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Route 166 is a former alignment of New Jersey Route 4, designated in 1920 and U.S. Route 9, designated in 1927 through Toms River. The highways were realigned when the Garden State Parkway was built, and the original alignment became U.S. Route 9 Alternate in the 1950s, which was eventually replaced with Route 166.
CR 527 begins at a traffic light with Route 166 in Toms River. [1] Passing some local roads at the beginning, CR 527 crosses an interchange with the Garden State Parkway at .53 of a mile (0.85 km). More than a mile later, Route 37 crosses CR 527 at a traffic light. Continuing through Toms River, CR 571 merges into CR 527 for about 3/4 of a mile ...
The highway extends 43.96 miles (70.75 km) from Route 37 in Toms River Township to Route 27 in Princeton. Though it is designated a north–south county route by the New Jersey Department of Transportation (NJDOT), it is signed both as north–south and east–west inconsistently.
US 9 in Toms River: Church Road, Kettle Creek Road Green Island Road in Toms River: CR 621: 3.76 6.05 Forest Hills Parkway in Berkeley Township: Grand Central Parkway, Pinewald Road, Surf Avenue, Admiral Avenue Route 166 in Beachwood: CR 622: 2.80 4.51 CR 527 in Toms River: Cox Cro Road, Old Freehold Road New Hampshire Avenue in Toms River
TOMS RIVER - A portion of the Garden State Parkway has buckled, causing at least a 15-mile traffic jam in the southbound lanes from about Exit 98 to Exit 82A on Tuesday evening, according to the ...
The speed limit on the parkway is 65 mph (105 km/h) for most of its length. However, it is posted at 55 mph (90 km/h) on a five-mile (8.0 km) section near Toms River and on a 40-mile (64 km) section between Sayreville and Paramus. [3] The NJTA may temporarily reduce the speed limit when special hazards exist. [4]
The meeting ended during the start of a public hearing on item number 13 on the agenda, an ordinance that would reshape Toms River's public works department by placing the divisions of roads and ...
Prior to 1927, the route between present-day Route 70 in Lakehurst and present-day CR 527 in Toms River was a part of Pre-1927 Route 18, which was legislated in 1923 to run from Camden to Toms River. [6] In the 1927 New Jersey state highway renumbering, Route 37 was legislated to run from Route 27 and Route 30 (now Business US 1, US 206, and ...