U.S. Route 220 | |
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Route information | |
Length: | 680 mi[1] (1,094 km) |
Existed: | 1927[1] – present |
Major junctions | |
South end: | US 1 in Rockingham, NC |
I-73 near Candor, NC I-85 / US 421 in Greensboro, NC I-40 in Greensboro, NC I-81 near Roanoke, VA I-64 / US 60 near Clifton Forge, VA I-68 / US 40 in Cumberland, MD I-70 / I-76 / Penna. Tpk. near Bedford, PA I-99 from Bedford, PA to Bellefonte, PA I-80 near Bellefonte, PA I-180 / US 15 in Williamsport, PA |
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North end: | Chemung St. Waverly, NY |
Highway system | |
United States Numbered Highways |
U.S. Route 220 is a 680-mile (1,094 km) long U.S. Route in the eastern United States.
US 220 is a spur route of U.S. Route 20 but at present, the two routes do not intersect nor do they connect via other spurs of US 20. The former U. S. Route 120, which was signed in Pennsylvania between 1926 and 1967, intersected U.S. Route 220 at Lock Haven, Pennsylvania. Also, the 1926 routing of U.S. Route 220 along PA Route 4 north from Williamsport as far as the New York State line ended at that spot only because in the 1920s, New York State's policy was not to sign any three-digit U. S. Route numbers on its roads; U. S. Routes 106 and 219 also ended abruptly at the Pennsylvania-New York border. If the U.S. Route 220 signing had continued north along what in 1925 was designated NY Route 4, and after the adoption of U. S. Route signing in New York NY Route 2, U.S. Route 220 would indeed have intersected U. S. Route 20 in central New York.[2]
The southern terminus of US 220 is at U.S. Route 1 in Rockingham, North Carolina. The northern terminus is at Chemung Street in Waverly, New York, just north of its interchange with New York State Route 17 and (future) Interstate 86. Some sections are part of the Appalachian Development Highway System's Corridor O as well as Interstate 73 in North Carolina.
In early 1927, US 220 absorbed most of U.S. Route 711, which had run from Northumberland, Pennsylvania north to the New York state line. The portion south of Muncy was already part of U.S. Route 120. Former US 220 north to the state line at Lawrenceville became part of an extension of U.S. Route 111.
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US 220's southern terminus is at U.S. Highway 1 in Rockingham, North Carolina. From Rockingham, US 220 travels north through Richmond, Montgomery, and Randolph Counties. South of the town of Ellerbe, US 220 follows a newly constructed four-lane bypass freeway, sharing Future Interstate 74 and Future Interstate 73. The old US 220 route is signed as Business/Alternate 220, which passes through the towns of Ellerbe, Norman, Candor, Biscoe, Star, and Seagrove. Rejoining US 220 near the North Carolina Zoo, ALT 220 continues into Asheboro and Randleman as Business 220 while US 220 Bypass continues north to Level Cross. There, the Business and Bypass routes merge and travel north into Guilford County. Outside Greensboro, US 220 intersects Interstate 85 and U.S. Route 421 (Greensboro Urban Loop) before intersecting Business 85 and eventually merging with Interstate 40 in the city. US 220 then exits with U.S. Highway 29 and U.S. Highway 70 onto O'Henry Boulevard and then continues west on Wendover Avenue, just north of Greensboro's Downtown. Exiting onto Battleground Avenue, US 220 travels north out of Greensboro and into Summerfield, North Carolina before entering Rockingham County. Business 220 splits to go through Madison and Mayodan and returns to US 220 near Stoneville. US 220 crosses the Virginia border near the town of Ridgeway, Virginia.
U.S. 220 enters the state from the south just south of Martinsville. It uses freeway spurs to bypass Martinsville and Rocky Mount. The remainder of U.S. 220 is a divided four lane highway with a 55 mile per hour speed limit for most of the distance between Martinsville and State Route 419 in Roanoke County. Some high traffic areas and non-divided stretches have 45 mile per hour, or lower, speed limits. In particular, the stretch through Boones Mill, Virginia is not divided; the town is also well known as a speed trap. U.S. 220 is a winding road in several stretches, and there have been many accidents. The proposed Interstate 73 would generally parallel U.S. 220 between Roanoke and Greensboro, North Carolina, though funds have not been allocated for the project and some local residents prefer efforts to fix U.S. 220. At Virginia 419, U.S. 220 becomes a freeway, the Roy L. Webber Expressway, once again. At downtown Roanoke, it becomes co-signed with Interstate 581 until the freeway reaches Interstate 81 north of Roanoke.
U.S. 220 continues along Interstate 81 northbound until it resumes near Daleville, at the interchange with Alternate U.S. 220. It once again becomes a four-lane road until just outside of Clifton Forge, and joins up with Interstate 64 westbound until Covington. It then continues a primarily two-lane mountainous path until exiting Virginia.
U.S. Route 311 was designated in 1926 to run from U.S. Route 11 in Roanoke south along State Route 33 to North Carolina.[3] US 220, another 1926 U.S. Highway, was extended south into Virginia by 1935.[4] It replaced the piece of State Route 18 north of Covington, all of State Route 12(Clifton Forge to near Roanoke), and all of US 311 in Virginia.
US 220 enters West Virginia 2 miles (3 km) south of Harper in Pendleton County. From the state line, US 220 parallels the South Branch Potomac River as it progresses northward. 13 miles (21 km) north of Harper, US 220 passes through Franklin, where it intersects with U.S. Route 33. The route crosses into Grant County approximately 17 miles (27 km) north of Franklin.
Within Grant County, US 220 intersects the concurrent routes of West Virginia Route 28/West Virginia Route 55 in Petersburg. The two state highways join US 220 eastward into Hardy County. WV 28 and WV 55 remain concurrent to Moorefield, where WV 55 splits from US 220 and WV 28. North of Moorefield, US 220/WV 28 intersects the future right-of-way of U.S. Route 48. US 220 and WV 28 remain concurrent into Hampshire County, where US 220 and WV 28 meet U.S. Route 50 in Junction. WV 28 departs US 220, following US 50 to the east, while US 220 joins US 50 westward into Mineral County.
At the top of Knobly Mountain northwest of Ridgeville, US 220 splits from US 50 and resumes a northerly alignment as it descends into the New Creek Valley. 7 miles (11 km) north of US 50, US 220 enters Keyser, the county seat of Mineral County. In the center of the city, US 220 intersects West Virginia Route 46. At the northern edge of Keyser, US 220 crosses the North Branch Potomac River via Memorial Bridge, leaving West Virginia and entering Maryland.
US 220 enters Maryland at McCoole, Allegany County. In McCoole, US 220 intersects the eastern terminus of Maryland Route 135. Past MD 135, US 220 turns to the northeast, paralleling the North Branch of the Potomac River to the east. 12 miles (19 km) into Maryland, with West Virginia visible to the right, US 220 intersects the western terminus of Maryland Route 956, a connector to a secondary state highway in West Virginia. Continuing north in the river valley, US 220 enters Cresaptown, where US 220 intersects with the east end of Maryland Route 53. 4 miles (6 km) north of Cresaptown, US 220 joins with Interstate 68 and U.S. Route 40 in Cumberland. At exit 46, US 220 turns north again, separating from I-68 and US 40 for a few miles before crossing the Mason-Dixon Line into Pennsylvania. North of I-68, US 220 is designate by the Appalachian Development Highway System as Corridor O until US 220 reaches Interstate 80 near Bellefonte, Pennsylvania.
After crossing the state line from Maryland, US 220 runs north through Bedford County to Bedford, where it divides into U.S. Route 220 Business, which enters the town of Bedford, and the main branch, which joins the southern terminus of Interstate 99 at an interchange with the Pennsylvania Turnpike.
The US 220/I-99 duplex continues northeast along the west side of Dunning Mountain and then Brush Mountain into Blair County and passes the towns of Altoona and Tyrone.
Just north of Port Matilda in Centre County, US 220 was recently rerouted to go through State College to follow the alignment of the I-99. US 322 joins the alignment to form a triplex. US 220 previously continued northeast of Port Matilda to an interchange with Interstate 80 near Milesburg. This previous route was redesignated as Alternate US 220, which meets back up with US 220 along its own duplex with I-80 near Bellefonte. This portion of US 220, from Interstate 68 in Maryland north to Bellefonte, is designated by the Appalachian Development Highway System as Corridor O.
From Port Matilda, US 220, I-99, and US 322 continue eastward 12 miles (19 km) to just north of State College where US 322 diverges eastward while US 220 and I-99 continue northward. The duplex travels past Bellefonte then joins I-80 eastward, where Interstate 99 currently ends.
US 220 follows I-80 eastward for 11 miles (18 km), then exits northward to travel through Lock Haven. Near Lock Haven, US 220 alternates between an at-grade road and a limited-access expressway several times, and joins Interstate 180 at Williamsport, traveling eastbound. East of Williamsport, I-180 turns to the south and US 220 exits the expressway onto a two-lane road that first travels east to Hughesville, where is turns northeast at an intersection with PA 405. A short section of super-two limited-access freeway is used to bypass Towanda, including an interchange with US 6. US 220 then continues on a northerly path to the New York state line at South Waverly.
In the future, US 220 and Interstate 99 two will form a duplex for 135 miles (217 km) throughout much of central Pennsylvania, from the interchange with the Pennsylvania Turnpike at Bedford to the intersection with US 15 at Williamsport, where US 220 will continue on its existing alignment and Interstate 99 will depart north onto US 15.
US 220 enters New York at Waverly. US 220 continues north for less than a tenth of a mile to its northern terminus at Chemung Street, formerly NY 17 prior to construction of the Southern Tier Expressway. The nearest New York State touring routes from US 220's terminus are NY 17C, NY 17 as noted, and NY 34. Both NY 17C and NY 34 are reached via a right turn at Chemung Street.
6 April 2005 109th CONGRESS, 1st Session, S. 719, To extend Corridor O of the Appalachian Development Highway System from its current southern terminus at I-68 near Cumberland to Corridor H, which stretches from Weston, West Virginia, to Strasburg, Virginia.
28 March 2006 109th CONGRESS, 2d Session, H. R. 5031, To extend Corridor O of the Appalachian Development Highway System from its current southern terminus at I-68 near Cumberland to Corridor H, which stretches from Weston, West Virginia, to Strasburg, Virginia.
A new highway was proposed in 2006, to extend Appalachian Corridor O, which now runs through Pennsylvania, through Maryland and West Virginia and connect with Corridor H (which will run from Weston, WV to Wardensville, WV and possibly connect with Interstate 81 in Virginia when completed). Committees have been formed and met in the three major cities along the route: Keyser, Cumberland, and Moorefield. Several different proposals have been discussed including one which will follow Interstate 68 west through Cumberland and then go south toward Keyser, WV, becoming the new US 220 replacing McMullen Highway. When Route 220 cuts off to the east just south of Keyser, the highway would follow WV Route 972 through New Creek to US 50. This is the point where the plan alters. One proposal is that it would travel west to WV 93 and follow it south to Scherr which is directly connected to Petersburg, just 10 minutes from Moorefield. Another proposal is that it follows another course of highways south and has a direct intersection with Corridor H (this section is WV 55) near Moorefield. The plan for Corridor O Extended will be chosen in the spring of 2007. This plan is competing with several other plans like one that proposes that the road follow I-68 east and turn south just before Frostburg, MD cutting across Dans Mountain between MD 36 and US 220.
A segment of US 220 in Pennsylvania is a limited-access highway.
County | Location | Mile | Exit | Destinations | Notes |
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Centre | Worth Township | Port Matilda | |||
US 322 west | Southbound exit, northbound entrance. US 322 joins northbound and leaves southbound. |
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Patton Township | US 322 / US 322 Bus. east (Atherton Street) – Park Forest |
Northbound exit, southbound entrance. | |||
Valley Vista Drive | Southbound exit, northbound entrance. | ||||
Toftrees/Woodycrest | |||||
College Township | US 322 east – Lewistown, Penn State University, State College | US 322 leaves northbound and joins southbound. | |||
Innovation Park/Penn State University | Southbound exit, northbound entrance. | ||||
Benner Township | Dale Summit/Nittany Mall | State Correctional Institution - Rockview area. Do not stop vehicle for next 2 miles (3.2 km). |
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PA 150 – Bellefonte | |||||
Spring Township | Harrison Road | Northbound exit, southbound entrance. | |||
PA 26 south to PA 64 – Pleasant Gap | PA 26 joins northbound and leaves southbound. | ||||
PA 550 – Bellefonte, Zion | |||||
I-80 | Exit 161 (I-80). US 220 joins I-80 northbound and leaves southbound. Future four-way interchange. |
Browse numbered routes | ||||
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← NC 218 | NC | US 221 → | ||
← US 219 | VA | SR 221 → | ||
← US 219 | WV | WV 230 → | ||
← US 219 | MD | MD 221 → | ||
← US 219 | PA | PA 221 → | ||
← US 219 | NY | NY 220 → |
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