in 1977.[37]

In all three states, the freeway replacements used shorter, straighter alignments compared to the former US 30S; some small towns were bypassed when the two lane roads were replaced with freeways. A significant case is at the Idaho state line, where I-84 runs several miles to the east of the former US 30S. Portions of the former alignment of US 30S in this area are now designated Idaho State Highway 81, Utah State Route 42 and Utah State Route 30. Another significant deviation is at the eastern terminus of US 30S, where Interstate 80 was routed several miles south of Granger, bypassing the town.

Nebraska–Iowa alternate route

 

 

U.S. Highway 30 Alternate

LocationNear Clarks, NebraskaMissouri Valley, Iowa
Existed1930s–1960s

U.S. Highway 30 Alternate was an alternate route of US 30 that ran between Council Bluffs and Missouri Valley, Iowa. The route was created on the former US 30 alignment by the mid-1930s when US 30 was routed west of Missouri Valley on old Iowa Highway 130.[38] By the end of the 1960s, US 30 Alternate became Iowa Highway 183.[39]

Central Iowa alternate route

 

 

U.S. Highway 30 Alternate

LocationOgdenMarshalltown, Iowa
Existed1973–1981

U.S. Highway 30 Alternate (US 30 Alternate) was a former mainline routing of US 30 through central Iowa that was bypassed by a four-lane highway in 1973. The alternate route began in Ogden, where the bypass began, and passed through Boone, Ames, Nevada, Colo, and State Center. The route ended between State Center and Marshalltown. It was in service for eight years before it became Iowa 930, which was an unsigned highway.

Clinton alternate route

 

 

U.S. Highway 30 Alternate

LocationClinton, Iowa
Existed1957[40]–1967[41]

U.S. Route 30 Alternate was an alternate route of US 30 that ran through Clinton, Iowa. In 1957, US 30 was rerouted over the Gateway Bridge across the Mississippi River, and Iowa Highway 136 was designated to cross the Lyons-Fulton Bridge.[42] However, by 1957, the old alignment through Clinton and across the Lyons-Fulton Bridge was numbered U.S. Route 30 Alternate.[43] By 1967, US 30 Alternate was reverted to Iowa Highway 136.[41][44]

Sterling–Chicago alternate route

 

 

U.S. Route 30 Alternate

LocationSterlingLynwood, Illinois
Existed1942–1971[45]

U.S. Route 30 Alternate (US 30 Alt.) was an alternate route of US 30 after US 330 was decommissioned in 1942. It traveled from Sterling through Chicago to Lynwood near the Indiana state line. By the early 1970s, the alternate route was removed and partly replaced by Illinois Route 38.

Aurora business loop

 

 

U.S. Route 30 Business

LocationAurora, Illinois
Existed1959–1970[45]

U.S. Route 30 City (later named U.S. Route 30 Business) was a business route for US 30. By 1959, US 30 was rerouted south of Sugar Grove after the southern bypass was completed. The old route that ran through Aurora was designated as a business route. It followed Galena Boulevard and Hill Avenue. In 1970, the business route was decommissioned entirely.

Illinois toll route

 

 

Toll U.S. Route 30

LocationFord Heights-Aurora, Illinois
Existed1958–1966

U.S. Route 30 Toll was a toll route of US 30. In 1958, Toll US 30 was formed after the East-West Tollway and the Tri-State Tollway were finished. The toll route followed the original route of the East-West Tollway, a southern portion of the Tri-State Tollway, and present-day Illinois Route 394 before reaching US 30 in East Chicago Heights (now Ford Heights). In 1966, Toll US 30 was decommissioned and was partly replaced with Illinois Route 190.[46]

US 30S in Ohio

 

U.S. Route 30S

LocationDelphos-Mansfield, Ohio
Existed1920s–1973

Between Van Wert and Mansfield, Ohio, US 30 split into a more direct route as US 30 N and a less direct route, US-30S. U.S. Route 30S, a divided U.S. route of US 30 until November 1973 when what was US 30N became the mainline of US 30.[47][48] US 30S was numbered in the 1920s to avoid conflict from local business owners worried about the diversion of traffic from their shops along the southern route.[49]

The whole of old US 30S in Ohio is now Ohio State Route 309.

Allegheny County truck route

 

 

U.S. Route 30 Truck

LocationAllegheny County, Pennsylvania
Existed2013–early 2017

U.S. Route 30 Truck was a truck route around a weight-restricted bridge over the South Fork Montour Run in North Fayette Township near Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, on which trucks over 29 tons and combination loads over 40 tons are prohibited. The route followed Clinton Road and Interstate 376.[29][50]

Philadelphia bypass

 

 

U.S. Route 30 Bypass

LocationBryn Mawr-Philadelphia, Pennsylvania

U.S. Route 30 Bypass (US 30 Byp.) was a bypass route of a section of US 30 between Bryn Mawr and Philadelphia in Pennsylvania. It was also known as U.S. Route 30 Alternate (US 30 Alt.) in Philadelphia. The route began at US 30 in Bryn Mawr and headed southeast on County Line Road, forming the border between Delaware County to the southwest and Montgomery County to the northeast. US 30 Byp. fully entered Delaware County and continued through suburban areas as Haverford Road. The road curved into Montgomery County, where it passed through Penn Wynne, before it crossed into Philadelphia at the US 1/US 13 Byp. (City Avenue) intersection, where it became Haverford Avenue. The bypass route continued east along Haverford Avenue and Lansdowne Avenue, reaching its eastern terminus at another intersection with US 30.[51] PA 201 was originally designated along Haverford Road and Haverford Avenue by 1928, running between US 30 (Lancaster Pike) in Bryn Mawr and US 30 (Lancaster Avenue) in Philadelphia.[52][53] US 30 Byp. was cosigned with PA 201 by 1940, continuing east from PA 201's eastern terminus along Lancaster Avenue, then becoming concurrent with US 1/US 13 on Powelton Avenue, 31st/32nd Streets, and Spring Garden Street before rejoining US 30 across the Schuylkill River at Eakins Oval.[54] By 1950, PA 201 was decommissioned.[55] In the 1950s, the eastern terminus of US 30 Byp. was rerouted along Lansdowne Avenue to end at US 30.[51] US 30 Byp. was decommissioned in the 1960s.[56]

Major intersections
CountyLocationmikmDestinationsNotes
DelawareMontgomery
county line
Radnor TownshipLower Merion Township line  US 30 (Lancaster Avenue)Western terminus
MontgomeryPhiladelphia
county line
Lower Merion TownshipPhiladelphia line  
 
US 1 / US 13 Byp. (City Avenue)
PhiladelphiaPhiladelphia  US 30 (Lancaster Avenue)Eastern terminus
1.000 mi = 1.609 km; 1.000 km = 0.621 mi

References

  1. ^ Google (June 2016). "2257 Gable Rd, St Helens, Oregon". Google Street View. Retrieved May 11, 2018.
  2. ^ "2020 Oregon Mileage Report" (PDF). Oregon Department of Transportation. Retrieved January 12, 2022.
  3. ^ "Cross Reference Table of Highway Route Number to State Highway Number" (PDF). Oregon Department of Transportation. 2020. p. 1. Retrieved October 10, 2022.
  4. ^ Oregon 2019–2021 Official State Map (PDF) (Map). Oregon Department of Transportation. April 2019. Portland and Vicinity inset. Retrieved October 10, 2022.
  5. ^ ODOT Engineering Automation Section (March 2020). "History of Highways in Oregon: Northeast Portland Highway Number 123" (PDF). Oregon Department of Transportation. p. 123-2. Retrieved October 10, 2022.
  6. ^ Oregon 1936 Road Map (Map). Cartography by E. A. Skelley. Oregon State Highway Commission. 1936. Map Showing Most Direct Highway Connections Through the City of Portland inset. Retrieved October 10, 2022 – via Oregon State Library.
  7. ^ U.S. Route Numbering Committee (July 19, 1955). [Report of the U.S. Route Numbering Committee to the Executive Committee] (PDF) (Report). Washington, DC: American Association of State Highway Officials. p. 113. Retrieved October 10, 2022 – via Wikimedia Commons.
  8. ^ Oregon Highway Map (Map). Oregon State Highway Commission. 1956. Portland inset. Retrieved October 10, 2022 – via Oregon State Library.
  9. ^ "Striping Cuts Street Mishaps". The Oregonian. August 5, 1965. sec. 2, p. 18.
  10. ^ 2008 Volume of Traffic on the Primary Road System of Iowa (PDF) (Report). Iowa Department of Transportation. January 1, 2008. Retrieved March 1, 2010.
  11. ^ Iowa State Highway Map (PDF) (Map). Iowa Department of Transportation. 1997. Retrieved April 24, 2010.
  12. ^ Hogan, Dick (December 31, 2001). "Highway 30 Sign Still Not Repaired". The Gazette. Cedar Rapids – Iowa City. p. 5.
  13. ^ DeLorme Street Atlas 2007, Toggle Measure Tool. Retrieved on 2007-07-02.
  14. ^ Google (September 26, 2020). "overview of U.S. Route 30 Business Chester County" (Map). Google Maps. Google. Retrieved September 26, 2020.
  15. ^ Chester County, Pennsylvania Highway Map (PDF) (Map). PennDOT. 2020. Retrieved September 26, 2020.
  16. ^ Philadelphia and Lancaster Turnpike (Map). Library of Congress. 1796. Retrieved July 2, 2007.
  17. ^ a b "PHMC Historical Markers Search" (Searchable database). Pennsylvania Historical and Museum Commission. Commonwealth of Pennsylvania. Retrieved January 25, 2014.
  18. ^ "Official Map of the Lincoln Highway". Lincoln Highway Association. Retrieved January 7, 2014.
  19. ^ "William Penn Highway: US 22 in Pennsylvania". Federal Highway Administration. Retrieved 2007-06-26.
  20. ^ a b Pennsylvania Highway Map (eastern side) (Map). Gulf Oil. 1926. Retrieved December 26, 2007.
  21. ^ a b Bureau of Public Roads & American Association of State Highway Officials (November 11, 1926). United States System of Highways Adopted for Uniform Marking by the American Association of State Highway Officials (Map). 1:7,000,000. Washington, DC: United States Geological Survey. OCLC 32889555. Retrieved November 7, 2013 – via Wikimedia Commons.
  22. ^ "U.S. Numbers For State Highways". Harrisburg Telegraph. January 20, 1928. p. 20. Retrieved August 31, 2015 – via Newspapers.com.
  23. ^ "New Numbering System Prepared For Pa. Highways". Warren Tribune. January 28, 1928. p. 7. Retrieved August 31, 2015 – via Newspapers.com.
  24. ^ Map of Pennsylvania (Map). Pennsylvania Department of Highways. 1928. Retrieved August 31, 2015.
  25. ^ Official Road Map of Pennsylvania (PDF) (Map). Pennsylvania Department of Highways. 1940. Retrieved September 26, 2020.
  26. ^ Official Map of Pennsylvania (PDF) (Map). Pennsylvania Department of Highways. 1970. Retrieved September 26, 2020.
  27. ^ Pennsylvania Official Transportation and Tourism Map (PDF) (Map). Pennsylvania Department of Transportation. 2000. Retrieved September 26, 2020.
  28. ^ Special Committee on U.S. Route Numbering (October 27, 1995). (PDF) (Report). Washington, DC: American Association of State Highway and Transportation Officials. Archived from the original (PDF) on October 16, 2017. Retrieved September 26, 2020.
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  30. ^ Google (February 10, 2016). "overview of U.S. Route 30 Business Alternate Truck" (Map). Google Maps. Google. Retrieved February 10, 2016.
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special, routes, route, several, special, routes, route, exist, order, from, west, east, they, follows, highway, systemunited, states, numbered, highway, systemlist, special, divided, this, transport, related, list, incomplete, help, adding, missing, items, ju. Several special routes of U S Route 30 exist In order from west to east they are as follows Special routes of U S Route 30Highway systemUnited States Numbered Highway SystemList Special Divided This transport related list is incomplete you can help by adding missing items July 2010 Contents 1 Existing 1 1 St Helens business loop 1 2 Portland bypass 1 3 Ontario business loop 1 4 Green River business loop 1 5 Rock Springs business loop 1 6 Rawlins business loop 1 7 Marshalltown business loop 1 8 Toledo Tama business loop 1 9 Cedar Rapids emergency route 1 10 Van Wert business loop 1 11 Dalton alternate route 1 12 Bedford business loop 1 13 Everett business loop 1 14 Chester County business loop 1 14 1 Downingtown business loop alternate truck route 2 Former 2 1 Portland business loop 2 2 Portland alternate route 2 3 Idaho Utah Wyoming southern route 2 4 Nebraska Iowa alternate route 2 5 Central Iowa alternate route 2 6 Clinton alternate route 2 7 Sterling Chicago alternate route 2 8 Aurora business loop 2 9 Illinois toll route 2 10 US 30S in Ohio 2 11 Allegheny County truck route 2 12 Philadelphia bypass 3 ReferencesExisting EditSt Helens business loop Edit This section needs expansion You can help by adding to it January 2022 U S Highway 30 BusinessLocationSt Helens OregonExisted2012 presentU S Route 30 Business US 30 Bus in St Helens Oregon uniquely uses Interstate Business Loop shields 1 This route was designated and is maintained by the local government and does not appear in the official state highways list unlike other business routes 2 Portland bypass Edit U S Highway 30 BypassLocationPortland OregonU S Route 30 Bypass serves as a bypass of Portland Oregon following several streets through the city s northern neighborhoods It is designated as the Northeast Portland Highway No 123 by the Oregon state government 3 The bypass route terminates to the west at US 30 in northwest Portland and crosses the Willamette River on the St Johns Bridge It travels northeast through Cathedral Park on Philadelphia Avenue Ivanhoe Street and Richmond Avenue before turning east onto Lombard Street The route follows Lombard Street across Portland s northern residential neighborhoods intersecting Oregon Route 99W I 5 and Oregon Route 99E Near Portland International Airport it dips southeast onto Killingsworth Street before an interchange with I 205 The route then leaves Portland on Sandy Boulevard and continues through Fairview before reaching its eastern terminus at an interchange with I 84 and US 30 in Wood Village 4 US 30 Bypass was established in the 1930s and designated as a state highway in 1937 5 The bypass route originally ended at the intersection of Killingsworth Street and Sandy Boulevard in eastern Portland as the latter carried US 30 6 In 1955 US 30 was relocated to the new Banfield Expressway now I 84 and US 30 Bypass was extended along its former alignment to Wood Village 7 8 Portions of the bypass on Lombard Street were widened to four lanes in 1965 by eliminating on street parking 9 Ontario business loop Edit U S Highway 30 BusinessLocationOntario OregonU S Route 30 Business is a business route signed in the Ontario Oregon area This road is part of the Olds Ferry Ontario Highway No 455 Green River business loop Edit U S Highway 30 BusinessLocationGreen River WyomingU S Route 30 Business is a business route signed in the Green River Wyoming area This road is entirely overlapped with Interstate 80 Business Loop Rock Springs business loop Edit U S Highway 30 BusinessLocationRock Springs WyomingU S Route 30 Business is a business route signed in the Rock Springs Wyoming area Like the one in Green River the road is entirely overlapped with the Interstate 80 Business Loop Rawlins business loop Edit U S Highway 30 BusinessLocationRawlins WyomingU S Route 30 Business is a business route signed in the Rawlins Wyoming area Like the ones in Green River and Rock Springs the road is entirely overlapped with the Interstate 80 Business Loop Marshalltown business loop Edit U S Highway 30 BusinessLocationMarshalltown IowaExisted1997 presentU S Route 30 Business is a business route that runs along Iowa Avenue in Marshalltown Iowa The route runs on the former alignment of US 30 through the town a 1950s era bypass of Marshalltown that was bypassed in 1997 by a freeway 3 4 mile 1 2 km south of the original bypass 10 11 Toledo Tama business loop Edit U S Highway 30 BusinessLocationToledo Tama IowaExisted2011 presentU S Route 30 Business US 30 is a business route located in Toledo and Tama In the early 2010s a new freeway was built for US 30 between the two cities When the freeway opened the business route was designated along the old route Cedar Rapids emergency route Edit U S Highway 30 EmergencyLocationCedar Rapids IowaExisted1985 presentU S Route 30 Emergency is an emergency bypass of a segment of the US 30 freeway bypass of Cedar Rapids Iowa Since the Cedar Rapids bypass of US 30 was completed in 1985 on occasion traffic has had to be rerouted off the road The bypass s proximity to the Union Pacific Railroad mainline resulted in an elevated roadway between Edgewood Road and Sixth Street SW When strong winds come from the south fog produced by an Archer Daniels Midland plant adjacent to the highway billows over the road making driving dangerous The Iowa DOT set up an emergency detour from Edgewood Road SW north to 16th Avenue SW east to 6th Street SW back to US 30 The frequency of fog related detours has decreased in recent years due to improved technology and the plant s expansion and relocation of cooling towers away from the highway 12 Van Wert business loop Edit U S Route 30 BusinessLocationVan Wert OhioU S Route 30 Business is a locally designated business loop that follows the original route of US 30 and the Lincoln Highway through downtown Van Wert Ohio Dalton alternate route Edit U S Route 30 AlternateLocationDalton OhioExisted1963 presentU S Route 30 Alternate is a 3 mile 4 8 km alternate route through downtown Dalton Ohio It follows the original route of US 30 through town while the mainline designation follows a 4 lane bypass Bedford business loop Edit U S Route 30 BusinessLocationBedford PennsylvaniaExisted1970 present US 30 Bus westbound past US 30 near Bedford U S Route 30 Business is a 3 mile 4 8 km business loop through the borough of Bedford Pennsylvania In 1970 US 30 became a freeway around the town to avoid congestion for travellers along the Pennsylvania Turnpike or U S Route 220 today also Interstate 99 a pair of area freeways from which Bedford was a major travel stop After the creation of the bypass the original path of US 30 along Pitt Street became a business route travelling as a narrow two lane stretch through the town with a four lane segment near some light industrial development before its eastern terminus Everett business loop Edit U S Route 30 BusinessLocationEverett PennsylvaniaExisted1982 present US 30 Bus eastbound in Everett U S Route 30 Business is a 2 mile 3 2 km business loop through the borough of Everett Pennsylvania In 1982 a freeway bypass was constructed around the town because of its low speed limits and lack of opportunities for highway widening As a result the original alignment of US 30 became a business route It is two lanes through the small crowded town Near the eastern edge of the routing alternate third passing lines are provided as the road traverses a county park and a golf course Chester County business loop Edit Main article U S Route 30 Business Chester County Pennsylvania U S Route 30 BusinessLocationChester County PennsylvaniaLength18 79 mi 13 30 24 km Existed1963 presentU S Route 30 Business US 30 Bus is a 19 mile 31 km business route of US 30 in Chester County Pennsylvania The route follows the former alignment of US 30 between Sadsbury Township and East Whiteland Township passing through Coatesville Downingtown and Exton US 30 follows a freeway bypass between these two points 14 15 The present alignment of US 30 Bus was originally part of a turnpike called the Philadelphia and Lancaster Turnpike that was completed in 1794 16 17 The state took over the turnpike in the beginning of the 20th century 17 In 1913 present day US 30 Bus was incorporated into the Lincoln Highway an auto trail that ran from San Francisco to New York City 18 The Lincoln Highway through Pennsylvania became Pennsylvania Route 1 PA 1 in 1924 19 20 US 30 was designated concurrent with PA 1 west of Philadelphia in 1926 with the PA 1 designation removed two years later 20 21 22 23 24 US 30 was widened into a multilane road through Chester County in the 1930s 25 In the 1960s US 30 was moved to a freeway bypass around Coatesville and Downingtown with US 30 Bus designated onto the former alignment of US 30 26 In 1995 US 30 Bus was extended east when US 30 was extended to bypass Exton 27 28 Downingtown business loop alternate truck route Edit U S Route 30 Business Alternate TruckLocationDowningtown PennsylvaniaExisted2013 presentU S Route 30 Business Alternate Truck US 30 Bus Alt Truck is a truck route of US 30 Bus around a weight restricted bridge over the East Branch Brandywine Creek in Downingtown Pennsylvania on which trucks over 36 tons and combination loads over 40 tons are prohibited The route follows US 322 the US 30 freeway and PA 113 US 30 Bus Alt Truck runs concurrent with US 322 Alt Truck along US 30 and PA 113 29 30 Former EditPortland business loop Edit U S Highway 30 BusinessLocationPortland OregonLength5 56 mi 31 8 95 km U S Route 30 Business was a 5 56 mile long 8 95 km 31 business route for U S Route 30 in eastern Portland Oregon running along Burnside Street and Sandy Boulevard Unlike a standard business route neither end was at US 30 the west end was at Oregon Route 99E Martin Luther King Boulevard and Grand Avenue Pacific Highway East at the east end of the Burnside Bridge and the east end was at U S Route 30 Bypass Northeast Portland Highway at the Interstate 205 interchange It crossed US 30 which is concurrent with Interstate 84 at around its midpoint The whole route was the Sandy Boulevard Highway No 59 see Oregon highways and routes until July 10 2003 when it was given to the city along with an adjacent part of Route 99E a month later 32 The US 30 Business designation was removed from what had become a city street on July 5 2007 33 Though the west end was just south of an interchange with US 30 I 84 there are no ramps pointing in the correct direction The reason for this strange end is that US 30 originally exited I 84 there and ran south on Route 99E and then turned west onto the Burnside Bridge through downtown It continued along Burnside Street 18th Avenue 19th Avenue Vaughn Street Wardway Street and St Helens Road When US 30 was realigned to use Interstate 5 and Interstate 405 around the north side of downtown US 30 Business remained the same except for a one block extension west from Route 99E northbound resulting in a milepost of 0 05 for the west end at Route 99E southbound Major intersections The entire route was in Portland Multnomah County mi 31 kmDestinationsNotes 0 05 0 080 To I 5 south Burnside Bridge to Naito Parkway SalemContinuation beyond OR 99E 0 05 0 080 OR 99E south Southeast Martin Luther King Jr Boulevard 0 000 00 OR 99E north Northeast Grand Avenue to I 5 north I 84 east US 30 east Oregon City Salem0 360 58East Burnside Street1 893 04 I 84 US 30 Banfield Expressway to I 5 Portland City Center4 527 27 OR 213 Northeast 82nd Avenue 5 518 87 US 30 Byp Columbia Boulevard Sandy Boulevard to I 2051 000 mi 1 609 km 1 000 km 0 621 miPortland alternate route Edit U S Highway 30 AlternateLocationPortland TroutdaleExisted1930s 1960sU S Route 30 Alternate was an alternate of U S Route 30 The route began at U S 30 at the intersection of Bunside and Sandy and ran along Burnside Street Gilham Avenue Thorburn Street Washington Street and Stark Street alternately known as Baseline Road due to being the baseline of the Willamette Stone before rejoining U S 30 at the intersection of Stark and Crown Point Highway 34 35 It stemmed from the desire by the city of Gresham Oregon to be connected to U S 30 The route existed in maps from the 1920s 1930s and 1940s but has long since been deleted Idaho Utah Wyoming southern route Edit U S Route 30SLocationBurley Idaho Granger WyomingExisted1926 1970sU S Route 30 South or US 30S was initially a split route and later an alternate route of US Route 30 between Burley Idaho and Granger Wyoming US 30S followed the general route of today s Interstate 84 across Idaho and western Utah and Interstate 80 across eastern Utah and Wyoming The route was decommissioned in the 1970s In the initial proposals for the US Highway System all of US Route 30 was to follow the Lincoln Highway with the western terminus at Salt Lake City Utah The Lincoln Highway Association was upset as refinements to the initial proposal modified the route of US 30 to break from the Lincoln Highway in Wyoming and proceed to the Pacific Northwest as they were assured that the Lincoln Highway would have a single numerical designation Utah was upset at these modifications as they would completely remove the US 30 routing in that state Wyoming Nevada Idaho and Utah all made conflicting proposals for the route As a compromise a split route was approved 36 In the approved U S Highway System numbering plan in 1926 US Route 30 split between Idaho and Wyoming US 30N the northern route passed directly from Wyoming to Idaho while a southern route entered Utah 21 Eventually the northern route became mainline US Route 30 leaving US 30S as an alternate route In the state of Utah s route logs US Route 30S is acknowledged as late as 1970 in numerous highway transfer resolutions as segments of interstates 80 and 80N were completed However all references to US 30S are gone from the state s highway resolutions by the time the state requested a designation change of I 80N to its modern designation of I 84 in 1977 37 In all three states the freeway replacements used shorter straighter alignments compared to the former US 30S some small towns were bypassed when the two lane roads were replaced with freeways A significant case is at the Idaho state line where I 84 runs several miles to the east of the former US 30S Portions of the former alignment of US 30S in this area are now designated Idaho State Highway 81 Utah State Route 42 and Utah State Route 30 Another significant deviation is at the eastern terminus of US 30S where Interstate 80 was routed several miles south of Granger bypassing the town Nebraska Iowa alternate route Edit U S Highway 30 AlternateLocationNear Clarks Nebraska Missouri Valley IowaExisted1930s 1960sU S Highway 30 Alternate was an alternate route of US 30 that ran between Council Bluffs and Missouri Valley Iowa The route was created on the former US 30 alignment by the mid 1930s when US 30 was routed west of Missouri Valley on old Iowa Highway 130 38 By the end of the 1960s US 30 Alternate became Iowa Highway 183 39 Central Iowa alternate route Edit U S Highway 30 AlternateLocationOgden Marshalltown IowaExisted1973 1981U S Highway 30 Alternate US 30 Alternate was a former mainline routing of US 30 through central Iowa that was bypassed by a four lane highway in 1973 The alternate route began in Ogden where the bypass began and passed through Boone Ames Nevada Colo and State Center The route ended between State Center and Marshalltown It was in service for eight years before it became Iowa 930 which was an unsigned highway Clinton alternate route Edit U S Highway 30 AlternateLocationClinton IowaExisted1957 40 1967 41 U S Route 30 Alternate was an alternate route of US 30 that ran through Clinton Iowa In 1957 US 30 was rerouted over the Gateway Bridge across the Mississippi River and Iowa Highway 136 was designated to cross the Lyons Fulton Bridge 42 However by 1957 the old alignment through Clinton and across the Lyons Fulton Bridge was numbered U S Route 30 Alternate 43 By 1967 US 30 Alternate was reverted to Iowa Highway 136 41 44 Sterling Chicago alternate route Edit See also Illinois Route 38 History U S Route 30 AlternateLocationSterling Lynwood IllinoisExisted1942 1971 45 U S Route 30 Alternate US 30 Alt was an alternate route of US 30 after US 330 was decommissioned in 1942 It traveled from Sterling through Chicago to Lynwood near the Indiana state line By the early 1970s the alternate route was removed and partly replaced by Illinois Route 38 Aurora business loop Edit U S Route 30 BusinessLocationAurora IllinoisExisted1959 1970 45 U S Route 30 City later named U S Route 30 Business was a business route for US 30 By 1959 US 30 was rerouted south of Sugar Grove after the southern bypass was completed The old route that ran through Aurora was designated as a business route It followed Galena Boulevard and Hill Avenue In 1970 the business route was decommissioned entirely Illinois toll route Edit Toll U S Route 30LocationFord Heights Aurora IllinoisExisted1958 1966U S Route 30 Toll was a toll route of US 30 In 1958 Toll US 30 was formed after the East West Tollway and the Tri State Tollway were finished The toll route followed the original route of the East West Tollway a southern portion of the Tri State Tollway and present day Illinois Route 394 before reaching US 30 in East Chicago Heights now Ford Heights In 1966 Toll US 30 was decommissioned and was partly replaced with Illinois Route 190 46 US 30S in Ohio Edit U S Route 30SLocationDelphos Mansfield OhioExisted1920s 1973Between Van Wert and Mansfield Ohio US 30 split into a more direct route as US 30 N and a less direct route US 30S U S Route 30S a divided U S route of US 30 until November 1973 when what was US 30N became the mainline of US 30 47 48 US 30S was numbered in the 1920s to avoid conflict from local business owners worried about the diversion of traffic from their shops along the southern route 49 The whole of old US 30S in Ohio is now Ohio State Route 309 Allegheny County truck route Edit U S Route 30 TruckLocationAllegheny County PennsylvaniaExisted2013 early 2017U S Route 30 Truck was a truck route around a weight restricted bridge over the South Fork Montour Run in North Fayette Township near Pittsburgh Pennsylvania on which trucks over 29 tons and combination loads over 40 tons are prohibited The route followed Clinton Road and Interstate 376 29 50 Philadelphia bypass Edit U S Route 30 BypassLocationBryn Mawr Philadelphia PennsylvaniaU S Route 30 Bypass US 30 Byp was a bypass route of a section of US 30 between Bryn Mawr and Philadelphia in Pennsylvania It was also known as U S Route 30 Alternate US 30 Alt in Philadelphia The route began at US 30 in Bryn Mawr and headed southeast on County Line Road forming the border between Delaware County to the southwest and Montgomery County to the northeast US 30 Byp fully entered Delaware County and continued through suburban areas as Haverford Road The road curved into Montgomery County where it passed through Penn Wynne before it crossed into Philadelphia at the US 1 US 13 Byp City Avenue intersection where it became Haverford Avenue The bypass route continued east along Haverford Avenue and Lansdowne Avenue reaching its eastern terminus at another intersection with US 30 51 PA 201 was originally designated along Haverford Road and Haverford Avenue by 1928 running between US 30 Lancaster Pike in Bryn Mawr and US 30 Lancaster Avenue in Philadelphia 52 53 US 30 Byp was cosigned with PA 201 by 1940 continuing east from PA 201 s eastern terminus along Lancaster Avenue then becoming concurrent with US 1 US 13 on Powelton Avenue 31st 32nd Streets and Spring Garden Street before rejoining US 30 across the Schuylkill River at Eakins Oval 54 By 1950 PA 201 was decommissioned 55 In the 1950s the eastern terminus of US 30 Byp was rerouted along Lansdowne Avenue to end at US 30 51 US 30 Byp was decommissioned in the 1960s 56 Major intersectionsCountyLocationmikmDestinationsNotesDelaware Montgomerycounty lineRadnor Township Lower Merion Township line US 30 Lancaster Avenue Western terminusMontgomery Philadelphiacounty lineLower Merion Township Philadelphia line US 1 US 13 Byp City Avenue PhiladelphiaPhiladelphia US 30 Lancaster Avenue Eastern terminus1 000 mi 1 609 km 1 000 km 0 621 miReferences Edit Google June 2016 2257 Gable Rd St Helens Oregon Google Street View Retrieved May 11 2018 2020 Oregon Mileage Report PDF Oregon Department of Transportation Retrieved January 12 2022 Cross Reference Table of Highway Route Number to State Highway Number PDF Oregon Department of Transportation 2020 p 1 Retrieved October 10 2022 Oregon 2019 2021 Official State Map PDF Map Oregon Department of Transportation April 2019 Portland and Vicinity inset Retrieved October 10 2022 ODOT Engineering Automation Section March 2020 History of Highways in Oregon Northeast Portland Highway Number 123 PDF Oregon Department of Transportation p 123 2 Retrieved October 10 2022 Oregon 1936 Road Map Map Cartography by E A Skelley Oregon State Highway Commission 1936 Map Showing Most Direct Highway Connections Through the City of Portland inset Retrieved October 10 2022 via Oregon State Library U S Route Numbering Committee July 19 1955 Report of the U S Route Numbering Committee to the Executive Committee PDF Report Washington DC American Association of State Highway Officials p 113 Retrieved October 10 2022 via Wikimedia Commons Oregon Highway Map Map Oregon State Highway Commission 1956 Portland inset Retrieved October 10 2022 via Oregon State Library Striping Cuts Street Mishaps The Oregonian August 5 1965 sec 2 p 18 2008 Volume of Traffic on the Primary Road System of Iowa PDF Report Iowa Department of Transportation January 1 2008 Retrieved March 1 2010 Iowa State Highway Map PDF Map Iowa Department of Transportation 1997 Retrieved April 24 2010 Hogan Dick December 31 2001 Highway 30 Sign Still Not Repaired The Gazette Cedar Rapids Iowa City p 5 DeLorme Street Atlas 2007 Toggle Measure Tool Retrieved on 2007 07 02 Google September 26 2020 overview of U S Route 30 Business Chester County Map Google Maps Google Retrieved September 26 2020 Chester County Pennsylvania Highway Map PDF Map PennDOT 2020 Retrieved September 26 2020 Philadelphia and Lancaster Turnpike Map Library of Congress 1796 Retrieved July 2 2007 a b PHMC Historical Markers Search Searchable database Pennsylvania Historical and Museum Commission Commonwealth of Pennsylvania Retrieved January 25 2014 Official Map of the Lincoln Highway Lincoln Highway Association Retrieved January 7 2014 William Penn Highway US 22 in Pennsylvania Federal Highway Administration Retrieved 2007 06 26 a b Pennsylvania Highway Map eastern side Map Gulf Oil 1926 Retrieved December 26 2007 a b Bureau of Public Roads amp American Association of State Highway Officials November 11 1926 United States System of Highways Adopted for Uniform Marking by the American Association of State Highway Officials Map 1 7 000 000 Washington DC United States Geological Survey OCLC 32889555 Retrieved November 7 2013 via Wikimedia Commons U S Numbers For State Highways Harrisburg Telegraph January 20 1928 p 20 Retrieved August 31 2015 via Newspapers com New Numbering System Prepared For Pa Highways Warren Tribune January 28 1928 p 7 Retrieved August 31 2015 via Newspapers com Map of Pennsylvania Map Pennsylvania Department of Highways 1928 Retrieved August 31 2015 Official Road Map of Pennsylvania PDF Map Pennsylvania Department of Highways 1940 Retrieved September 26 2020 Official Map of Pennsylvania PDF Map Pennsylvania Department of Highways 1970 Retrieved September 26 2020 Pennsylvania Official Transportation and Tourism Map PDF Map Pennsylvania Department of Transportation 2000 Retrieved September 26 2020 Special Committee on U S Route Numbering October 27 1995 Report of the Special Committee on U S Route Numbering to the Standing Committee on Highways PDF Report Washington DC American Association of State Highway and Transportation Officials Archived from the original PDF on October 16 2017 Retrieved September 26 2020 a b Risk Based Bridge Postings State and Local Bridges PDF Pennsylvania Department of Transportation October 8 2013 Retrieved December 18 2014 Google February 10 2016 overview of U S Route 30 Business Alternate Truck Map Google Maps Google Retrieved February 10 2016 a b c Digital Video Log Oregon Department of Transportation August 6 2002 Retrieved December 21 2014 Oregon Department of Transportation Jurisdictional Transfer Amendments to the Oregon Highway Plan PDF Oregon Department of Transportation Descriptions of US and OR Routes July 2007 accessed May 2008 ORoads US Route 30 Alternate Portland Retrieved 2011 09 25 SYSTEM auto parks and garages of Oregon INC Retrieved 2011 09 25 Richard F Weingroff From Names to Numbers The Origins of the U S Numbered Highway System Route 3 Route 2 Highway Resolutions Utah Department of Transportation November 2007 Retrieved April 12 2017 Iowa State University 2005 Iowa Geographic Map Server Retrieved April 10 2010 Iowa State Highway Map PDF Map Iowa State Highway Commission 1973 Retrieved April 10 2010 Illinois Division of Highways H M Gousha 1957 Illinois Official Highway Map Map 1 805 000 Springfield Illinois Division of Highways via Illinois Digital Archives a b Illinois Division of Highways Rand McNally 1967 Illinois Official Highway Map Map 1 772 500 Springfield Illinois Division of Highways via Illinois Digital Archives Iowa State Highway Map PDF Map Iowa State Highway Commission 1956 Retrieved April 10 2010 Iowa State Highway Map PDF Map Iowa State Highway Commission 1957 Retrieved April 10 2010 Iowa State Highway Map PDF Map Iowa State Highway Commission 1968 a b Routes in Illinois 21 40 Illinois Division of Highways Rand McNally 1966 Illinois Official Highway Map Map 1 772 500 Springfield Illinois Division of Highways via Illinois Digital Archives Renaming Of Rt 30s Draws No Opposition The Lima News October 12 1973 p 13 Retrieved August 20 2014 Butko Brian 2013 2005 Greetings from the Lincoln Highway Stackpole Books p 84 ISBN 9780811711746 Retrieved August 20 2014 Eye U S 30 Location The Times Bulletin Associated Press September 20 1973 p 1 Retrieved August 20 2014 Google August 14 2015 overview of U S Route 30 Truck in Allegheny County Map Google Maps Google Retrieved August 14 2015 a b Official Map of Pennsylvania back PDF Map Pennsylvania Department of Highways 1960 Retrieved January 16 2014 Pennsylvania Highway Map Philadelphia Metro Map Gulf Oil 1928 Retrieved November 8 2007 Tourist Map of Pennsylvania back PDF Map Pennsylvania Department of Highways 1930 Retrieved January 16 2014 Official Road Map of Pennsylvania back PDF Map Pennsylvania Department of Highways 1940 Retrieved January 1 2014 Official Road Map of Pennsylvania back PDF Map Pennsylvania Department of Highways 1950 Retrieved January 16 2014 Official Map of Pennsylvania back PDF Map Pennsylvania Department of Highways 1970 Retrieved January 16 2014 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Special routes of U S Route 30 amp oldid 1128907976, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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