NYS Route 266 | ||||
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Map of Buffalo with NY 266 highlighted in red |
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Route information | ||||
Maintained by NYSDOT and the cities of Buffalo and Tonawanda | ||||
Length: | 11.13 mi[3] (17.91 km) | |||
Existed: | ca. 1935[1][2] – present | |||
Major junctions | ||||
South end: | I-190 / Thruway in Buffalo | |||
North end: | NY 265 in Tonawanda | |||
Location | ||||
Counties: | Erie | |||
Highway system | ||||
Numbered highways in New York
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New York State Route 266 (NY 266) is a state highway in Erie County, New York, in the United States. It runs along the Niagara River from the city of Buffalo to the city of North Tonawanda. The southern terminus of the route is at the ramps leading to Interstate 190 exit 8 in Buffalo. Its northern terminus is at an intersection with NY 265 just south of North Tonawanda in the city of Tonawanda.
Contents |
Route 266 starts near the Peace Bridge in Buffalo as Niagara Street. It continues upriver, closely paralleling the New York State Thruway's Niagara Section (Interstate 190). After the Scajaquada Expressway (NY 198), NY 265 forks off to the northeast.
Leaving the city, entering an industrial area of the Town of Tonawanda, it becomes River Road. Shortly afterwards, the short western connector end of Sheridan Drive, NY 325, splits off in the same direction. After that it crosses over I-190 and stays with the river past the tank farm. It crosses under the interstate, this time with an exit, just on the mainland side of the South Grand Island Bridge. Finally the river takes it into the city of Tonawanda, where it ends at another junction with 265 a short distance south of Tonawanda Creek and the Erie Canal, which share the water channel that forms the border between Tonawanda, Erie County and North Tonawanda, Niagara County.
All of modern NY 266 was originally designated as part of NY 384 in the 1930 renumbering of state highways in New York. NY 384 began at Main Street (NY 5) in Buffalo and followed Niagara Street and River Road north to the city of Tonawanda, where it turned north onto modern NY 265 and proceeded across the Erie Canal into North Tonawanda.[4] Ca. 1935, NY 266 was assigned to the portion of modern NY 384 between Sheridan Drive (NY 324) in the town of Tonawanda and River Road (then-NY 384) in North Tonawanda.[1][2] NY 384 was realigned by the following year to follow Delaware Avenue between downtown Buffalo and North Tonawanda. The change supplanted NY 266, which was reassigned to the portion of NY 384's original, riverside routing south of NY 265 in the city of Tonawanda.[5] The south end of the route was shifted three blocks west to Niagara Square in the 1960s after NY 5 was realigned through downtown Buffalo to serve the square.[6][7] NY 266 was truncated again in the early 1970s to begin at the newly-constructed ramps leading to Interstate 190 exit 8.[8][9]
The entire route is in Erie County.
Location | Mile[3] | Destinations | Notes | |
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Buffalo | 0.00 | I-190 / Thruway | Exit 8 (I-190 / Thruway) | |
2.78 | NY 198 / NY 265 | Southern terminus of NY 265 | ||
I-190 / Thruway south via Hamilton Street | Exit 12 (I-190 / Thruway) | |||
3.69 | I-190 / Thruway south via Hertel Avenue | Exit 13 (I-190 / Thruway) | ||
4.00 | I-190 / Thruway | Exit 14 (I-190 / Thruway) | ||
Town of Tonawanda | 5.58 | I-190 / Thruway south / NY 325 | Exit 15 (I-190 / Thruway); southern terminus of NY 325 | |
7.97 | I-190 / Thruway / NY 324 | Exit 17 (I-190 / Thruway) | ||
City of Tonawanda | 11.13 | NY 265 | Former western terminus of NY 356 | |
1.000 mi = 1.609 km; 1.000 km = 0.621 mi |