Massachusetts Route 1A
Route 1A | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|
Route information | ||||
Maintained by MassDOT | ||||
Length: | 95.12 mi[1] (153.08 km) | |||
Existed: | by 1927 – present | |||
Major junctions | ||||
South end: | US 1A in Pawtucket, RI | |||
I‑95 in Attleboro I‑495 in Wrentham US 1 in Dedham I‑93 / US 1 / Route 3 in Boston I‑90 / Mass Pike in Boston Route 128 in Beverly US 1 from Newburyport to Salisbury | ||||
North end: | NH 1A in Seabrook, NH | |||
Highway system | ||||
|
Route 1A is a south–north state highway in Massachusetts. It is an alternate route to U.S. 1 with three signed sections and two unsigned sections where the highway is concurrent with its parent. Due to the reconfiguration of tunnel interchanges brought on by the completion of the Big Dig, Route 1A is discontinuous in the downtown Boston area. Vehicles entering Downtown Boston via the Sumner Tunnel must take I-93 north to the exit for Government Center and make a U-turn to access the entrance ramp to I-93 south (which silently carries Route 1A south as well) and vice versa.[2]
Route description
Rhode Island border to Attleboro
A short segment of Route 1A, 1.8 miles (2.9 km) in length, in Attleboro runs from U.S. Route 1A at the Rhode Island border through a junction with Interstate 95, before heading north and merging with Route 1. The entire length of this segment is known as Newport Avenue.
North Attleborough to Dedham
This segment of Route 1A extends roughly north from North Attleborough to Dedham, passing through the towns of Plainville, Wrentham, Norfolk, Walpole, Norwood and Westwood on the way. Prior to its realignment along I-95 and I-93, Route 1 continued north along the Providence Highway towards Boston at the junction of Route 1A and that road.
Boston to Salisbury
This segment of Route 1A extends from Boston, Massachusetts to Salisbury, Massachusetts.
The highway starts from US 1 (which is on the Central Artery with I-93 and Route 3) at the former Government Center/Logan Airport interchange. It passes through the Callahan Tunnel (outbound/northbound, no toll) and Sumner Tunnel (inbound/southbound, toll), becoming the East Boston Expressway past Logan Airport. The East Boston Expressway was the first freeway built in the city. Immediately beyond Logan Airport, Interstate 90 ends at Route 1A.
The road continues as a divided highway through Revere. It is a limited access highway through Revere, passing Suffolk Downs and the Wonderland Greyhound Park (which is across the street from the outer terminus of the MBTA's Blue Line), before running through the isolated Point of Pines neighborhood and exiting Revere over the General Edwards Bridge into Lynn. For the first mile and a half in Lynn, it is concurrent with the Lynnway, and is a high-traffic retail area. After the Lynnway portion, the route becomes concurrent with Route 129 for a mile, before crossing into Swampscott as Paradise Road. At Vinnin Square, it passes into Salem as Loring Avenue, passing by Salem State University. The route turns left onto Lafayette Street and is concurrent with Route 114. At the intersection with Derby Street, notable for the large fire station, the route turns right. At the next stop sign, the route turns left onto Hawthorne Boulevard passing Salem Common and the Salem Witch Museum before turning left onto Winter Street. At the end of Winter Street, the route turns right onto Bridge Street crossing the Veterans Memorial Bridge into Beverly. It follows two of the main streets of downtown Beverly, before heading north, passing through Wenham and Hamilton (through this section the road is occasionally signed as a US Route) before becoming the main road through the town of Ipswich, crossing the historic Choate Bridge over the Ipswich River. While in Ipswich, much of the route runs concurrently with Route 133 until just over the town line into Rowley. It passes through the main village of Rowley, as well as the central villages of Newbury. In Newburyport, Massachusetts, it merges with Route 1, signed with its parent highway over the Merrimack River and into the town center of Salisbury. It then heads east from the Salisbury town center before turning north and ending in Salisbury Beach at the New Hampshire border. New Hampshire Route 1A continues north from this point.
Major intersections
County | Location | mi[1] | km | Destinations | Notes | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Bristol | Attleboro | 0.000 | 0.000 | US 1A south – Pawtucket | Continuation into Rhode Island | ||
0.412 | 0.663 | I‑95 – Walpole, Boston, Providence, RI | Exits 2A-B on I-95 | ||||
1.637 | 2.634 | Route 123 – Attleboro, Brockton, Valley Falls, RI | |||||
1.728 | 2.781 | US 1 south | Southern terminus of silent concurrency with US 1 | ||||
See US 1 mileposts 2.4–7.0 | |||||||
North Attleborough | 7.109 | 11.441 | US 1 north | Northern terminus of silent concurrency with US 1 | |||
Norfolk | Plainville | 7.981 | 12.844 | Route 106 east to US 1 – Mansfield, West Bridgewater | Western end of Route 106 | ||
Wrentham | 10.634 | 17.114 | I‑495 to I‑95 – Cape Cod, Lowell | Exit 15 on I-495 | |||
11.375 | 18.306 | Route 121 south – Woonsocket, RI | Northern end of Route 121 | ||||
12.840 | 20.664 | Route 140 – Franklin, Foxboro, Taunton | |||||
Norfolk | 15.091 | 24.287 | Route 115 – Foxboro, Norfolk, Millis | ||||
Walpole | 19.70 | 31.70 | Route 27 – Walpole, Sharon, Stoughton | ||||
Dedham | 27.144 | 43.684 | Providence Highway to I‑95 / US 1 / Route 128 – Boston, Providence, RI | Formerly US 1, south end of silent concurrency with Providence Highway and then US 1 | |||
See Route 128 exits 15-12 and I-93 exits 1-24B | |||||||
Suffolk | Boston | I‑93 north / US 1 north (Central Artery) / Route 3 north (Storrow Drive) – Government Center | Northern terminus of silent concurrency with US 1 Exit 24B on the Central Artery, Northbound exit and southbound entrance | ||||
Haymarket Square | Northbound entrance only | ||||||
Sumner (southbound) / Callahan (northbound) Tunnels | |||||||
Porter Street – East Boston | Exit unsigned southbound, EZPass only entrance southbound | ||||||
George R. Visconti Road | No exit either direction, southbound entrance only | ||||||
Logan Airport | Northbound exit and southbound entrance | ||||||
50.023 | 80.504 | I‑90 / Mass Pike west – Ted Williams Tunnel, Worcester | East end of I-90, southbound exit and northbound entrance; Alternative access to Logan International Airport | ||||
50.305 | 80.958 | Route 145 north (Bennington Street) – Winthrop, Chelsea | Interchange, south end of Route 145 | ||||
Revere | 52.487 | 84.470 | Route 145 | Interchange, northbound exit and southbound entrance | |||
52.852 | 85.057 | Route 16 west / Route 60 west – Malden, Lynn, Revere Beach, Chelsea | Eastern end of Routes 16 and 60; To US 1 via Route 60; To Route 145 via Route 16 | ||||
Essex | Lynn | 55.843 | 89.871 | Lynnway east – Nahant, Swampscott | |||
58.018 | 93.371 | Route 129 west – Lynnfield | Southern terminus of concurrency with Route 129 | ||||
59.167 | 95.220 | Route 129 east – Swampscott, Marblehead | Northern terminus of concurrency with Route 129 | ||||
Salem | 62.554 | 100.671 | Route 114 east – Marblehead | Southern terminus of concurrency with Route 114 | |||
63.326 | 101.913 | Route 114 west | Northern terminus of concurrency with Route 114 | ||||
64.250 | 103.400 | Route 107 south – Lynn, Malden | North end of Route 107 | ||||
Danvers River | 64.933 | 104.500 | Essex Bridge | ||||
Beverly | 65.447 | 105.327 | Route 22 north / Route 127 north | South end of Routes 22 and 127 | |||
66.242 | 106.606 | Route 62 – Danvers, Beverly Farms | |||||
67.699 | 108.951 | Route 97 north – Topsfield | South end of Route 97 | ||||
67.897 | 109.270 | Route 128 – Gloucester, Rockport, Peabody, Boston | Exits 20A-B on Route 128 | ||||
Ipswich | 75.603 | 121.671 | Route 133 east – Essex | Southern terminus of concurrency with Route 133 | |||
Rowley | 79.754 | 128.352 | Route 133 west – Georgetown | Northern terminus of concurrency with Route 133 | |||
Newburyport | 88.395 | 142.258 | Route 113 west – West Newbury, Groveland | East end of Route 113 | |||
88.588 | 142.569 | US 1 south – Danvers, Boston | Southern terminus of concurrency with US 1, southbound exit and northbound entrance | ||||
Salisbury | 90.879 | 146.256 | US 1 north / Route 110 west – Amesbury, Merrimac, Salisbury Beach | Northern terminus of concurrency with US 1, east end of Route 110 | |||
95.120 | 153.081 | NH 1A north to NH 286 – Hampton | Continuation into New Hampshire | ||||
1.000 mi = 1.609 km; 1.000 km = 0.621 mi
|
References
- 1 2 "Massachusetts Route Log Application". Massachusetts Department of Transportation. 2012. Retrieved November 26, 2014.
- ↑ Executive Office of Transportation - Office of Transportation Planning Roads - June 2008 The older tunnels to and from East Boston have interchanges with I-93 and surface roads north of the point at which unsigned Route 1A "exits" Route 1 in downtown Boston. Unsigned Route 1A along the Fitzgerald Expressway does not directly connect to those tunnels; a direct connection requires using I-90 and the newer Ted Williams Tunnel, which is not concurrent with Route 1A at any point.
External links
Route map: Google
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Massachusetts Route 1A. |
- Massachusetts Executive Office of Transportation - Boston's First Expressway
- East Boston Expressway - Historic Overview