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The road is owned and maintained by the Ohio Turnpike and Infrastructure Commission (OTIC), headquartered in Berea. [a] Built from 1949 to 1955, construction for the roadway was completed a year prior to the Interstate Highway Act. The modern Ohio Turnpike is signed as three Interstate highways: I-76, I-80 and I-90.
The Ohio Department of Transportation currently operates the seventh-largest highway system in the United States [33] and the sixth-largest interstate system measured by total lane-miles. [34] These highways support the fifth-greatest traffic volume by total vehicle miles, [ 35 ] the third-greatest value of commercial freight, and contain the ...
Ohio Turnpike has a new toll system The Ohio Turnpike changed its toll systems and built new toll plazas in April, which allows E-Zpass drivers to pass through without stopping, according to the ...
From the mid-1960s to 1978, the part of I-90 running from the Ohio Turnpike in Lorain County to the interchange with I-71 and what is now I-490 was built. The final section of that part of the road opened on November 4 of that year. [12] Originally, I-90 was going to be parallel to, and north of, I-80/Ohio Turnpike from Lorain west to Toledo ...
Motorists enter and exit the Ohio Turnpike at the state Route 8 toll Plaza in Boston Heights in 2014. The Turnpike is completing and rolling out its largest improvement project since 1955.
I-271 in Ohio lacks a direct interchange with the I-80 section of the Ohio Turnpike; traffic interchanges between the two via I-77 and Ohio State Route 8, which both pass nearby. I-475 has no direct interchange with I-80 / I-90 on the Ohio Turnpike near Toledo., though there is an indirect connection via US 20 and Dussel Drive.
The local–express lanes begin at the southern interchange of U.S. Route 422 (US 422) and continue northward slightly beyond the end of I-271. The northbound express lanes allow access to all exits (excluding Chagrin Boulevard, Harvard Road, and State Route 175 (SR 175), a southbound-only exit).
U.S. Route 6 (US 6) is a part of the United States Numbered Highway System that runs from Bishop, California, to Provincetown, Massachusetts.In Ohio, the road runs west–east from the Indiana state line near Edgerton to the Pennsylvania state line near Andover.