|
|direction_a=West |terminus_a= at the New York state line in Greenwich |junction= |direction_b=East |terminus_b= at the Rhode Island state line in Killingly |counties=Fairfield, New Haven, Middlesex, New London, Windham }} The Connecticut Turnpike, now officially the Governor John Davis Lodge Turnpike, is a freeway and former toll road in Connecticut that runs (from southwest to northeast) from Greenwich to Killingly. The Turnpike is signed as Interstate 95 from the New York border at Greenwich to East Lyme, and then as Interstate 395 from East Lyme to Plainfield. A short, unnumbered section (unsigned State Road 695) continues the Turnpike where it ends at Killingly, merging into U.S. 6 at the Rhode Island border. The Turnpike is long; on I-95, on I-395, and on CT 695〔 and carries an annual average daily traffic of over 150,000 in some sections west of New Haven.〔(Connecticut Department of Transportation Traffic Log )〕 Most of the signage identifying the route as a "unified road" has been taken down in recent years. The easternmost section of the turnpike (SR 695) is not signed except as a connection between I-395 North and U.S. Route 6. Connecticut Turnpike trailblazers can still be found, although there are very few in existence today. One of the original Connecticut Turnpike trailblazers can be seen while driving along Center Street in Southport. More recently, exits on the I-395 portion of the Turnpike were renumbered based on I-395's mileage through Connecticut (e.g., Exit 77 renumbered to Exit 2, etc.). This renumbering of exits eliminated one of the last vestiges of the Turnpike's identity, as exit numbers on I-395 were a continuation of the Turnpike's exit numbering sequence. ==Route description== 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「Connecticut Turnpike」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
|