Interstate 676

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Interstate 676
Auxiliary route of the Interstate Highway System
Length: 6.90 mi[1] (11.10 km)
Formed: 1964 (from I-76),[2] opened to traffic 1991[3]
West end: I-76/US 30 in Philadelphia, PA
Major
junctions:
I-95 in Philadelphia, PA
US 30 in Gloucester City, NJ
South end: I-76 in Camden, NJ
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Interstate 676 (abbreviated I-676) is an interstate highway that serves as a major thoroughfare through Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, where it is known as the Vine Street Expressway, and Camden, New Jersey, where it is known as the northern segment of the North-South Freeway, as well as the Martin Luther King, Jr. Memorial Highway. Its western terminus is at Interstate 76 in Philadelphia near the Philadelphia Museum of Art. From there it heads east towards the Ben Franklin Bridge[4]. On the east (New Jersey) side of the bridge, the highway heads south to its southern terminus at Interstate 76 in Gloucester City, New Jersey near the Walt Whitman Bridge[5].

Originally, the designation for this stretch of highway was Interstate 80S, with Interstate 680 continuing on the Schuylkill Expressway to the Walt Whitman Bridge.[6] But on April 16, 1963, Pennsylvania wanted to renumber its Interstate numbers. Part of this was the renumbering from I-80S into I-76, and all of its auxiliary routes into I-x76. The FHWA approved the request on February 26, 1964[2]. However, the Philadelphia portion of the highway was not open to traffic until January 10, 1991[3].

Contents

[edit] Route description

Lengths
mi km
PA 2.15[1] 3.44
NJ 4.75[7] 7.65

[edit] Pennsylvania

I-676 splits from the Vine Street Expressway.
I-676 splits from the Vine Street Expressway.

I-676 begins at an interchange with I-76. It immediately crosses the Schuylkill River and enters a depressed road cut. In this road cut, many streets, such as 20th Street/Ben Franklin Parkway, 18th Street, and Broad Street pass over the expressway. I-676 interchanges with a few of these streets (see exit list below). After passing under 10th Street, the last street that I-676 passes under, the highway rises up, and signs direct drivers either to exit the Vine Street Expressway (which diverges from I-676 here) and continue on I-676 across the Ben Franklin Bridge, or to keep left for I-95.

After exiting the Vine Street Expressway, I-676 traffic is directed through a brief at-grade portion along city streets, a rare example of a non–limited access section of Interstate highway. This arrangement was chosen due to concerns that building onramps to the Ben Franklin Bridge would have effectively destroyed Franklin Square, a historically sensitive site. The Vine Street Expressway (without I-676) continues unsigned for a short distance to its terminus at I-95.

[edit] New Jersey

After crossing the bridge, there is an immediate ramp to 6th Street in Camden, which are near the toll booths for westbound traffic. Now, drivers are now directed to take either US 30 or I-676. If continued on I-676, the highway turns south, and rises onto a viaduct through the Camden waterfront. The highway then interchanges with a few streets in Camden, and then ends at I-76.

[edit] Exit list

County Location Mile[7][8] # Destinations Notes
Philadelphia
(Pennsylvania)
Philadelphia 0.00 I-76 / US 30 west – Valley Forge, Philadelphia International Airport Westbound exit and eastbound entrance
0.41 Ben Franklin Parkway, 23rd Street
0.78 PA 611 (Broad Street) – Central Philadelphia
1.43 8th Street south – Chinatown At-grade intersection westbound; interchange eastbound
1.47 I-95 (Delaware Expressway) – Trenton, Chester
To PA 611 / Vine Street – Pennsylvania Convention Center Westbound exit and eastbound entrance
1.86 6th Street south – Independence Hall At-grade intersection
5th Street Westbound exit and eastbound entrance
Benjamin Franklin Bridge over the Delaware River
Camden
(New Jersey)
Camden
3.84 5B 6th Street, Broadway – Downtown Camden, Rutgers University No exit number southbound
3.50 US 30 east to US 130 / NJTPCherry Hill, Trenton South end of US 30 overlap; northbound exit is via exit 5A
5B Market Street – Downtown Camden, Adventure Aquarium Southbound exit only
5A M.L. King Boulevard, Campbell Place – Waterfront No northbound entrance
2.27 4 Kaighns Avenue, Atlantic Avenue
1.14 3 Morgan Boulevard to Broadway (CR 551) – Port Terminals
0.36 1 Collings Avenue – Gloucester, Collingswood Signed as exits 1B (east) and 1C (west) southbound
2 I-76 west (Walt Whitman Bridge) – Philadelphia Southbound exit and northbound entrance
1A US 130 north / NJ 168 south (via NJ 76C) – Camden, Trenton Southbound exit and northbound entrance
I-76 east – Atlantic City, Delaware Memorial Bridge Southbound exit and northbound entrance

[edit] References

  1. ^ a b Route Log and Finder List, Table 2. Federal Highway Administration (2002-10-31). Retrieved on 2007-06-06.
  2. ^ a b Was I-76 Numbered to Honor Philadelphia for Independence Day, 1776?. Ask the Rambler. Federal Highway Administration (2005-01-18). Retrieved on 2007-06-06.
  3. ^ a b Bittan, Dave. "Expressway Through Your City's Heart Opens Vine Highway Connects Schuylkill to I-95", Philadelphia Daily News, 1991-01-11. Retrieved on 2007-06-06. 
  4. ^ I-676 in PA. Google. Retrieved on 2007-06-06.
  5. ^ Southern terminus of I-676. Google. Retrieved on 2007-06-06.
  6. ^ PennDOT. Pennsylvania State Transportation [map]. (1960) Section 2. Retrieved on 2007-06-06.
  7. ^ a b I-676 Straight Line Diagram. New Jersey Department of Transportation. Retrieved on 2007-06-06.
  8. ^ DeLorme Street Atlas USA 2007, Toggle Measure Tool. Accessed on 2007-06-06.

[edit] External links

Browse numbered routes
< PA 670 PA PA 690 >
< NJ 495 NJ I-695 >
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