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Interstate 95 (abbreviated I-95) is an Interstate Highway that runs 1,927 miles (3,101 kilometers) north-south along the east coast of the United States. The southern terminus is in the city of Miami, Florida (Map), at a junction with U.S. Route 1; the northern terminus is at the Canadian border at Houlton, Maine (Map), where it becomes New Brunswick Route 95.

Interstate 95 is one of the best-known, most important, and most heavily travelled highways in the Interstate system. It serves and connects the major cities along the Northeast corridor, and it is the major north-south highway along the east coast. It is the longest north-south Interstate highway (five east-west routes are longer), and it passes through more states (15) than any other Interstate.

I-95 is the only long-distance Interstate in the original plans that is not yet completed. Due to the cancellation of the Somerset Freeway, the section in Pennsylvania is not contiguous with the main section in New Jersey. Once the Pennsylvania Turnpike/Interstate 95 Interchange Project is completed around 2010, I-95 will finally be completed.

Length and major cities


FL 382.17FDOT GIS data 615.04 GA 112.03 (PDF) 180.29 SC 198.76Federal Highway Administration Route Log and Finder List, Main Routes of the Dwight D. Eisenhower National System Of Interstate and Defense Highways as of October 31, 2002 319.87 NC 181.71 292.43 VA 178.73 287.64 DC 0.11 0.18 MD 109.05Maryland State Highway Administration, December 31, 2004 Highway Location Reference 175.50 DE 23.43 37.71 PA 51.08 82.21 NJ 77.96 (main route)
8.77 (Trenton area)
11.03 (west spur)
97.76 (total)New Jersey Department of Transportation, 2005 Straight Line Diagrams 125.46
14.11
17.75
157.33 NY 23.50 37.82 CT 111.57Connecticut State Numbered Routes and Roads as of December 31, 2004 (PDF) 179.55 RI 43.3RIGIS data - "Roads - Primary" and "Roads - State" 69.7 MA 91.95 147.98 NH 16.20GRANIT GIS data - NH Public Roads 26.08 ME 305 491 Bolded cities are officially-designated control cities for signs.

Intersections with other interstates


From south to north:

Spur routes


Tolls


Portions of the highway have or used to have tolls:

Notes


  • The highway's spurs have set three records. I-95 has the most "child" highways of any interstate. There are soon to be eight separate I-295s, making this designation used for the most highways. Also, six I-695s were planned, but were subsequently postponed or never built, setting another record.

  • The highway was known as a drug route and was nicknamed Cocaine Alley.

  • East-West spur on FL 528 travels between Orlando and Cape Canaveral, Florida; location of Kennedy Space Center.

  • There are two unsigned spur routes from the Washington area. I-695 is an unsigned route that connects I-395 and I-295; and I-595 to Annapolis is better known as US 50/301. (There is another I-695 not too far to the north, a full beltway around Baltimore.)

  • Originally, I-95 was supposed to go through Washington, D.C. instead of around it. The section through the city was re-designated as I-395; it does not connect with I-95 at its northern end, but does at its southern end. The Baltimore-Washington Parkway is not an interstate, but if it were, it would have been I-295; the section not controlled by the National Park Service is designated MD 295, while the portion of the Anacostia Freeway in Washington not designated I-295 is DC 295 – the District's only "state highway". The Capital Beltway article has more about this stretch of highway.

  • A substantial portion of the Capital Beltway in Virginia and Maryland is also Interstate 95; additionally, there is a very small portion at the Woodrow Wilson Bridge where the road actually crosses through an edge of the District of Columbia in the Potomac River. (This small area is within the boundaries surveyed in straight lines when the District was carved out of Virginia and Maryland upon its formation in 1790).

  • The light towers along I-95 between the I-495 Capital Beltway and the Baltimore city line contain either mercury vapor or metal halide streetlights, both of which cast a soft white light. Once I-95 enters Baltimore, the light towers contain high-pressure sodium lights, which are bright orange. North of Baltimore, there are mercury vapor/metal halide towers at four more interchanges. Light towers are very common on Interstate highways, especially in urban areas, and most of them contain sodium lighting. They usually carry three or four lights, but some light towers can carry as many as 12.

  • At eight lanes wide, the Fort McHenry Tunnel is among the widest underwater tunnels in the world. There are four tubes, each of them carrying two lanes.

  • In Baltimore, two interstate highways (I-70 and I-83) were planned to intersect with I-95, but they were both cancelled, along with I-170 (which is now part of US 40). I-70 ends unceremoniously at a Park & Ride lot just before the Baltimore city line, and I-83 ends in the downtown district. Ramp stubs remain from both interchanges. Aerial photos of ghost ramps: To I-70: *," target="_blank" >[http://maps.google.com/maps?q=Baltimore+MD&ll=39.281849,-76.550079&spn=0.001802,0.005563&t=k

  • Originally, a bridge, possibly a suspension bridge, was planned to carry I-95 over Baltimore Harbor, and a tunnel was planned for I-695. Opposition prevented the I-95 bridge from being built (because it would've blocked the view of the Baltimore skyline and Fort McHenry), and it switched positions with the I-695 tunnel, which had also been rejected. The two crossings became the Key Bridge for I-695, and the Fort McHenry Tunnel for I-95.

  • The I-895 Harbor Tunnel Thruway in Baltimore intersects with I-95 at three different points. At one of those crossings (where the two Baltimore tunnels are located), there are no ramps between the Thruway and the I-95 freeway.

  • I-395, a skyway into downtown Baltimore, was once considered the shortest three-digit Interstate route in the country.

  • Also, an I-895 was planned to connect I-95 and I-295 south of Trenton, with the bridge over the Delaware River being a replacement of the Burlington-Bristol Bridge, making a complete loop of Trenton. This was never built, and the Pennsylvania Turnpike Extension would be the interstate in the area if a connection between it and I-295 were ever built.

  • I-895 around Providence was also planned, but it was never built.

  • The Pocahontas Parkway in Virginia was supposed to be designated I-895. However, due to circumstances surrounding its construction (namely, it opened as a toll road while having received federal funds), it was disqualified as an Interstate.

  • I-95 in Massachusetts loops around Boston along Massachusetts State Highway 128. I-95 was supposed to go through Boston instead of around it but, due to pressure from local residents, all proposed interstate highways within 128 were cancelled in 1972 by Governor Francis Sargent, the exception being the completion of Interstate 93 to Boston. The only section of I-95 completed within the 128 beltway by the Massachusetts Department of Transportation was part of the highway north of Boston to Saugus, called the Northeast Expressway which is now part of U.S. Route 1. Between 1972 and 1974, plans were to extend I-95 along a northly extension of the Northeast Expressway to Route 128 in Danvers. During this time, I-95 was officially routed along Route 128 from Canton to Braintree and along Massachusetts Route 3 from Braintree to intersection with the Northeast Expressway in Boston. When the extension was cancelled in 1974, I-95's route shifted to where it is today (along Route 128), and I-93 was extended to meet I-95 in Canton. Plans for the abandoned roadways can still be seen going from the end of the Northeast Expressway to the Saugus River in Saugus, Massachusetts. Furthermore, on the south end in Canton, there is an abandoned stretch north of the trumpet interchange at I-95 and I-93. From aerial photographs, the planned configuration of the junctions is apparent. *

  • Across the Canadian border near Houlton, Maine, I-95 continues in Canada as New Brunswick Highway 95. This is the one of two places where an Interstate and its Canadian extension have the same route number; the other is at the north end of Interstate 29. (However, each of these Canadian extensions runs for less than ten miles before connecting to another highway.)

  • I-95 was recently rerouted in Maine. Before 2004, the Maine Turnpike between the Falmouth Spur (near Portland, Maine) and Gardiner, Maine was signed as I-495, and I-95 followed a free expressway parallel to the east. Now, the entire Maine Turnpike is signed as I-95, the old I-95 free highway between the Falmouth Spur and Gardiner has been resigned as an extension of I-295 from Portland, and I-495 now only exists as the secret designation for the short Falmouth Spur. The official reason for this change was "to avoid confusion." However, some point out that the new signage might be a ploy to encourage through traffic to use the toll Maine Turnpike instead of the slightly shorter parallel free expressway, and that busy traffic heading for much of the Maine coast must now change from I-95 to I-295 before exiting on U.S. Route 1.

  • A small, disused cemetery lies on the road shoulder near Kennebunk, Maine. Although it is less than five feet from the roadside, crews have taken care to preserve it, even erecting a fence around the tombstones so that snowplows do not cause any damage.

Disasters


On February 18, 1981, in Stafford County, Virginia, eleven people died when a commuter bus lost control near Quantico and fell into Chopawamsic Creek.

In January 1983, a truck with a brake failure slammed into a line of cars waiting to pay a toll on I-95 in Stratford, Connecticut. Seven people were killed. This accident is what partially led to the removal of toll barriers throughout Connecticut, which was completed six years after.

On the morning of June 28, 1983, a 100 ft (30 meter) section of the Mianus River Bridge in the Cos Cob section of Greenwich, Connecticut collapsed, plunging northbound I-95 traffic into the river below, killing three. The collapse was blamed on the failure of the steel pins to hold the horizontal beams together and inadequate inspection prior to the collapse. Northbound traffic was diverted on this section of I-95 for 25 days. Southbound traffic was unaffected.

One January 19, 2002, an overtall tractor-trailer truck struck the underpass of U.S. Route 58 at Exit 11 of I-95 in Emporia, Virginia. The crash almost completely demolished the bridge, reducing it to only one passable lane (westbound). Emergency repairs to shore the bridge and open a second lane for eastbound traffic took weeks. Full repairs took many months.

On February 1, 2004, a tanker truck fell onto the northbound lanes of I-95 as it was entering the southbound side from the Harbor Tunnel Thruway in Howard County, Maryland, just south of Baltimore. The truck driver was killed, along with the occupants in additional vehicles traveling north on I-95 (including a pickup truck). The northbound lanes of I-95 were closed to traffic overnight, as cleanup crews cleared the highway of debris from the crash. It is believed that the truck fell onto I-95 while it was crossing the overpass marking the Thruway's southern terminus.

On March 26, 2004, a bridge on I-95 in Bridgeport, Connecticut was partly melted by the explosion of a tanker truck carrying over 11,900 gallons (45,000 liters) of fuel oil. Repairs were estimated to take at least two weeks, but the highway was opened to northbound traffic in only a few days. Southbound traffic resumed about a week later.

On October 16, 2004, a sudden hail storm just north of Baltimore caused a string of 17 accidents, involving 92 vehicles, in an 11-mile stretch of I-95. Both Northbound and Southbound lanes were closed down. The Northbound lanes were reopened seven hours later, and the Southbound lanes required a further 12 hours to clean.

On the morning of July 25, 2005, a Philadelphia-bound Greyhound bus crashed and overturned on the rain-soaked lanes of northbound I-95 in Baltimore, Maryland, near the junction with US 40 in the eastern part of the city, before the junction with I-895. Fourteen people were seriously injured, although nobody died. Slick roads caused by an early-morning thunderstorm was blamed for the crash. The highway was closed in the northbound direction for hours.

On the morning of November 23, 2005, a tanker truck exploded on southbound I-95 just north of the Capital Beltway (I-495) in Prince George's County, Maryland. The highway was damaged and was closed for several hours on the day before Thanksgiving, one of the busiest travel days of the year.

Early in the morning of January 9, 2006, human remains were found on the northbound lanes of I-95 near its junction with Maryland Route 175 in Howard County, Maryland. The northbound lanes were closed for seven hours while the scene was investigated.

See also


External links


  • http://www.usastar.com/i95/homepage.htm
  • Interstate 95 at Exitlists.com

References


Interstate 95

Interstate 95

 

This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the "Interstate 95".

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