Ohio State Route 84
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
State Route 84 |
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Length: | 63.39 mi[1] (102.02 km) | ||||||||||||
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Formed: | 1924 | ||||||||||||
West end: | US 20 in Euclid | ||||||||||||
Major junctions: |
I-90 in Wickliffe I-90 near North Kingsville |
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East end: | PA 226 near Conneaut | ||||||||||||
Counties: | Cuyahoga, Lake, Ashtabula | ||||||||||||
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State Route 84 is an east-west state highway in the northeastern portion of the U.S. state of Ohio. Its western terminus is along U.S. Route 6 at U.S. Route 20 in Euclid, and its eastern terminus is at the Pennsylvania state line about 10 miles south-southeast of Conneaut; Pennsylvania Route 226 continues eastward.
Contents |
[edit] Cities and villages along route
- Euclid
- Richmond Heights
- Willoughby Hills
- Wickliffe
- Willoughby
- Mentor
- Kirtland Hills
- Painesville
- Perry
- Madison
- Geneva
- Ashtabula
- Kingsville
- Bushnell
[edit] Junctions
County | Location | Mile | Roads intersected | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|
Cuyahoga | Euclid | 0.00 | US 20 - US 6 |
US 20 crosses southwest-northeast; eastern terminus of US 20/US 6 concurrency; SR 84 begins concurrent with US 6 heading southeast. |
Richmond Heights | 2.20 | SR 175 | SR 175 crosses south-north | |
Lake | Willoughby Hills | 3.28 | US 6 | US 6 leaves to the east; SR 84 turns north. |
Wickliffe | 3.67 | I-90 | I-90 passes under SR 84; full-access interchange (exit 187); SR 84 later turns northeast. | |
Willoughby | 6.46 | SR 91 | SR 91 crosses south-north. | |
8.35 | SR 174 | SR 174 joins from the southeast. | ||
8.69 | SR 174 | SR 174 leaves to the northeast. | ||
Mentor | 11.02 | SR 306 | SR 306 crosses south-north. | |
13.22 | SR 615 | SR 615 crosses south-north. | ||
Concord Township | 19.01 | SR 44 | SR 44 passes under south-north; full-access interchange. | |
Painesville | 20.87 | SR 86 | SR 86 leaves to the southeast. | |
21.35 | SR 86 | SR 86 joins from the north. | ||
Perry Township | 24.75 | SR 307 | Former SR 307 alignment begins southeast. | |
Madison | 32.31 | SR 528 | SR 528 joins from the south. | |
32.45 | SR 528 | SR 528 leaves to the north. | ||
Ashtabula | Geneva | 37.84 | SR 534 | SR 534 crosses south-north. |
Saybrook Township | 43.49 | SR 45 | SR 45 crosses south-north. | |
Ashtabula | 47.28 | SR 46 | Former SR 46 alignment ends to the south. | |
47.68 | SR 83 | Former SR 83 begins to the east. | ||
Ashtabula Township | 49.58 | SR 11 - SR 46 |
SR 11/SR 46 concurrency passes under south-north; full-access interchange. | |
Kingsville Township | 54.58 | SR 193 | SR 193 leaves to the northwest. | |
55.11 | SR 84 | Former alignment begins southeast. | ||
55.33 | I-90 | I-90 passes under southwest-northeast; full-access interchange (exit 235). | ||
55.43 | SR 193 | SR 193 joins from the south. | ||
55.73 | SR 84 | Former alignment ends northwest. | ||
Sheffield Township | 57.53† | SR 84 | Former alignment begins southeast. | |
Monroe Township | 59.23† | SR 84 | Former alignment ends southwest. | |
60.65 | SR 7 | SR 7 crosses south-north. | ||
63.39 | PA 226 | SR 84 ends at state line; PA 226 begins northeast. |
† Milepost estimates (no benchmark available)
[edit] Points of interest
[edit] History
- 1924 – Original route established[2]; originally routed from 1 mile south of Madison to 2 miles west of Andover along the current alignment of State Route 307 from 1 mile south of Madison to Dorset, and a currently unnumbered road from Dorset to West Andover[3].
- 1926 – Extended to Willoughby Hills along a previously unnumbered road[3].
- 1931 – Truncated at Dorset; Dorset to West Andover decertified[3].
- 1935 – Rerouted from Madison to Ashtabula along the previous State Route 307 alignment (which was unnumbered before 1933); former alignment from south of Madison to Dorset certified as State Route 307[3].
- 1938 – Extended to Pennsylvania state line along the former alignment of State Route 83 from Ashtabula to Kelloggsville (which was unnumbered before 1926), and along a previously unnumbered road from Kelloggsville to the state line[3].
[edit] Sources
- ^ Mileages retrieved from Technical Services Straight Line Diagrams unless otherwise noted.
- ^ Explanation of the Ohio State Highway System (The Unofficial Ohio State Highways Web Site) by John Simpson
- ^ a b c d e Route 84 (The Unofficial Ohio State Highways Web Site) by John Simpson
[edit] External links
- The Unofficial Ohio State Highways Web Site, by John Simpson
- Ohio Highway Ends | Ohio Route 84 from state-ends.com by Dan Garnell