Greensboro Urban Loop

Greensboro Urban Loop

Open segment of the beltway in solid red, future segment in dashed red
Route information
Maintained by NCDOT
Length: 24.3 mi[1] (39.1 km)
Existed: 2005 – present
Major junctions
Beltway around Greensboro
 
Location
Counties: Guilford
Highway system

The Greensboro Urban Loop is a partially completed 39.3-mile (63.2 km) beltway around Greensboro, North Carolina, United States. The loop carries I-73, I-85, I-785, I-840, and US 421.

Route description

The parts of Urban Loop that are currently open are:

Construction of the next section of the western part of the Loop, the northwest segment between Bryan Boulevard and US 220, began in October 2013. Work began on the northeast section between US 70 and US 29 (Future I-785) in August 2014. Land and right-of-way property was bought for the segment between US 220 and Lawndale Drive in 2014-2015, which started construction in November 2016, and Lawndale to US 29, work to start currently scheduled for 2018.[2][3]

In April 2005, the city of Greensboro voted to approve annexation of the Urban Loop into the city of Greensboro. The annexation took effect in June of that year.

I-73 is completed and signed along the southwestern part of Urban Loop, including a wrong-way concurrency with I-85 for approximately one mile. It should be noted however: as a result of the freeway's unusual design, I-85 and I-73 do not share the same roadbed. A traveler following I-73 through the intersection will not at any point be on mainline I-85, despite signage that indicates otherwise to minimize confusion.

Alternate names

Officially it is known as the Greensboro Urban Loop and there is no official alternate name(s) to the entire loop or sections of it. Unofficially, the name Painter Boulevard was used locally as the name of the loop around Greensboro. Pennell Churchman Painter was the first city manager of Greensboro, serving from 1921 to 1929. The proposed loop was named for him in the early 1960s.[4] NCDOT has repeatedly denied in public hearings, since the project's inception in 1995, that Painter Boulevard was ever used as a name for the Greensboro Urban Loop and in any official documentation. This is one of five freeway corridors in the Greensboro area to include the word "Boulevard" in its name. What is now I-85 Bus. is also known as Preddy Boulevard, what was once I-40 Bus. west of downtown (and is again I-40) is also known as Fordham Boulevard, and part of I-73 is planned to follow Bryan Boulevard. O. Henry Boulevard carries US 29 east of downtown Greensboro. It should be noted that since 2008 local media outlets have discontinued the name Painter Boulevard in their news reports.[5]

History

The Urban Loop and its designations since January 2004 up to October 2008.

A June 1948 document from the city Planning & Zoning Commission described the loop as part of "a comprehensive thoroughfare system for Greensboro." At one time, the road was a parkway similar to Wendover Avenue and named "Painter Boulevard", but the city did not have enough money to build it, and federal help would require a road like an interstate highway.[6]

The first appearance of a freeway urban loop appeared in the 1967 City of Greensboro Transportation Plan. In June 1977, a thoroughfare plan (including the urban loop) was adopted by the City of Greensboro, Guilford County and the North Carolina Board of Transportation. In July 1989, North Carolina Highway Trust Fund Law was enacted, which provides a trust fund for designated urban loops. By November 1989, an updated thoroughfare plan was approved by the city, county and state. Planning and environmental impact studies of the urban loop began in 1989-1990.[7][8] In 1995, a Record of Decision was made approving the Greensboro Urban Loop; finalizing its routing and approval of a I-85 bypass.[9][10][11][12]

In 2002, the first segment of the urban loop opened, a 2.21-mile (3.56 km) four-lane connector between I-40/I-85 and US 70; it was unsigned and designated as SR 3269. By 2006, Future I-840 signage appears at the US 70 interchange. In November 2016, I-785 signage began appearing on exit signs along I-40 and I-85 approaching the Loop interchange. On February 21, 2004, a 12.9-mile (20.8 km) southeast segment of the urban loop opened; designated as I-85, leaving its old alignment through Greensboro as I-85 Business.[13]

Short Term Interstate 40 relocation

When the southwest section of the Loop was completed in March 2008, I-40 was moved onto the Loop sharing the route with I-85 on the eastern half and I-73 on the western, the existing I-40 through Greensboro was redesignated Business Interstate 40. On September 12, 2008, after complaints by local residents about traffic noise and motorists on the confusion between Interstate 40 and Business Interstate 40 through Greensboro, NCDOT officials received permission from the FHWA to reroute Interstate 40 back through the city of Greensboro and decommission Business Interstate 40. This placed Interstate 40 on its original route while leaving I-73 and I-85 signed along the Greensboro Urban Loop. By the end of fall 2008 Business Interstate 40 signs through Greensboro were to be replaced back with Interstate 40 signs, and US 421 was to be rerouted to replace most of the I-40 route along the Loop.[14]

Future

The remaining sections of the Greensboro Urban Loop (designated as I-840 from Bryan Blvd to US 29 and I-785/I-840 south of US 29) are broken into the following four projects, three currently under construction:

This section is for a six-lane freeway connecting Bryan Boulevard to US 220 (Battleground Avenue) in northwest Greensboro. Known as STIP Number U-2524C, it is estimated to cost $101 million, with property acquisition and construction already in progress. Completion of this segment is tentatively scheduled for March 2018.[15][16]
This section is for a six-lane freeway connecting US 220 (Battleground Avenue) to Lawndale Drive in northwest Greensboro. Known as STIP Number U-2524D, it is estimated to cost $88.1 million, with property acquisition already in progress and construction started in November 2016 with completion currently scheduled for December 2020.[15][16]
This section is for a four-lane freeway connecting US 70 to US 29 in northeast Greensboro, with an interchange at Huffine Mill Road. Known as STIP Number U-2525B, it is estimated to cost $119 million, with construction started in 2014. Completion of this segment is tentatively scheduled for December 2018. This section will also be overlapped with Interstate 785.[15][17]
This section is for a six-lane freeway connecting US 29 to Lawndale Drive, with interchanges at Yanceyville Street and North Elm Street. Known as STIP Number U-2525C, it is estimated to cost $139 million, with property acquisition tentatively scheduled for 2016 and construction tentatively scheduled for 2018.[15][17]

After the Greensboro Urban Loop is completed, NCDOT and Greensboro DOT plan to add two additional interchanges: FlemingLewiston Road (SR2136), and Cone Boulevard (SR2565). Plans for the additional interchanges have existed since 2004; however, because they are to be constructed after the loop's completion, there is no current time table or funding for these projects at this time.[15][18][19]

Exit list

The entire route is in Greensboro, Guilford County.

mi[1]kmExitDestinationsNotes
0.00.0103
A-B
A: I40 east Greensboro
B: I40 west / US 421 north Winston-Salem
West end of I-840 and north end of US 421 overlap; northbound exit left
1.62.6104West Friendly Avenue
3.65.8107 I73 north / Bryan Boulevard PTI AirportNorth end of I-73 overlap; inner-bound exit, outer-bound entrance, to be signed as Exit 3 on I-840 West
FlemingLewiston RoadFuture interchange (unfunded)[18]
6 US 220 (Battleground Avenue)Future interchange (under construction)[15]
8Lawndale DriveFuture interchange (under construction)[15]
10North Elm StreetFuture interchange (funded)[15]
Yanceyville StreetFuture interchange (funded)[15]
14 I785 north / US 29Future interchange (under construction)[15]
16Cone BoulevardFuture interchange (unfunded)[19]
17Huffine Mill RoadFuture interchange (under construction)[15]
18.629.919 US 70 (Burlington Road) Burlington, GreensboroOuter-bound exit and inner-bound entrance
20.833.521 I40 / I85 north / I85 Bus. south Greensboro, Durham, RaleighNorth end of I-85, south of I-785 and west end of I-840 overlap
22.836.7129Youngs Mill Road
24.940.1128Alamance Church Road
27.043.5126
A-B
A: US 421 south Sanford
B: Old US 421 Greensboro
South end of US 421 overlap
29.347.2124South ElmEugene Street
31.350.4122 I73 south / US 220 Greensboro, AsheboroSouth end of I-73 overlap; southbound exit and northbound entrance
32.652.596To Groometown Road / To Grandover ParkwayNorthbound exit and southbound entrance only; southbound take exit 97B
32.652.597
A-B
A: I85 Bus. north / US 29 north / US 70 east Greensboro
B: I85 south / I85 Bus. south / US 29 south / US 70 south High Point, Charlotte
South end of I-85 overlap; northbound follow-thru exit 121
35.457.0100Gate City BoulevardDiverging Diamond Interchange
38.061.2102Wendover Avenue
1.000 mi = 1.609 km; 1.000 km = 0.621 mi

References

  1. 1 2 Google (August 29, 2013). "Greensboro Urban Loop" (Map). Google Maps. Google. Retrieved August 29, 2013.
  2. "NCDOT Greensboro Urban Loop Project Page". North Carolina Department of Transportation. Retrieved February 23, 2016.
  3. "NCDOT Progress Report, Contract Number C203792". North Carolina Department of Transportation. Retrieved December 26, 2016.
  4. "This day in history". News & Record. December 15, 2015. Retrieved March 30, 2017.
  5. "Official Public Hearing Transcript - Greensboro Western and Eastern Urban Loop" (PDF). North Carolina Department of Transportation. October 25, 2010. Retrieved August 30, 2013.
  6. Wireback, Taft (July 23, 2017). "70 years of road planning in Greensboro takes concrete shape". News & Record. Retrieved July 23, 2017.
  7. "Greensboro Western Urban Loop Guilford County" (PDF). North Carolina Department of Transportation. June 1991. p. 18. Retrieved November 24, 2014.
  8. "Greensboro Eastern/Northern Urban Loop Guilford County" (PDF). North Carolina Department of Transportation. August 1992. p. 21. Retrieved November 24, 2014.
  9. "Greensboro Eastern/Northern Urban Loop" (PDF). North Carolina Department of Transportation. March 1995. Retrieved November 24, 2014.
  10. "Greensboro Western Urban Loop" (PDF). North Carolina Department of Transportation. August 1995. Retrieved November 24, 2014.
  11. Greensboro Eastern/Northern Urban Loop Map (PDF) (Map). North Carolina Department of Transportation. 1996. Retrieved November 24, 2014.
  12. Greensboro Western Urban Loop Map (PDF) (Map). North Carolina Department of Transportation. 1996. Retrieved November 24, 2014.
  13. Behrens, Mike (May 15, 2004). "Report of the Special Committee on U.S. Route Numbering to the Standing Committee on Highways" (PDF) (Report). St. George, UT: American Association of State Highway and Transportation Officials. p. 5. Retrieved November 24, 2014.
  14. NCDOT Press Release dated 9/12/08
  15. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 "NCDOT: Greensboro Urban Loop". North Carolina Department of Transportation. Retrieved August 31, 2013.
  16. 1 2 Project Map: U-2524 (PDF) (Map). North Carolina Department of Transportation. October 25, 2010. Retrieved December 26, 2016.
  17. 1 2 Project Map: U-2525 (PDF) (Map). North Carolina Department of Transportation. October 18, 2010. Retrieved August 31, 2013.
  18. 1 2 "Fleming Road Extension/Western Urban Loop Interchange" (PDF). Greensboro DOT & North Carolina DOT. December 16, 2004. Retrieved August 31, 2013.
  19. 1 2 "Cone Boulevard Extension/Eastern Urban Loop Interchange" (PDF). Greensboro DOT & North Carolina DOT. August 17, 2004. Retrieved August 31, 2013.
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