Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Service plazas are located in pairs (one for each side of the turnpike) near mile markers 20, 76, 100, 139, 170, 197, and 237. The service plazas located in Lucas County west of Toledo at mile marker 49 were the least utilized, so were closed and demolished; the Swanton toll barrier was later built at the site.
US 127 in Seven Mile: SR 121 in Wayne Lakes: 1937: current SR 504: 1.29: 2.08 Staunton Township: Staunton Township 1937: 1982 SR 505: 10.39: 16.72 US 52 in Higginsport: SR 125 in Clark Township: 1937: current SR 506: 4.34: 6.98 SR 124 in Marshall Township: SR 753 in Brush Creek Township: 1937: current SR 507: 3.09: 4.97
ODOT between 2014 and 2016 completed a widening project between I-475 in Perrysburg and SR 15 in Findlay to add a third lane in each direction. The SR 15 interchange (which also features the north end of US 68) was subsequently rebuilt as well. Several miles north of the southerly I-475 junction, I-75 intersects with I-80/I-90 (Ohio Turnpike).
The SR 8B freeway, as it appeared on the 1964 Ohio highway map. On August 6, 1954, the portion of the North Expressway in Akron opened from Perkins Street to Cuyahoga Falls Avenue. [ 4 ] By 1962, it had been extended south to the Central Interchange and numbered Route 8B; it became mainline SR 8 in 1969 north of Market Street, and in its ...
The George V. Voinovich Bridges in Downtown Cleveland, 2022. In the western half of Ohio, I-90 is jointly signed with the Ohio Turnpike/I-80.The Ohio Turnpike/I-90 connector (designated exit 8A, now exit 142) was built in Lorain County in Amherst Township and Elyria Township in 1975.
State Route 58 (SR 58) is a north–south state highway in northern Ohio maintained by the Ohio Department of Transportation (ODOT). The 41.627 miles (66.992 km) that make up SR 58 serve the cities of Ashland, Wellington, Oberlin, Amherst, and Lorain in Ashland and Lorain Counties.
The 248.002 miles (399.121 km) that lie in Ohio are maintained by the Ohio Department of Transportation (ODOT). US 6 serves the major cities of Sandusky, Lorain, and Cleveland. The highway is also called the Grand Army of the Republic Highway to honor the Union forces of the U.S. Civil War. [1] The alternate name was designated in 1953.
before 1931 – Route 9 ran from Cincinnati to Michigan. [5] This highway followed the current U.S. Highway 127 from the Ohio River at Cincinnati to just south of Bryan and followed current Ohio State Route 15 northward to the Michigan state line.