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U.S. Route 7

U.S. Route 7 (US 7) is a north–south United States Numbered Highway in western New England that runs for 308 miles (496 km) through the states of Connecticut, Massachusetts, and Vermont. The highway's southern terminus is at Interstate 95 (I-95) exit 15 in Norwalk, Connecticut. Its northern terminus is at I-89 exit 22 near the village of Highgate Springs, Vermont, immediately south of the Canada–US border.

U.S. Route 7

US 7 highlighted in red
Route information
Length308.36 mi[1][2][3] (496.26 km)
Existed1926[4]–present
Major junctions
South end I-95 in Norwalk, CT
Major intersections
North end I-89 near Highgate Springs, VT
Location
CountryUnited States
StatesConnecticut, Massachusetts, Vermont
Highway system

Route description

Lengths
  mi[1][2][3] km
CT 78.22 125.88
MA 53.85 86.66
VT 176.29 283.71
Total 308.36 496.26

Connecticut

US 7 in Connecticut (also known as Route 7, Ethan Allen Highway, and Super 7) is mostly a surface road but has two short expressway sections in the Norwalk and Danbury areas. US 7 begins in Norwalk with a four-mile (6.4 km) expressway to nearly the Wilton town line. There are three exits on this short section, signed as "The Forty Third Infantry Division Memorial Highway", named after the 43rd Infantry Division. Exit 1, just past I-95 (the southern terminus), leads to the Central Norwalk Business District and US 1. Exit 2 leads to Route 123 which extends from US 1 in Norwalk to the New York state line, passing through the town of New Canaan. After exit 2, the expressway reduces to four lanes from six. Exit 3 leads to Route 15 southbound, also known as the Merritt Parkway. This interchange was half built and only allows southbound access from the expressway; northbound access is gained via Route 123 at exit 2. The expressway section ends at Grist Mill Road in Norwalk, about one-half mile (0.80 km) past exit 3. US 7 then passes through Wilton as a four-lane highway until just after Cannondale, where it becomes a two-lane highway. It continues through Ridgefield as a two-lane highway.

Near Danbury, another expressway section was built beginning one mile (1.6 km) south of I-84 near Danbury Municipal Airport. This section is also signed as "The Forty Third Infantry Division Memorial Highway". Through Danbury proper, US 7 overlaps with I-84 for about four miles (6.4 km). Through this section of expressway, I-84, US 7, US 6, and US 202 are concurrent. US 7 and Route 202 then leave I-84 at exit 7 and travel on their own expressway for approximately eight miles (13 km) to just south of the New Milford town line. On this section there are two exits. At exit 11 (Federal Road), US 202 exits the expressway and at exit 12, US 202 crosses back over US 7. On southbound US 7, the exit for I-84 eastbound is signed as exit 10. There is no exit number for I-84 west because of the concurrency. The US 7 expressway then bypasses Brookfield to the west and terminates at an intersection with US 202 at the FairfieldLitchfield county line. Construction on the section between I-84 and exit 12 began in 1974 and completed in 1976. The Brookfield bypass segment between exit 12 and the current expressway terminus opened in November 2009, after two years of construction. The former US 7 route through Brookfield is now signed solely as US 202.

US 7 is cosigned with US 202 until central New Milford, where US 202 turns east with Route 67 while US 7 continues north. Recent construction has also made large parts of US 7 between the terminus of the expressway and New Milford a four-lane divided highway with at-grade intersections. North of New Milford center, US 7 remains a two-lane road through the rest of Connecticut and leaves Connecticut in the town of North Canaan.

Massachusetts

US 7 enters Massachusetts in the town of Sheffield and remains a two-lane road until Lenox. There, a four-lane bypass of Lenox was built in two pieces, and the old US 7 is now Route 7A. US 7 continues on as a four-lane road to Pittsfield, where it is then a three-lane road, narrowing to two lanes for a short time, then widening to four lanes in downtown Pittsfield. US 7 leaves downtown Pittsfield as a two-lane surface arterial and continues as a rural highway with occasional three-lane stretches for climbing the grades along the Berkshires. It passes west of Mount Greylock before passing through Williamstown, connecting the Taconic Trail with the Mohawk Trail. The road passes Williams College before entering Vermont.

Like Connecticut, Massachusetts planned a US 7 expressway from the existing bypass in Lenox all the way to Lanesborough. This plan was never initiated, although land takings occurred. The highway was ultimately canceled due to environmental and community opposition.

In Massachusetts, US 7 passes through the towns of Sheffield, Great Barrington, Stockbridge, Lee, Lenox, Pittsfield, Lanesborough, New Ashford, and Williamstown, before crossing into Pownal, Vermont.

Vermont

 
Original-style Vermont US 7 shield with embossed features
 
Westward view of Lake Champlain from US 7 in Charlotte, Vermont

US 7 remains a rural two-lane highway from the Massachusetts line to Bennington, where it becomes a grade separated freeway a mile north of Bennington. Once complete, US 7 will utilize this new bypass while the existing two-lane road into town will become part of Vermont Route 7A (VT 7A). North of town, the highway then again returns to expressway status. For three miles (4.8 km), it is a four-lane freeway with a grass median. US 7 then narrows down to an undivided two-lane freeway, with brief passing lanes in each direction. Just north of Manchester, the expressway ends. From Manchester to Wallingford, the road is two lanes and rural. North of Wallingford, US 7 becomes a four-lane divided highway with at-grade intersections, until its southern junction with US 4, south of the city of Rutland. From Rutland north, the road is either two-lane or four-lane undivided, uncontrolled road all the way to the Canada–US border except between Shelburne and Burlington, which is a four-lane divided highway. US 7 and US 2 are concurrent from Burlington to Colchester. It is known as the Ethan Allen Highway for much of the path through Vermont.

In Vermont, it passes through the towns of Pownal, Bennington, Shaftsbury, Glastenbury, Arlington, Sunderland, Manchester, Dorset, Danby, Mount Tabor, Wallingford, Clarendon, and Rutland; the city of Rutland; the towns of Pittsford, Brandon, Leicester, Salisbury, Middlebury, New Haven, Waltham, Ferrisburg, Charlotte, and Shelburne; the cities of South Burlington (at which point I-89 begins to parallel it), Burlington, and Winooski; the towns of Colchester, Milton, Georgia, and St. Albans; the city of St. Albans; and the towns of Swanton and Highgate before ending at I-89 just south of the customs offices at the Canada–US border.

History

 

Prior to the U.S. Numbered Highway System, the alignment of US 7 from Great Barrington, Massachusetts, to the Canada–US border north of Highgate Springs, Vermont, was part of the New England road marking system's Route 4. When first commissioned in 1927, US 7 ran along the entire length of Route 4, continuing south from Great Barrington along current Route 41. Route 41 continues into Connecticut up to the town of Sharon. Route 4 then went west along Route 343 to the New York state line, where the road continues along New York State Route 343 (NY 343) to Amenia. US 7 originally extended further south of Amenia all the way to New York City along NY 22 but was never signed within the city. By 1929, the southern terminus had been shifted to Norwalk, Connecticut. The previous designations of the new alignment south of Great Barrington were: Route 17 to North Canaan, State Highway 134 to New Milford, State Highway 128 to Danbury, Route 3 to Ridgefield, and State Highway 126 to Norwalk.

Until the 1970s, US 7 reached the Canada–US border, with the road continuing as provincial route 7. US 7 was then cut back to the I-89 interchange mentioned above, with I-89 continuing to the Canada–US border and becoming Route 133.

Major intersections

Connecticut
  I-95 in Norwalk
  US 1 in Norwalk
  I-84 in Danbury. The highways travel concurrently through the city.
   US 6 / US 202 in Danbury. US 6/US 7 travel concurrently through the city. US 7/US 202 travel concurrently to Brookfield.
  US 202 in Brookfield
  US 202 in Brookfield. The highways travel concurrently to New Milford.
  US 44 in North Canaan. The highways travel concurrently through the town.
Massachusetts
  US 20 in Lenox. The highways travel concurrently to Pittsfield.
Vermont
  US 4 in the Town of Rutland. The highways travel concurrently to the City of Rutland.
  I-189 on the South BurlingtonBurlington city line
  US 2 in Burlington. The highways travel concurrently to Colchester.
  I-89 in Colchester
  I-89 in Georgia
  I-89 in Highgate

[5]

See also

Special routes

References

  1. ^ a b (PDF). Connecticut Department of Transportation. December 31, 2014. Archived from the original (PDF) on March 4, 2016. Retrieved February 28, 2023.
  2. ^ a b . Mass.gov. October 16, 2009. Archived from the original on February 24, 2012. Retrieved October 6, 2014.
  3. ^ a b (PDF). Vermont Agency of Transportation. July 2005. Archived from the original (PDF) on September 21, 2006. Retrieved February 28, 2023.
  4. ^ Bepler, Laurie J.; Bepler, Virginia B. (1999). Route 7, the Road North: Norwalk to Canaan. Arcadia Publishing. ISBN 9780738502564. Retrieved July 17, 2018.
  5. ^ Rand McNally (2014). The Road Atlas (Walmart ed.). Chicago: Rand McNally. pp. 23, 48, 104. ISBN 0-528-00771-8.

External links

KML is from Wikidata
  • US 7 Expressway @ NYC Roads.com
  • US 7 (Greater New York Roads)
  • Endpoints of U.S. Highway 7

route, north, south, united, states, numbered, highway, western, england, that, runs, miles, through, states, connecticut, massachusetts, vermont, highway, southern, terminus, interstate, exit, norwalk, connecticut, northern, terminus, exit, near, village, hig. U S Route 7 US 7 is a north south United States Numbered Highway in western New England that runs for 308 miles 496 km through the states of Connecticut Massachusetts and Vermont The highway s southern terminus is at Interstate 95 I 95 exit 15 in Norwalk Connecticut Its northern terminus is at I 89 exit 22 near the village of Highgate Springs Vermont immediately south of the Canada US border U S Route 7US 7 highlighted in redRoute informationLength308 36 mi 1 2 3 496 26 km Existed1926 4 presentMajor junctionsSouth endI 95 in Norwalk CTMajor intersectionsUS 1 in Norwalk CT I 84 US 6 US 202 in Danbury CT US 202 in New Milford CT US 44 in North Canaan CT US 20 in Pittsfield MA US 4 in Rutland VT I 189 in South Burlington VT US 2 in Burlington and Colchester VTNorth endI 89 near Highgate Springs VTLocationCountryUnited StatesStatesConnecticut Massachusetts VermontHighway systemUnited States Numbered Highway SystemList Special Divided US 6US US 8 US 6CT Route 8 Route 6AMA Route 7A VT 5AVT VT 7A Route 3N E Route 5 Contents 1 Route description 1 1 Connecticut 1 2 Massachusetts 1 3 Vermont 2 History 3 Major intersections 4 See also 4 1 Special routes 5 References 6 External linksRoute description EditLengths mi 1 2 3 kmCT 78 22 125 88MA 53 85 86 66VT 176 29 283 71Total 308 36 496 26Connecticut Edit Main article U S Route 7 in Connecticut US 7 in Connecticut also known as Route 7 Ethan Allen Highway and Super 7 is mostly a surface road but has two short expressway sections in the Norwalk and Danbury areas US 7 begins in Norwalk with a four mile 6 4 km expressway to nearly the Wilton town line There are three exits on this short section signed as The Forty Third Infantry Division Memorial Highway named after the 43rd Infantry Division Exit 1 just past I 95 the southern terminus leads to the Central Norwalk Business District and US 1 Exit 2 leads to Route 123 which extends from US 1 in Norwalk to the New York state line passing through the town of New Canaan After exit 2 the expressway reduces to four lanes from six Exit 3 leads to Route 15 southbound also known as the Merritt Parkway This interchange was half built and only allows southbound access from the expressway northbound access is gained via Route 123 at exit 2 The expressway section ends at Grist Mill Road in Norwalk about one half mile 0 80 km past exit 3 US 7 then passes through Wilton as a four lane highway until just after Cannondale where it becomes a two lane highway It continues through Ridgefield as a two lane highway Near Danbury another expressway section was built beginning one mile 1 6 km south of I 84 near Danbury Municipal Airport This section is also signed as The Forty Third Infantry Division Memorial Highway Through Danbury proper US 7 overlaps with I 84 for about four miles 6 4 km Through this section of expressway I 84 US 7 US 6 and US 202 are concurrent US 7 and Route 202 then leave I 84 at exit 7 and travel on their own expressway for approximately eight miles 13 km to just south of the New Milford town line On this section there are two exits At exit 11 Federal Road US 202 exits the expressway and at exit 12 US 202 crosses back over US 7 On southbound US 7 the exit for I 84 eastbound is signed as exit 10 There is no exit number for I 84 west because of the concurrency The US 7 expressway then bypasses Brookfield to the west and terminates at an intersection with US 202 at the Fairfield Litchfield county line Construction on the section between I 84 and exit 12 began in 1974 and completed in 1976 The Brookfield bypass segment between exit 12 and the current expressway terminus opened in November 2009 after two years of construction The former US 7 route through Brookfield is now signed solely as US 202 US 7 is cosigned with US 202 until central New Milford where US 202 turns east with Route 67 while US 7 continues north Recent construction has also made large parts of US 7 between the terminus of the expressway and New Milford a four lane divided highway with at grade intersections North of New Milford center US 7 remains a two lane road through the rest of Connecticut and leaves Connecticut in the town of North Canaan Massachusetts Edit Main article U S Route 7 in Massachusetts US 7 enters Massachusetts in the town of Sheffield and remains a two lane road until Lenox There a four lane bypass of Lenox was built in two pieces and the old US 7 is now Route 7A US 7 continues on as a four lane road to Pittsfield where it is then a three lane road narrowing to two lanes for a short time then widening to four lanes in downtown Pittsfield US 7 leaves downtown Pittsfield as a two lane surface arterial and continues as a rural highway with occasional three lane stretches for climbing the grades along the Berkshires It passes west of Mount Greylock before passing through Williamstown connecting the Taconic Trail with the Mohawk Trail The road passes Williams College before entering Vermont Like Connecticut Massachusetts planned a US 7 expressway from the existing bypass in Lenox all the way to Lanesborough This plan was never initiated although land takings occurred The highway was ultimately canceled due to environmental and community opposition In Massachusetts US 7 passes through the towns of Sheffield Great Barrington Stockbridge Lee Lenox Pittsfield Lanesborough New Ashford and Williamstown before crossing into Pownal Vermont Vermont Edit Main article U S Route 7 in Vermont Original style Vermont US 7 shield with embossed features Westward view of Lake Champlain from US 7 in Charlotte Vermont US 7 remains a rural two lane highway from the Massachusetts line to Bennington where it becomes a grade separated freeway a mile north of Bennington Once complete US 7 will utilize this new bypass while the existing two lane road into town will become part of Vermont Route 7A VT 7A North of town the highway then again returns to expressway status For three miles 4 8 km it is a four lane freeway with a grass median US 7 then narrows down to an undivided two lane freeway with brief passing lanes in each direction Just north of Manchester the expressway ends From Manchester to Wallingford the road is two lanes and rural North of Wallingford US 7 becomes a four lane divided highway with at grade intersections until its southern junction with US 4 south of the city of Rutland From Rutland north the road is either two lane or four lane undivided uncontrolled road all the way to the Canada US border except between Shelburne and Burlington which is a four lane divided highway US 7 and US 2 are concurrent from Burlington to Colchester It is known as the Ethan Allen Highway for much of the path through Vermont In Vermont it passes through the towns of Pownal Bennington Shaftsbury Glastenbury Arlington Sunderland Manchester Dorset Danby Mount Tabor Wallingford Clarendon and Rutland the city of Rutland the towns of Pittsford Brandon Leicester Salisbury Middlebury New Haven Waltham Ferrisburg Charlotte and Shelburne the cities of South Burlington at which point I 89 begins to parallel it Burlington and Winooski the towns of Colchester Milton Georgia and St Albans the city of St Albans and the towns of Swanton and Highgate before ending at I 89 just south of the customs offices at the Canada US border History Edit Prior to the U S Numbered Highway System the alignment of US 7 from Great Barrington Massachusetts to the Canada US border north of Highgate Springs Vermont was part of the New England road marking system s Route 4 When first commissioned in 1927 US 7 ran along the entire length of Route 4 continuing south from Great Barrington along current Route 41 Route 41 continues into Connecticut up to the town of Sharon Route 4 then went west along Route 343 to the New York state line where the road continues along New York State Route 343 NY 343 to Amenia US 7 originally extended further south of Amenia all the way to New York City along NY 22 but was never signed within the city By 1929 the southern terminus had been shifted to Norwalk Connecticut The previous designations of the new alignment south of Great Barrington were Route 17 to North Canaan State Highway 134 to New Milford State Highway 128 to Danbury Route 3 to Ridgefield and State Highway 126 to Norwalk Until the 1970s US 7 reached the Canada US border with the road continuing as provincial route 7 US 7 was then cut back to the I 89 interchange mentioned above with I 89 continuing to the Canada US border and becoming Route 133 Major intersections EditConnecticut I 95 in Norwalk US 1 in Norwalk I 84 in Danbury The highways travel concurrently through the city US 6 US 202 in Danbury US 6 US 7 travel concurrently through the city US 7 US 202 travel concurrently to Brookfield US 202 in Brookfield US 202 in Brookfield The highways travel concurrently to New Milford US 44 in North Canaan The highways travel concurrently through the town Massachusetts US 20 in Lenox The highways travel concurrently to Pittsfield Vermont US 4 in the Town of Rutland The highways travel concurrently to the City of Rutland I 189 on the South Burlington Burlington city line US 2 in Burlington The highways travel concurrently to Colchester I 89 in Colchester I 89 in Georgia I 89 in Highgate 5 See also EditNew York State Route 22 parallels the state line on the New York side Connecticut Route 41 and Massachusetts Route 41 State Route 343 New York Connecticut Massachusetts Route 7A Vermont Route 7A Vermont Route 7B New England road marking systemSpecial routes Edit U S Route 7 Alternate an alternate route of US 7 through Burlington VermontReferences Edit a b Highway Log Connecticut State Numbered Routes And Roads PDF Connecticut Department of Transportation December 31 2014 Archived from the original PDF on March 4 2016 Retrieved February 28 2023 a b Executive Office of Transportation Office of Transportation Planning Roads Mass gov October 16 2009 Archived from the original on February 24 2012 Retrieved October 6 2014 a b 2004 Route Log AADTs State Highways PDF Vermont Agency of Transportation July 2005 Archived from the original PDF on September 21 2006 Retrieved February 28 2023 Bepler Laurie J Bepler Virginia B 1999 Route 7 the Road North Norwalk to Canaan Arcadia Publishing ISBN 9780738502564 Retrieved July 17 2018 Rand McNally 2014 The Road Atlas Walmart ed Chicago Rand McNally pp 23 48 104 ISBN 0 528 00771 8 External links EditKML file edit help Template Attached KML U S Route 7KML is from Wikidata Wikimedia Commons has media related to U S Route 7 US 7 Expressway NYC Roads com US 7 Greater New York Roads Endpoints of U S Highway 7 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title U S Route 7 amp oldid 1142264360, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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