U.S. Route 20 in Pennsylvania
U.S. Route 20 | |||||||
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Route information | |||||||
Maintained by PennDOT | |||||||
Length: | 45.433 mi[1] (73.117 km) | ||||||
Existed: | 1926 – present | ||||||
Major junctions | |||||||
West end: | US 20 at Ohio border near West Springfield | ||||||
US 6N near West Springfield I-79 in Erie US 19 in Erie I-90 near North East | |||||||
East end: | US 20 at New York border near North East | ||||||
Location | |||||||
Counties: | Erie | ||||||
Highway system | |||||||
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U.S. Route 20 is an east-west U.S. Highway in Pennsylvania, which clips the northwestern corner of the state, running entirely in Erie County. While it is part of the nation's longest road, it features the shortest segment of any two-digit U.S. route in the commonwealth. Although bypassed by Interstate 90 as the primary through route in the area, heavy traffic has led to nearly the entire highway being upgraded to four lanes in width.
Route description
U.S. 20 travels for 45 miles through Pennsylvania's Great Lakes region. For most of its journey, it closely parallels a heavily travelled CSX rail line, which also serves Amtrak passenger trains. The highway enters the state under the moniker of West Ridge Road eastward from the Ohio border, as it journeys through Springfield Township, Girard Township, Fairview Township and Millcreek Township. This section of road was widened to encompass a mostly four-lane set-up after a pair of 1938 and 1946 infrastructural projects, owing to the heavy truck traffic between Erie and Cleveland, Ohio. A 1952 upgrade saw the remainder of the Millcreek Township section of the route improved to four lanes.
At the intersection with Pennsylvania Route 832, just outside the Erie city limits, U.S. 20 becomes West 26th Street. The highway then passes through an industrial and commercial corridor that represents a 1946 alignment change, which saw 26th Street extended to avoid the route's former complicated passage along East Avenue. Soon after a major interchange with Greengarden Boulevard, the highway becomes two lanes, as it passes through Erie's old residential neighborhoods. After a junction with U.S. Route 19 just south of the city center, it becomes East 26th Street.
U.S. 20 turns sharply northward as Broad Street at the Bayfront Connector, as it resumes four lane status temporarily. It then turns east again as Buffalo Road through Wesleyville and Harborcreek Township. This portion of road was upgraded to four lanes during a 1958 overhaul. In North East Township, U.S. 20 becomes West Main Road. Within the town limits of North East it becomes West Main Street until it reaches the town center at its intersection with Pennsylvania Route 89, where it becomes East Main Street. Outside the town limits it becomes East Main Road until it reaches Pennsylvania's border with New York. The portion of road around North East was upgraded to four lanes in 1971.
Major intersections
The entire route is in Erie County.
Location | mi[1] | km | Destinations | Notes | |
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Ohio state line | 0.000 | 0.000 | US 20 (Main Road) / LECT | Continues into Ohio | |
West Springfield | 1.479 | 2.380 | PA 5 (Lake Road) / LECT | Western terminus of PA 5 | |
2.876 | 4.628 | US 6N | Western terminus of US 6N | ||
East Springfield | 6.224 | 10.017 | PA 215 | ||
Girard | 10.351 | 16.658 | PA 18 south (Meadville Road) | West end of PA 18 concurrency | |
11.375 | 18.306 | PA 18 north (Rice Avenue) | East end of PA 18 concurrency | ||
Fairview | 15.419 | 24.814 | PA 98 (Avonia Road) | ||
Erie | 22.739 | 36.595 | PA 832 (Sterrettania Road/Peninsula Road) | ||
23.655 | 38.069 | I-79 | Interchange | ||
26.381 | 42.456 | US 19 (Peach Street) | Northern terminus of US 19 | ||
26.459 | 42.582 | PA 505 (State Street) | Northern terminus of PA 505 | ||
26.953 | 43.377 | PA 8 (Parade Street) | Northern terminus of PA 8, 2 blocks north of PA 97 northern terminus | ||
28.333 | 45.598 | PA 290 | |||
Wesleyville | 30.325 | 48.803 | PA 430 (Hannon Road) | Western terminus of PA 430 | |
Northwest Harborcreek | 33.898 | 54.554 | PA 531 (Depot Road) | Northern terminus of PA 531 | |
34.131 | 54.929 | PA 955 (Iroquois Avenue) | Eastern terminus of PA 955 | ||
North East | 41.201 | 66.307 | PA 89 (Freeport Road) | ||
44.244– 44.269 | 71.204– 71.244 | I-90 | Interchange | ||
New York state line | 45.433 | 73.117 | US 20 | Continues into New York | |
1.000 mi = 1.609 km; 1.000 km = 0.621 mi |
See also
Wikimedia Commons has media related to U.S. Route 20 in Pennsylvania. |
- U.S. Roads portal
- Pennsylvania portal
- Erie portal
References
- 1 2 Bureau of Maintenance and Operations (January 2015). Roadway Management System Straight Line Diagrams (Report) (2015 ed.). Pennsylvania Department of Transportation. Retrieved June 30, 2015.
- Erie County (PDF)
U.S. Route 20 | ||
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Pennsylvania | Next state: New York |