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The Garden State Parkway (GSP), originally known as the Route 4 Parkway or Route 4 Freeway, [2] is a controlled-access toll road that stretches the north–south length of eastern New Jersey from the state's southernmost tip near Cape May north to the New York state line at Montvale. Its name refers to New Jersey's nickname, the "Garden
CR 539 heads through decreasing residential development as it heads into the densely forested Pine Barrens and intersects CR 602 prior to an interchange with the Garden State Parkway. Following this interchange, the speed limit of the road rises to 55 miles per hour (89 km/h), the route comes to a junction with CR 606, and passes through the ...
The agency is headquartered in Woodbridge Township, New Jersey. The NJTA was created in 1949 to oversee construction and maintenance of the New Jersey Turnpike. In 2003, the authority assumed control of the Garden State Parkway, which had previously been maintained by an agency known as the New Jersey Highway Authority (NJHA).
Pothole repair on the Garden State Parkway will close two lanes southbound between exit 157 in Elmwood Park and exit 154 in Clifton, 10 p.m. April 3 to 6 a.m. April 4. Installation of traffic ...
The average increase for passenger vehicles on the New Jersey Turnpike will be 15 cents. The average increase for passenger vehicles on the Garden State Parkway will be 5 cents, said Tom Feeney, a ...
Up to three lanes will be closed for milling and paving operations on the Garden State Parkway southbound between exit 144 in Irvington and exit 138 in Kenilworth, from 9 p.m. to 6 a.m., Nov. 13 ...
Route 167 is a short, 0.77-mile-long (1.24 km) state highway in Atlantic and Burlington counties in New Jersey.The route is one of the few discontinuous state highways in New Jersey, split by wetlands, the Garden State Parkway and the Mullica River.
In 1952, the New Jersey Highway Authority (NJHA) was created to facilitate the construction of the Garden State Parkway. [7] In October 1954, the NJHA received bids for constructing a 3,650-foot (1,110 m) bridge crossing the Great Egg Harbor Bay, beginning at Beesley's Point, as well as a 750-foot (230 m) bridge crossing Drag Channel.