Loudoun County Parkway

Loudoun County Parkway
SRs 606, 607, 772, and 1950
Major junctions
South end: Braddock Road in South Riding
 
US 50 in Arcola
Old Ox Road

Ryan Road in Brambleton
Dulles Greenway in Ashburn
North end: SR 7 in Ashburn
Location
Counties: Loudoun
Highway system

Virginia Routes
Primary • Secondary • History • Turnpikes

The Loudoun County Parkway is a secondary state highway in eastern Loudoun County, Virginia. Two sections of the route currently exist, a southern portion signed as State Route 606 from Braddock Road north to Arcola Road which continues east as Old Ox Road, and a northern portion in Ashburn signed as three different numbers: State Route 772 between Ryan Road and Old Ryan Road, State Route 1950 between Old Ryan Road (now Mooreview Parkway) and Smith Switch Road, and State Route 607 from the intersection of Smith Switch Road to State Route 7.

Except for two small portions around Redskins Park and between Evergreen Mills Road and Arcola Road, the parkway is either four or six lanes.

Contents

Route description

South Riding and Arcola

Loudoun County Parkway begins at Braddock Road in South Riding and continues north across U.S. Route 50. The parkway continues north along the western boundary of Washington Dulles International Airport to the intersection of Arcola Road, where it becomes Old Ox Road and continues east toward Herndon. The parkway is planned to head north from here to connect to Ryan Road in Brambleton, with construction to begin in 2008. This entire section of Loudoun County Parkway was originally Old Ox Road.[1]

Brambleton and Ashburn

Loudoun County Parkway resumes at the intersection of Evergreen Ridge Drive south of Ryan Road a few miles south of the Dulles Greenway. The parkway heads north over the Greenway, and past the Verizon campus. After crossing Waxpool Road, the parkway continues north through corporate centers and Redskins Park. This section was once called Panorama Parkway. Until 2006, the section from Smith Switch Road to State Route 7 was an unpaved dirt road, but was rebuilt in 2006 as a four-lane divided highway as part of the Route 28 Improvement Project.

References

  1. ^ Progress Report on Loudoun County Parkway by Ron Shaffer, July 21, 2005, The Washington Post Retrieved July 16, 2010