Rhode Island Route 3

For the Route 3 that existed in the 1920s, see U.S. Route 6 in Rhode Island.
"RI 3" redirects here. RI 3 may also refer to Rhode Island's 3rd congressional district.

Route 3 marker

Route 3
Route information
Length: 30.1 mi[1][2] (48.4 km)
Existed: mid-1930s – present
Major junctions
South end: US 1 in Westerly
  I95 in Hopkinton
Route 138 in Hopkinton
Route 102 in Exeter
I95 in West Greenwich
North end: Route 2 in Warwick
Location
Counties: Washington, Kent
Highway system

Rhode Island Routes

Route 2Route 4
Route 1 N.E. Route 2

Route 3 is a state highway in the U.S. state of Rhode Island. Route 3 serves as a local alternative to Interstate 95 as it parallels I-95 for almost its entire length. Route 3 in West Warwick was the site of The Station nightclub fire.

Route description

Route 3 starts at US 1 in Westerly. It begins heading north, and it has a partial interchange with the Westerly Bypass. Route 3 continues north, intersects I-95 at exit 1, and turns to the northeast to parallel I-95. After two more interchanges with I-95, Route 3 passes through downtown Coventry. Continuing east into West Warwick, Route 3 terminates at Route 2 on the West Warwick/Warwick town line.

History

About 1835 the New London Turnpike was established as the primary road between Providence, Rhode Island and New London, Connecticut. As such, it was one of the earliest interstate highways in the country. The New London Turnpike proved a viable alternative to the Old Post Road, which followed the coastal route, as it was more direct and faster.

The New London Turnpike (also called New London Avenue in parts of Rhode Island and the Gold Star Highway in Connecticut) was a primary route until the advent of automobiles in the early 20th Century. The increased need for roadways led to the development of a more improved interstate highway system. The Connecticut portion of the New London Turnpike is now Route 184 and in Rhode Island parts of the New London Turnpike are on Routes 2 and 3.

In 1922, the WesterlyProvidence road was assigned New England Interstate Highway 1A, as an alternate to New England Interstate Highway 1. The road was only paved north of Nooseneck Hill. When NE 1 became US 1 in 1927, NE 1A became Route 1A (now assigned to a different route).

The original NE 1A alignment differed from the current Route 3 alignment in the following places:

From there, the main road used Route 33 to where the Meshanticut Interchange is now, and then roughly Route 2 (though the exact route is unclear; it may have originally used Cranston Street into Westminster Street) to end concurrent with US 1 and Route 2 in Providence, possibly at Broad Street (former Route 117).

By 1939, the number had been changed to Route 3, and it was on its current alignment (though still extending north to Providence, via Route 2 and US 1), and was fully paved with concrete except for a bit in downtown Westerly (and along Route 2 and US 1 north of Route 12). Route 3 was part of a major through route, serving as a cutoff for US 1, along with Rhode IslandConnecticut Route 84. In fact, in 1947, Connecticut proposed moving US 1 to this route, but RIDOT declined, wanting US 1 to continue through the shore towns. RIDOT offered US 1A as a compromise, but this was never signed.[3] The old alignment through Washington to the Meshanticut Interchange site became Route 3A and later Route 33; by 1939 this was on its current alignment, bypassing Washington.

1952 and 1953 saw the building of a new high-speed relocation of Route 3 from Route 84 to north of Wyoming, where Route 3 left the New London Turnpike. This was built as a four-lane surface road, with interchanges at the Route 3/Route 84 split and Route 138.

When the Huntington Expressway was built in 1959, Route 2 was moved onto it, leaving Route 3 as the only road on Reservoir Avenue north of the Expressway. Later the Expressway was designated Route 10, and Route 2 was moved back. At or after that time, Route 3 was truncated to Route 2.

In 1957 and 1958, the Kent County Freeway was built, splitting from Route 3 near Nooseneck Hill and heading east to Route 2. The original designation of this is unknown. However, the westernmost section carried Route 3, at least southbound, due to southbound access along the old road being cut off at the merge. This access was brought back in 1969 when the freeway extension was built to the south.

1959 also saw the assignment of the Interstate Highways, including I-95 along the Route 3 corridor. Route 84 and Route 3 were temporarily designated Route 95 from Connecticut to the beginning of the Kent County Freeway, which was I-95. Route 3 was moved back to the old alignment at the 19521953 relocation.

The southernmost several blocks in Westerly may have at one time used Canal Street and one of the diagonal streets to cut over to current Route 3.

Major intersections

CountyLocationmi[2]kmDestinationsNotes
WashingtonWesterly0.00.0 US 1 (Broad Street)Southern terminus
0.50.8 Route 91 east (Oak Street)
1.21.9 High Street to Route 78 west / I95 Connecticut
1.93.1 Route 78 east Misquamicut Beach
Ashaway4.57.2 Route 216 north (High Street)South end of concurrency with Route 216
4.67.4 Route 216 south (Ashaway Road)North end of concurrency with Route 216
Hopkinton6.310.1 I95 Providence, New London, CT, New York CityExit 1 on I-95
Hope Valley11.919.2 Route 138 west (Spring Street)South end of concurrency with Route 138
Wyoming12.820.6 Route 138 east (Main Street) to I95North end of concurrency with Route 138
Richmond14.924.0 I95 south New London, CTExit 4 on I-95
Exeter18.029.0 Route 165 west (Ten Rod Road)East end of Route 165
19.130.7 Route 102 north (Victory Highway) Wickford, NewportSouth end of concurrency with Route 102
19.331.1 Route 102 south (Victory Highway) to I95
KentWest Greenwich23.938.5 I95 Westerly, ProvidenceExit 6 on I-95
Coventry25.240.6 Route 118 west Summit, GreeneEast end of Route 118
27.644.4 Route 33 north (Sandy Bottom Road)South end of Route 33
WarwickProvidence-New London PikeEast end of New London Pike
30.148.4 Route 2 (Quaker Lane)Northern terminus
1.000 mi = 1.609 km; 1.000 km = 0.621 mi

See also

References

  1. RIGIS data - "Roads - Primary" and "Roads - State"
  2. 1 2 Google (23 December 2013). "Route 3" (Map). Google Maps. Google. Retrieved 23 December 2013.

External links

Route map: Bing / Google

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Wednesday, August 19, 2015. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.