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The I-84 Hartford Project [29] is a Connecticut Department of Transportation (CTDOT) project to address structural deficiencies within the I-84 corridor approximately between Flatbush Avenue (exit 45) and the I-91 interchange in Hartford, including a 3,200-foot (980 m) elevated section known as the Aetna Viaduct. Since it became apparent in the ...
Connecticut authorities initially agreed to change the size of their tokens, [16] but later reneged and the problem went unsolved until 1985, when Connecticut discontinued tolls on the turnpike. [17] At that time, the MTA was paid 17.5 cents for each of more than two million tokens that had been collected during the three-year "token war". [17]
I-84 has two current and two former auxiliary routes. I-384 is a spur of I-84 in Manchester, Connecticut. I-684 connects I-84 in Brewster, New York, with I-287 in Harrison, New York. I-284 was a planned but never built expressway relocation of US 5 to bypass East Hartford, Connecticut, along the eastern shore of the Connecticut River.
Interstate 84 (I-84) is a part of the Interstate Highway System that runs from Dunmore, Pennsylvania, to Sturbridge, Massachusetts, in the eastern United States. In New York , I-84 extends 71.46 miles (115.00 km) from the Pennsylvania state line at Port Jervis to the Connecticut state line east of Brewster .
$0.59~$1.84 [73] All-electronic toll; allows EZ TAG, TxTag, TollTag, and Pay by Mail 183A Toll Road: 11.6 18.7 ... Connecticut Turnpike — tolls removed in 1985;
Early designation for the extension of I-84 from East Hartford to Providence. Re-designated as I-84 in 1968. Completed sections around Manchester and Willimantic re-designated as I-384 and US 6, respectively, in 1984 when East Hartford-Providence I-84 extension was cancelled I-84: 97.90: 157.55 I-84 at the New York state line
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First toll road in New England and second in the country (the first was the road over Snicker's Gap, Virginia, chartered in 1785) Greenwich Road: October 1792: Boston Post Road in Greenwich: U.S. Route 1: Became part of the Connecticut Turnpike in 1806 New London and Windham County Turnpike: May 1795