New York State Route 17K

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NY Route 17K
Length: 22.37 mi[1] (36 km)
West end: NY 17 near Bloomingburg
Major
junctions:
I-84 in East Coldenham
I-87/Thruway in Newburgh
East end: US 9W/NY 32 in Newburgh
Counties: Orange
Numbered highways in New York
< NY 17J NY 17M >
Interstates - U.S. Routes - State Routes

New York State Route 17K is a state highway in southern New York, entirely within Orange County. The western terminus is at the intersection with old Route 17 west of the intersection with modern NY 17 located near Bloomingburg, which is in Sullivan County, New York. In Newburgh it widens into the main thoroughfare, Broadway. Midway across the city, 17K ends at US 9W.

The road can be divided into a half west of Montgomery, where it runs through relatively undeveloped land; and an eastern half where it closely parallels Interstate 84, to the point that it too is signed at Exit 17 of the New York State Thruway.

Contents

[edit] Route description

Communities

Route 17K's western terminus is at the intersection with the old, two-lane NY 17 (now designated as County Route 76) just short of the Orange-Sullivan county line, the bridge over the Shawangunk Kill near the center of Bloomingburg.

Ward's Bridge, which carries 17K into Montgomery
Ward's Bridge, which carries 17K into Montgomery

From there it has an interchange with NY 17 then heads roughly eastward, going up and down some gentle hills, to the first traffic light, the six-way intersection with NY 302 (also the Long Path hiking trail) that passes for downtown Bullville. The direction of the highway remains unchanged as it continues past several horse farms and Winding Hills Park to reach Ward's Bridge, where it crosses the Wallkill River and enters Montgomery.

The portion within the village is rather short, although consequential enough to include the traffic light at the northern end of NY 211. After the village, it passes the combined building of Valley Central High School and Valley Central Middle School. The growing population of the area has added more traffic to the highway in recent years, forcing the school board to increase the stagger between the two schools' schedule.

Orange County Choppers store
Orange County Choppers store

This has also complicated Scotts Corners, the intersection with NY 208 a mile past the schools. Despite heavier rush-hour traffic due to the nearby I-84 exchange, both roads remain two-lane, with plans to expand any of them strongly resisted by local residents who fear the increase in development that might ensue. Just past the intersection, the brand-new headquarters of Walden Federal bank sit atop a hill on the north and a strip mall opposite contains another traffic magnet, the Orange County Choppers' retail store, which draws customers from a great distance.

Shortly afterward, Berea Elementary School adds its traffic to the nearby intersection. Past it, 17K remains rather undeveloped, with the odd house, store or side street breaking the woods. Much of the land here is owned by the county for another one of its parks.

The next traffic light, Coldenham Road, was until recently a blinker, another testament to increasing development in northern Orange County. From the east, it provides a good shortcut to Walden.

Widening of 17K at Drury Lane, December 2006.
Widening of 17K at Drury Lane, December 2006.

17K continues on toward its next light, Drury Lane. As of 2007 the road is being widened through here to support increased traffic expected when Drury is upgraded from Orange County Route 54 into NY 747 to carry traffic from the interchange being constructed at I-84 to a new access road to Stewart International Airport. To avoid possible damage to the Catskill Aqueduct, which crosses 17K here, a new section of road was built from the existing Drury just north of the interstate to connect with Stone Castle Road, which was itself slightly relocated to the west to create a four-way intersection. The current Drury will then end in a cul-de-sac just short of the exit.[2] A Valero convenience store and gas station opened at the intersection to serve interstate travelers in late 2006.

After Drury, 17K passes yet another building of the Valley Central School District, East Coldenham Elementary School. In 1989, 16 students died here when a wall collapsed during a freak tornado.

Development along the highway begins to increase at this point as 17K itself intersects I-84 and runs along the northern boundary of the airport. The Newburgh Auto Auction's vast parking lots are visible to the north and commercial hangars to the south. The Air National Guard base can also be seen, with several large C-5 cargo planes usually parked on the tarmac in front of their hangars. The base's entrance road, secured with a series of concrete barriers since the September 11, 2001 attacks, marks the end of the airport property.

Next, 17K crosses over the Thruway. Actual access will not come for about another half mile, but the road widens to four lanes with a middle turn lane and becomes heavily developed as it reaches the busy intersection with the Newburgh area's main commercial strip, NY 300. A short distance past this light is the entrance ramp to the Thruway, a long loop back to the toll booth which also picks up traffic from 84 and 300 as well.

The four-lane section continues until the Newburgh city limit, where it narrows to two lanes for several primarily residential blocks before widening into Broadway. A few blocks later, NY 207 reaches its eastern terminus. Further on, NY 32 comes in from the south as Lake Street. The two make the only concurrency along 17K for several more blocks to the US 9W junction at Robinson Street. Here 17K ends while 32 joins 9W.

[edit] History

An original stone marker from the Newburgh-Cochecton Turnpike along Route 17K in the Town of Montgomery.
An original stone marker from the Newburgh-Cochecton Turnpike along Route 17K in the Town of Montgomery.

Route 17K follows the route of the Newburgh-Cochecton Turnpike, one of the first in the state. Stone markers indicating the distance from Newburgh can still be seen by the roadside at several locations.

In the 1920s, the section from Montgomery to Newburgh was part of old New York State Route 8, a route that went from the New Jersey state line at Unionville via Middletown to Newburgh. Old Route 8 from the New Jersey line to Montgomery was renumbered to 84 in the 1930 renumbering. The piece from Montgomery to Newburgh, plus the previously unnumbered segment from Bloomingburg to Montgomery was designated as New York State Route 215. The 215 designation was short-lived. The change to the 17K designation took place sometime in the mid-1930s.

The route may not retain 17K for much longer either. Once all of the existing NY 17 freeway has been redesignated as Interstate 86, 17K will no longer connect to its parent route. New York's Department of Transportation has not indicated what its plans are, but it has historically renumbered other letter-suffixed routes when they no longer connected to parent routes.

[edit] Major intersections

County Location Mile[3] Road(s) Notes
Orange Bloomingburg 0.00 CR 76
Bloomingburg Road (Old Route 17)
Official western terminus of NY 17K.
Wallkill 0.36 NY 17 Exit 116 (NY 17).
Bullville 3.72 NY 302  
Village of Montgomery 10.66 NY 211 Eastern terminus of NY 211.
Scotts Corners 12.59 NY 208  
East Coldenham ~16.1 NY 747 Designation will be official once construction of new intersection at Stone Castle Road is complete. Will be northern terminus of 747.
17.39 I-84 Exit 6 (I-84).
Town of Newburgh ~19.6 I-87/Thruway NY 17K passes over I-87/Thruway.
19.91 NY 300
Union Avenue
 
20.09 I-87/Thruway Exit 17 (I-87/Thruway).
Entrance displaced almost a mile from actual Thruway crossing.
City of Newburgh 21.39 NY 207
Little Britain Road/Wisner Avenue
Eastern terminus of NY 207.
22.14 NY 32
Lake Street
Western terminus of overlap.
22.37 US 9W
NY 32
Robinson Avenue
Eastern terminus of NY 17K/32 overlap.
Legend
Crossing, no access Concurrency termini Decommissioned Unconstructed Closed

[edit] References

  1. ^ New York Routes - New York State Route 17K
  2. ^ Rife, Judy; February 11, 2007; "Traveling through the new Route 747"; Times-Herald Record; retrieved February 12, 2007.
  3. ^ NYSDOT Traffic Data Report - Routes 15 to 23. Retrieved on 2007-02-17.