词条 | New Jersey Route 15 |
释义 |
|state=NJ |type=NJ |route=15 |established=January 1, 1953[1] |length_mi=19.53 |length_ref=[2] |map=New Jersey Route 15 map.svg |direction_a=South |terminus_a={{jct|state=NJ|US|46|county2=Morris}} in Dover |junction={{plainlist|
}} |direction_b=North |terminus_b={{jct|state=NJ|US|206|CR|565}} in Frankford Township |counties=Morris, Sussex |previous_type=NJ |previous_route=14 |next_type=NJ |next_route=17 }} Route 15 is a state highway in New Jersey, spanning Morris and Sussex counties, which travels for {{convert|19|mi|km}} from U.S. Route 46 (East McFarland Street) in Dover to an intersection with U.S. Route 206 in Frankford Township. It becomes a divided highway in Jefferson Township until becoming a freeway bypass near Sparta. Route 15 was originally Route 6A from 1927 until 1953, when a renumbering occurred and the route was given its current number. Since the finishing of the Sparta Bypass, the New Jersey Department of Transportation and North Jersey Transportation Planning Authority have considered more bypasses and alignment changes for Route 15. Route descriptionRoute 15 currently exists in two disconnected segments. The southern segment begins in downtown Dover at an intersection with U.S. Route 46 (US 46). It follows Bergen Street south a short distance to Clinton Street, then turns west along Clinton Street through downtown Dover. This segment, which is signed in downtown Dover, was disconnected from the rest of the route when a new intersection between US 46 and Route 15 was constructed just northwest of downtown Dover. Route 15 formerly passed under US 46 along the Morristown and Erie Railway at the location of this new intersection. The southern segment ends at a dead end just southeast of the new intersection, with the northern segment of Route 15 starting again at US 46 almost directly above the rail line.[2][3] From the new intersection with US 46, Route 15 continues north, exiting Dover and entering Rockaway Township. The road remains two lanes past the turn for the Rockaway Townsquare Mall. For a very short distance Route 15 becomes a freeway as it crosses the Interstate 80 (I-80) interchange. A mile north, the road becomes a four lane divided highway with exits for a few businesses and Picatinny Arsenal. At that point, Route 15 leaves Rockaway Township and enters Jefferson Township. In Jefferson Township, the northbound and southbound lanes become about a quarter mile apart as it climbs up a steep mountain.[2] The Southbound lanes have businesses, easy access to them, and a speed limit of {{convert|40|mph|kph}} as this was the original lanes of Route 15 when it was only a two lane highway. The northbound lanes are nearly a freeway with limited access to businesses on the southbound lanes. The northbound lanes have a speed limit of 50 mph as well. These two lanes were built in the late 1960s.[2][4] Slightly farther north, Route 15 becomes a freeway and the northbound and southbound lanes come closer together. At this point, the original two-lane Route 15 breaks off into Route 181, heading through Jefferson Township and into downtown Sparta. Several miles north, the freeway leaves Morris County in Jefferson Township and enters Sussex County and Sparta Township, bypassing downtown Sparta.[2] After bypassing downtown Sparta, Route 181 ends and merges onto Route 15. The freeway then ends and Route 15 becomes a two-lane road. After Route 15 leaves Sparta and enters Lafayette Township, it merges with Route 94. Routes 15 and 94 run as a concurrency until Route 94 turns off to the southeast while Route 15 heads northwest. It continues into Frankford Township and comes to an end at U.S. Route 206 and County Route 565.[2][4] History{{infobox road small|state=NJ |type=NJ 1926 |county= |route=6A |location= Dover–Frankford Township |length_mi= |length_round= |length_ref= |formed=1927[11] |deleted=1953 }} Before the 1953 New Jersey state highway renumbering, NJ 15 was designated as State Highway Route 6A, beginning in 1927.[5] In the renumbering, NJ 15 was assigned. Originally Route 15 was a 2 lane road all the way down to Picatinny Arsenal. The road originally went through downtown Sparta and today that road is known as Route 181. In the mid-1960s, Route 15 was to expand and become 4 lanes several miles into Jefferson Township. But businesses were on both sides of this road making a widening difficult. So the additional 2 lanes were built behind the businesses on the left side of the road heading south. In 1974, a bypass freeway was built around the Sparta Business district and into Jefferson Township. The freeway began several miles into Sparta and would extend to the area where 15 was divided into 4 lanes back in the 1960s. In Sparta, New Jersey Department of Transportation commissioner Jack Lettire and state senator Robert Littell announced the completion of a project of restructuring the NJ 15-Houses Corner Road intersection, which began ground breaking in 2002 by James E. McGreevey, then-governor of New Jersey. The project was completed in August 2004. The original intersection was a signalized intersection with a blinking light and no left turn-off lanes from NJ 15. Because of heavy traffic, turning left onto Houses Corner Road became dangerous for motorists. The intersection has a full traffic light. The project cost a total of $15.5 million.[6] Wilson Drive and White Lake Road were also realigned to form one signalized intersection, with completion originally expected in 2008. The intersection was improved, with construction finishing on June 1, 2009, after eight months of work starting in October 2008. The project cost the state $2.3 million (2009 USD) to fund for construction by the North Jersey Transportation Planning Authority.[7][8] Studies are being made to improve the Route 15 corridor from I-80 to U.S. Route 206. Concepts include widening, the addition of climbing lanes, and a potential bypass of Lafayette.[9] The project to construct a new intersection at US 46 in Dover began in 2008; the project also entailed the replacement of bridges on US 46 over the Morristown and Erie Railway and Rockaway River. A temporary intersection was completed in January 2010 utilizing a former US 46 westbound–Route 15 northbound ramp.[10] The permanent intersection was completed in August 2011.[11] There is an ongoing local grassroots movement to honor the late U.S. President Ronald Reagan by renaming Route 15 after him. Most recently on February 2, 2012, a bill was introduced in the New Jersey General Assembly by Assemblymen Michael Patrick Carroll, Gary R. Chiusano, Jay Webber and Assemblywoman Alison Littell McHose to designate Route 15 as the "Ronald Reagan Memorial Highway".[12] {{-}}Major intersections{{Jcttop|state=NJ|length_ref=[2]}}{{NJint|county=Morris |cspan=10 |location=Dover |lspan=4 |mile=0.00 |road={{jct|state=NJ|US|46|CR|661|county2=Morris|I|80|to3=yes|name1=East McFarlan Street|name2=Mount Hope Avenue}} }}{{NJint |mile=0.35 |road=Dead end }}{{Jctgap|text={{convert|0.02|mi|adj=on}} gap in route}}{{NJint |mile=0.37 |road={{jct|state=NJ|US|46|name1=West McFarlan Street|city1=Clifton|city2=Lake Hopatcong}} }}{{NJint |location=Wharton |lspan=2 |mile=2.05 |type=incomplete |road={{jct|state=NJ|I|80|city1=Netcong|location2=Delaware Water Gap|city3=Denville|city4=Paterson|location5=New York}} |notes=Exit 34 on I-80; no direct northbound access to I-80 west }}{{NJint |mile=2.52 |type=incomplete |road={{jctname|state=NJ|CR|634|county1=Morris|dir1=south|name1=North Main Street|noshield1=yes}} |notes=Interchange; no northbound exit }}{{NJint |location=Rockaway Township |lspan=2 |mile=2.59 |road=Richard Mine Road – Mount Hope, Lake Denmark |notes=Interchange; southbound entrance via u-turn }}{{NJint |mile=2.68 |road=Picatinny Arsenal (Parker Road) |notes=Interchange }}{{NJint |location=Jefferson Township |lspan=2 |mile=6.65 |type=incomplete |road=Lake Shawnee |notes=Northbound exit only }}{{NJint |mile=6.93 |road={{jct|state=NJ|NJ|181|dir1=north|road=Weldon Road|city1=Lake Forest|city2=Woodport|city3=Milton|city4=Oak Ridge|location5=Lake Hopatcong North Shore}} |notes=Interchange; south end of freeway }}{{NJint |county=Sussex |cspan=6 |location=Sparta Township |lspan=3 |mile=10.34 |road={{jct|state=NJ|NJ|181|city1=Sparta|location2=Lake Mohawk Business District}} }}{{NJint |mile=12.52 |road={{jct|state=NJ|CR|517|city1=Sparta|city2=Franklin}} }}{{NJint |mile=14.11 |road={{jct|state=NJ|NJ|181|dir1=south|name1=Woodport Road|city1=Sparta|location2=Lake Mohawk Business District}} |notes=Northern end of freeway section }}{{NJint |type=concur |location=Lafayette Township |lspan=2 |mile=16.61 |road={{jct|state=NJ|NJ|94|dir1=north|city1=Franklin|city2=Hamburg|city3=Vernon}} |notes=Southern end of Route 94 concurrency }}{{NJint |type=concur |mile=16.89 |road={{jct|state=NJ|NJ|94|dir1=south|city1=Newton}} |notes=Northern end of Route 94 concurrency }}{{NJint |township=Frankford |mile=19.53 |road={{jct|state=NJ|US|206|CR|565|dir2=north|name2=Sussex Road|city1=Branchville|location2=Milford|city3=Newton|city4=Sussex|extra=airport|location5=Airport}} }}{{jctbtm|keys=concur,incomplete}} See also
References1. ^{{cite news |title=New Route Markers Go Up Next Month |url=http://www.fultonhistory.com/Newspapers%2021/Hackettstown%20NJ%20Gazette/Hackettstown%20NJ%20Gazette%201952-1953/Hackettstown%20NJ%20Gazette%201952-1953%20-%200243.pdf |accessdate=September 26, 2018 |work=The Hackettstown Gazette |date=December 18, 1952 |page=17}} 2. ^1 2 3 4 5 6 {{cite web|url=http://www.state.nj.us/transportation/refdata/sldiag/00000015__-.pdf|author=New Jersey Department of Transportation|title=Route 15 straight line diagram|accessdate=2007-04-08}} 3. ^{{google maps |url=https://www.google.com/maps/dir/40.887875,-74.5561245/40.8869523,-74.5613361/@40.8872026,-74.5597657,432m/am=t/data=!3m2!1e3!4b1!4m9!4m8!1m5!3m4!1m2!1d-74.5574099!2d40.8865853!3s0x89c30a8fce74cfef:0x69e70e95d967e048!1m0!3e0 |title=Route 15 - Dover segment |accessdate=January 20, 2019}} 4. ^1 {{google maps |url=https://www.google.com/maps/dir/40.88669,-74.5622033/41.120376,-74.7130399/@41.0038758,-74.7775584,55257m/am=t/data=!3m2!1e3!4b1!4m2!4m1!3e0 |accessdate=January 20, 2019}} 5. ^1 State of New Jersey, Laws of 1927, Chapter 319. 6. ^{{cite web| author=New Jersey Department of Transportation| year=2007| title=Route 15 and Houses Corner Road project completed in Sussex County| publisher=New Jersey Department of Transportation | accessdate=2007-09-29| url=http://www.state.nj.us/transportation/about/press/2004/080504-2.shtm}} 7. ^{{cite news|url=http://www.state.nj.us/transportation/about/press/2009/060109.shtm|title=NJDOT announces completion of intersection improvements at Route 15, Wilson Drive and White Lake Road in Sparta|date=June 1, 2009|publisher=New Jersey Department of Transportation|accessdate=September 10, 2009}} 8. ^{{cite web| author=North Jersey Transportation Planning Authority| year=2007| title=Route 15 Improvements| publisher=North Jersey Transportation Planning Authority| accessdate=2007-09-29| url=http://www.njtpa.org/capital_programming/WebTables/column3/Morris.pdf |archiveurl = https://web.archive.org/web/20070621031504/http://www.njtpa.org/capital_programming/WebTables/column3/Morris.pdf |archivedate = June 21, 2007}} 9. ^{{cite web| author=New Jersey Department of Transportation| year=2007| title=Route 15 bypass study| publisher=New Jersey Department of Transportation | accessdate=2007-09-28| url=http://www.state.nj.us/transportation/works/studies/rt15/}} 10. ^{{cite news |url=https://www.nj.com/news/local/index.ssf/2010/01/dover_intersection_of_routes_1.html |title=Dover intersection of Routes 15, 46 being realigned by state |author=Staff |date=January 28, 2010 |website=NJ.com |accessdate=January 20, 2019}} 11. ^{{cite web |url=https://www.state.nj.us/transportation/about/press/2011/081111.shtm |title=New Route 15 intersection with Route 46 opens in Dover |date=August 11, 2011 |publisher=New Jersey Department of Transportation (press release) |accessdate=January 20, 2019}} 12. ^New Jersey Assembly Bill 2208, introduced February 2, 2012. External links{{Commons category|New Jersey Route 15}}{{Attached KML|display=title,inline}}
4 : State highways in New Jersey|Limited-access roads in New Jersey|Transportation in Morris County, New Jersey|Transportation in Sussex County, New Jersey |
随便看 |
|
开放百科全书收录14589846条英语、德语、日语等多语种百科知识,基本涵盖了大多数领域的百科知识,是一部内容自由、开放的电子版国际百科全书。