Transportation in Virginia
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Transportation in the Commonwealth of Virginia is by land, sea and air. Virginia's extensive network of highways and railroads were developed and built over a period almost 400 years, beginning almost immediately after the founding of Jamestown in 1607, and often incorporating old established trails of the Native Americans.
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[edit] History
[edit] Colonial period, 19th century
During the colonial period, the Virginia Colony was dependent upon the waterways as avenues of commerce, and James River Plantations such as John Rolfe's Varina Farms with their own wharfs on the rivers of the fall line (at present-day Richmond were soon shipping tobacco and other export crops abroad. Other important navigable rivers in this period were the Elizabeth, York, and Potomac.
By the 19th century, the Virginia Board of Public Works was funding transportation infrastructure improvements, stimulating such private enterprises as the James River and Kanawha Canal, the Chesterfield Railroad, and the Valley Turnpike. Claudius Crozet's innovative tunnels under the Blue Ridge Mountains were a key link in Collis P. Huntington's railroad linking Virginia to the Ohio River Valley in 1873. Soon thereafter, Pocahontas coal was riding the rails from the mountains eastbound for export via the Chesapeake and Ohio, Norfolk and Western and Virginian Railways with coal piers on Hampton Roads.
[edit] 20th-21st centuries
With urging from the state chapter founded in Roanoke in 1894 of the National Good Roads Movement, in 1906 the Virginia General Assembly created the first State Highway Commission. In 1932, the state's role was expanded when the provisions of the Byrd Road Act during the Great Depression brought most secondary roads in the counties into the scope of state control and maintenance.
In the mid-20th century, Virginia's Henry G. Shirley Memorial Highway in Northern Virginia pioneered HOV and reversible traffic lanes. Prior to the creation of the Interstate Highway System, Virginia had some other notable roads to handle heavy traffic including Military Highway in South Hampton Roads, Mercury Boulevard on the Virginia Peninsula, and State Route 168 which extended from west of Williamsburg to the North Carolina border near the eastern edge of the Great Dismal Swamp, including Tidewater Drive in the Norfolk area. The Richmond-Petersburg Turnpike was built to relieve heavy traffic on US1-301 between those two cities.
In 1957, The Hampton Roads Bridge-Tunnel, first of its kind, was completed, and was soon Incorporated into Interstate 64. The Chesapeake Bay Bridge-Tunnel completed in 1964 is the longest bridge-tunnel in the world. Interstate highways I-81 and I-95 are some of busiest roads of commerce on the East Coast.
Of course, people and property continue to travel by ship, as the first settlers did. The Atlantic Ocean is accessed by the more sheltered Chesapeake Bay and Hampton Roads, with 5 major navigable rivers offering a wide choice of ports and industrial sites. International shipping traffic continues to grow as intermodal port and rail facilities are expanded. The Virginia Port Authority even operates an inland port in the Shenandoah Valley.
The Wright Brothers are credited with first flight just south of Virginia at Kitty Hawk, North Carolina. Other early flights took place at Willoughby Spit near Norfolk. In modern times, major commercial airports are located around the state, with many additional general aviation facilities.
For those who wish to live in the past, at least for a visit, the Colonial Parkway, carefully shielded from commercial development, joins Colonial Williamsburg with Yorktown and Jamestown, the three points of the Historic Triangle. By riding the toll free Jamestown Ferry service across the James River, it is even possible to arrive at Jamestown Island by water, with a similar view to that of the first colonists. Virginia's scenic byways include the Skyline Drive in Shenandoah National Park and the Blue Ridge Parkway. Even in busy Northern Virginia, a bucolic interlude is available inside the beltway on the George Washington Memorial Parkway. The state has literally dozens of other stretches of roads designated as scenic byways, and VDOT distributes a free map showing them.
[edit] Highways and bridges
The Virginia State Highway System is an integrated system of roads maintained by the Virginia Department of Transportation (VDOT). As of 2005, the VDOT maintains 57,082 miles of state highways — the third largest system in the United States, after Texas and North Carolina.
[edit] Interstate highways
Virginia has an extensive network of Interstate Highways. The Interstate Highways, totaling 1118 miles (1799 km) in Virginia,[1] are freeways designated by the Federal Highway Administration and numbered by the American Association of State Highway and Transportation Officials. They are in a special class with respect to federal funding. These Interstate Highways are as follows:
- Three-digit Interstates are:
-
- Another planned route, I-895 is currently signed as State Route 895 and operated as toll road under a public-private financing partnership.
[edit] Primary highways
Primary highways, totaling 8111 miles (13,053 km),[1] consist of U.S. Routes, designated and numbered by the American Association of State Highway and Transportation Officials, and primary State Routes, designated and numbered by VDOT. Alternate, business, and bypass bannered routes, as well as wye connections (with a "Y" suffix appended to the number), are all considered primary routes.[2]
Primary routes are generally given numbers under 600. The two exceptions - State Route 785 and State Route 895 - are numbered as Interstate Highway spurs.
Major U.S. highways in Virginia include:
- U.S. Route 1
- US-11
- US-13
- US-15
- US-17
- US-19
- US-21
- US-23
- US-29
- US-33
- US-48
- US-50
- US-52
- US-58
- US-60
- US-211
- US-219
- US-220
- US-221
- US-250
- US-258
- U.S. Route 301
- US-340
- US-360
- US-421
- US-460
- U.S. Route 501
- US-522
[edit] Secondary highways
Virginia has 48,305 miles (77,739 km) of secondary routes.[1] These roads, numbered 600 and up, receive less funding than primary routes. Numbers are only unique within each county, and routes that cross county lines generally keep their numbers.
Under the provisions of the Byrd Road Act of 1932, the secondary roads in most of Virginia's counties are maintained by the Virginia Department of Transportation, an arrangement which a 1998 study found " unusual among the 50 states." (The study also identified such issues as drainage, speed limits, and planning and coordination of roads with development as those which local leaders felt should be within their ability to control). [1]
The streets and roads in two counties, Arlington and Henrico, as well as some of the incorporated towns, and all of the independent cities are maintained by the various localities. In the early 21st century, the Virginia General Assembly was considering legislation to allow some additional counties (most likely those in fast-growing areas) to choose to resume control and care for the secondary highways within their boundaries.
[edit] National Parkways
Several national parkways are located in Virginia. These include:
[edit] Beltways and bypasses
[edit] Northern Virginia
The Capital Beltway circles Washington D.C. through Northern Virginia, Maryland, and a tiny edge of the District of Columbia. The road is signed with Inner Loop and Outer Loop designations.
[edit] Hampton Roads
The Hampton Roads Beltway extends 56 miles on a long loop through the region, crossing the harbor on two toll-free bridge-tunnel facilities. These crossings are the Hampton Roads Bridge-Tunnel between Phoebus in Hampton and Willoughby Spit in Norfolk and the Monitor-Merrimac Memorial Bridge-Tunnel between Newport News and Suffolk. The Beltway connects with another Interstate highway and three arterial U.S. Highways at Bower's Hill near the northeastern edge of the Great Dismal Swamp. The road is signed with Inner Loop and Outer Loop designations.
Also in Hampton Roads, the Williamsburg area has State Route 199, a semi-circular limited access roadway also named the Humelsine Parkway which is sometimes locally referred to somewhat tongue-in-cheek as the "Williamsburg Beltway".
[edit] Richmond
The Richmond area does not officially have a beltway. However, it has two roads which effectively form portions of a beltway, although they do not completely encircle Richmond. These are Interstate 295 in the northwest, northern, and eastern portions, and State Route 288 in the southwest and western areas.
[edit] Bypasses
Many urban areas in Virginia have roads which form bypasses of the central portions. In some cases, semi-circumferential roadways exist, such as State Route 37 in the Winchester area, and State Route 199 in the Williamsburg and Historic Triangle area.
[edit] River and waterway crossings
[edit] Major bridges, tunnels, and bridge-tunnels
The Chesapeake Bay Bridge-Tunnel, a toll facility which links the region with Virginia's Eastern Shore which carries US 13. Completed in 1964, at over 17 miles, it is the longest bridge-tunnel in the world.
Virginia has many crossings of its rivers and waterways. Listed alphabetically, some of the larger named crossings include:
- 14th Street Bridge (I-395) (across Potomac River)
- Arland D. Williams Jr. Memorial Bridge (part of the 14th St bridge complex, across Potomac River)
- Berkley Bridge on I-264 at Elizabeth River, Norfolk
- Boulevard Bridge in Richmond
- Downtown Tunnel joining Portsmouth and Norfolk
- Edward E. Willey Bridge (across James River)
- George P. Coleman Bridge (across York River)
- Governor Harry W. Nice Memorial Bridge (mostly in Maryland)
- Hampton Roads Bridge-Tunnel (across mouth of Hampton Roads joining cities of Hampton and Norfolk)
- James River Bridge (across James River)
- Martin Luther King Jr. Memorial Bridge joining cities of Petersburg and Colonial Heights
- Midtown Tunnel (joining Portsmouth and Norfolk)
- Monitor-Merrimac Memorial Bridge-Tunnel (across Hampton Roads between cities of Newport News and Suffolk)
- Pocahontas Parkway Bridge (across James River)
- Powhite Parkway Bridge (across James River)
- Robert E. Lee Memorial Bridge (across James River)
- Theodore Roosevelt Bridge (mostly in DC) (across Potomac River)
- Varina-Enon Bridge (across James River)
- Woodrow Wilson Bridge (mostly in DC and Maryland)
- Wilson Creek Bridge (a.k.a. The Smart Road Bridge)
- World War II Veterans Memorial Bridge (across James River)
[edit] Ferry systems
[edit] Motor vehicle services
The Jamestown Ferry (also known as the Jamestown-Scotland Ferry) is an automobile ferry system on the James River connecting Jamestown in James City County with Scotland in Surry County. It carries State Route 31. Operated by VDOT, it is the only 24-hour state-run ferry operation in Virginia and has over 90 employees. It operates four ferryboats, the Pocahontas, the Williamsburg, the Surry, and the Virginia. The facility is toll-free.
The VDOT operates other toll-free ferries: the Merry Point ferry, which crosses the western end of the Corrotoman River in Lancaster County; the Sunnybank Ferry, crossing the Little Wicomico River in Northumberland County; and the Hatton Ferry, one of the last two poled ferries in the United States
[edit] Pedestrian ferry services
Additionally, Hampton Roads Transit's Paddlewheel Ferry on the Elizabeth River operates service (no motor vehicles) between Portsmouth and Norfolk and boasts the world's first natural gas-powered pedestrian ferry.
[edit] Local public transportation
[edit] Transit bus and paratransit systems
Virginia has a number of publicly-funded providers of transit bus and paratransit services. They include:
- Bay Transit (Urbanna)
- Blacksburg Transit
- Bristol Transit
- Charlottesville Transit
- Colonial Beach Transit
- Danville Transit
- Farmville Bus
- Fredericksburg Regional Transit
- Greater Lynchburg Transit
- Greater Richmond Transit Company (GRTC)
- Greater Roanoke Transit
- Hampton Roads Transit
- Harrisonburg Transit
- JAUNT (Charlottesville)
- Petersburg Area Transit
- Valley Metro (Roanoke)
- Williamsburg Area Transport (Historic Triangle)
- Winchester Transit
- WMATA (DC Metro area)
[edit] Light rail, bus rapid transit, maglev projects
Although no services of these types are currently operational, light rail service is in planning stages at Norfolk and Hampton-Newport News. The Norfolk system has received initial federal funding approval.
Richmond is working on plans for a heritage streetcar system.
The resort city of Virginia Beach was considering a Bus Rapid Transit (BRT) system similar that in use in Las Vegas, but plans were put on hold in early 2006. There is a small very experimental and innovative maglev project under development (but not yet in service) on campus at Old Dominion University in Norfolk.
[edit] Commuter rail, subway
Commuters in Northern Virginia have access to Virginia Railway Express (VRE) with suburban commuter rail service on lines south to Fredericksburg, and southwest to Manassas. The Washington Metro subway system operated by WMATA has lines in Northern Virginia as far west as the City of Fairfax and Vienna.
[edit] Intercity bus services
Intercity bus service is provided by Greyhound Lines and Carolina Trailways.
[edit] Railroads
[edit] Passenger rail
Virginia is served by passenger rail service provided by Amtrak. The Department of Rail and Public Transportation of the State of Virginia has studies underway for extending high speed passenger rail service to the Virginia Peninsula and South Hampton Roads areas, as well as a rail connections in Virginia to both the Northeast Corridor and the Southeast High Speed Rail Corridor. The Transdominion Express would serve a large portion of the south central regions of the state.
Virginia is also the northern point for Amtrak's Auto Train Service which allows passengers to take a motor vehicle, to ride an overnight trip to the southern stop in Sanford, Florida just out side of Orlando, Florida.
[edit] Freight railroads
Virginia is served by major Class I railroads Norfolk Southern and CSX. There are dozens of short line railroads, including the Buckingham Branch Railroad, the state's largest. Norfolk Southern, a Fortune 500 company, has its headquarters in Norfolk.
[edit] Air
Virginia is served by a number of major commercial airports. These include:
- Charlottesville-Albemarle Airport
- Lynchburg Regional Airport
- Newport News/Williamsburg International Airport
- Norfolk International Airport
- Richmond International Airport
- Roanoke Regional Airport
- Shenandoah Valley Regional Airport
- Washington Reagan National Airport
- Washington Dulles International Airport
[edit] Ports and waterways
Hampton Roads has become known as the "world's greatest natural harbor". The port is located only 18 miles from open ocean on one of the world's deepest, natural ice-free harbors. Since 1989, Hampton Roads has been the mid-Atlantic leader in U.S. waterborne foreign commerce and is ranked second nationally behind the Port of South Louisiana based on export tonnage. When import and export tonnage are combined, the Port of Hampton Roads ranks as the third largest port in the country (following the ports of New Orleans/South Louisiana and Houston. In 1996, Hampton Roads was ranked ninth among major U.S. ports in vessel port calls with approximately 2,700. In addition, this port is the U.S. leader in coal exports. The coal loading facilities in the Port of Hampton Roads are able to load in excess of 65 million tons annually, giving the port the largest, most efficient and modern coal loading facilities in the world.
The Hampton Roads region's economic base is largely port-related, including shipbuilding, ship repair, naval installations, cargo transfer and storage, and manufacturing related to the processing of imports and exports. Associated with the ports' military role are almost 50,000 federal civilian employees.
The harbor of Hampton Roads is an important highway of commerce, especially for the cities of Norfolk, Portsmouth, and Newport News. In Portsmouth, a few miles up the Elizabeth River, Norfolk Naval Shipyard is located. Newport News Shipbuilding & Dry Dock Company is located a short distance up the James River. There are also several smaller shipyards, numerous docks and terminals. Massive coal loading piers and facilities were established in the late 19th and early 20th century by the Chesapeake and Ohio Railway (C&O), Norfolk and Western Railway (N&W), and Virginian Railway (VGN). The latter two were predecessors of the Norfolk Southern Railway, a Class I railroad which has its headquarters in Norfolk, and continues to export coal from a large facility at Lambert's Point on the Elizabeth River. CSX Transportation now serves the former C&O facility at Newport News.
Virginia has extensive waterways. In addition to the lower portion of the Chesapeake Bay and the harbor of Hampton Roads, navigable rivers include:
The Atlantic Intracoastal Waterway passes through eastern Virginia.
The state operates an inland port facility near Front Royal.
[edit] Trivia
State Routes 785 and 895 are the currently the only primary routes with numbers higher than 599, in order to match future interstate numbering designations.
[edit] External links
- VDOT
- Virginia Department of Rail and Public Transportation
- Virginia Dept. of Motor Vehicles
- Amtrak
- Virginia Railway Express
- Greyhound and Carolina Trailways Buses
- Southeast High Speed Rail Corridor
- Virginia Department of Rail and Public Transportation
- Transdominion Express webpage
- VA Dept. of Transportation Ferry Information
- Hatton Ferry
- Hampton Roads Ferry Service