Pennsylvania Route 28
Route information | ||||
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Maintained by PennDOT | ||||
Length | 98.264 mi[1] (158.141 km) | |||
Existed | 1927–present | |||
Major junctions | ||||
South end | Anderson Street in Pittsburgh[2][3] | |||
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North end | US 219 in Brockway | |||
Location | ||||
Country | United States | |||
State | Pennsylvania | |||
Counties | Allegheny, Butler, Armstrong, Clarion, Jefferson | |||
Highway system | ||||
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Pennsylvania Route 28 (PA 28) is a major state highway, which runs for 98 miles (158 km) from Anderson Street in Pittsburgh to U.S. Route 219 (US 219) in Brockway in Pennsylvania in the United States.
From Pittsburgh to Kittanning, it is a 44.5-mile-long (71.6 km) limited access expressway that is named the Alexander H. Lindsay Memorial Highway, and is also known as the Allegheny Valley Expressway.
Route description
This section needs additional citations for verification. (October 2022) |
PA 28 begins adjacent to Downtown Pittsburgh at Anderson Street near the Interstate 279 (I-279)/I-579 interchange and travels north/northeast along the northern bank of the Allegheny River. Until recently the route was a surface street for the first two miles (3.2 km) until the 40th Street Bridge and then an expressway from 40th Street to Kittanning. Upgrades in 2013 made it a limited-access highway throughout its 44.5 miles (71.6 km) in the Pittsburgh metropolitan area from the route's start at I-279 to Rayburn Township, Armstrong County, with Governor Tom Corbett attending the completion ceremony on November 17, 2014.[4]
In Etna, PA 28 interchanges with Pennsylvania Route 8 at exit 5 before departing the Blue Belt, which PA 28 is part of from I-279/I-579 to this point, at exit 6 near Aspinwall. Near Harmar Township, PA 28 meets Pennsylvania Route 910 at exit 11 which provided access to Interstate 76 (the Pennsylvania Turnpike).
From exit 11 to U.S. Route 422 west of Kittanning, PA 28 has eight interchanges, including exits with Pittsburgh Mills Boulevard (exit 12A), Pennsylvania Route 366 (exit 14), and Pennsylvania Route 356 (exit 17), while continuing to parallel the Allegheny to the east. Exit 18 consists of Pennsylvania Route 128 crossing or which used to be old 28 before the expressway. At exit 19, PA 28 merges with the limited-access US 422 and heads east along US 422 as it proceeds south of West Kittanning.[5]
Upon crossing the Allegheny River and entering Kittanning, US 422 and PA 28 interchange with Pennsylvania Route 66. PA 66 then joins the concurrency for two miles (3 km) to an exit with U.S. Route 422 Business southeast of downtown Kittanning. Here, US 422 leaves the freeway and heads east toward Indiana while PA 28 and PA 66 remain concurrent as they progress northward.
The 41-mile-long (66 km) freeway ends with a concurrency with Pennsylvania Route 66. In Rayburn Township, PA 28/PA 66 intersects the western terminus of Pennsylvania Route 85. After PA 85, PA 28/PA 66 head towards the northeast. In South Bethlehem, PA 28/PA 66 become North Street and Broad Street then intersecting the northern terminus of Pennsylvania Route 839.
After crossing Redbank Creek, PA 28/PA 66 enters Clarion County and New Bethlehem. In downtown New Bethlehem, PA 66 splits off from PA 28 and making the PA 28/PA 66 concurrency one of the longest concurrencies in Pennsylvania. After the split, PA 28 heads northeast as Broad Street paralleling Redbank Creek. In Hawthorn, PA 28 is called Brookville Street and meets the western terminus of Pennsylvania Route 536. North of PA 536, PA 28 begins to slide to the north instead of the northeast.
In Summerville, PA 28's course begins to slide towards the northeast again and in Summerville, PA 28 is called Harrison Street. In Clover and Rose townships, PA 28 parallels many railroads tracks that even cross it.
In Brookville, PA 28 has a wrong-way concurrency with U.S. Route 322 and Pennsylvania Route 36. The reason of the wrong-way concurrency is that PA 28 is heading north while PA 36 is heading south on the concurrency with US 322. In downtown Brookville, PA 36 splits off from US 322/PA 28. Then after crossing North Fork Creek, US 322/PA 28 meet the southern terminus of the former Pennsylvania Route 968.
East of here, US 322 splits off from PA 28 at a "T" interchange. East of Brookville in Pine Creek Township, PA 28 intersects Interstate 80 at exit 81 a diamond interchange. North of I-80, PA 28 continues north as a local road without intersecting another route for more than 14 miles (23 km). PA 28 passes through the many wildlife in Pennsylvania through a forest region. In Brockway, PA 28 is called Main Street before terminating (ending) at a "T" intersection with U.S. Route 219.
History
This section needs additional citations for verification. (October 2022) |
In 1927, PA 28 was created, being signed on existing two laned roads from Pittsburgh to Kittanning. It is named after Alexander Lindsay, a lawyer who lived in South Buffalo and commuted to work in Pittsburgh: he successfully lobbied for the city to be connected to the proposed Keystone Shortway (I-80). [6]
The highway was signed to Brockway in 1928. That same year, the route was under construction from Blawnox to Cheswick, Troy Hill Road to Oakland, and Hazen to Reitz Crossing Road. Those sections were completed in 1929, at which point the section from Avella to Woodrow and from Hickory to Fort Cherry Road began construction.[7]
In 1930, the section from Blawnox to Cheswick was completed, and the roadway was paved in both Venice and from Skyline Road to PA 18. That year the western terminus was also moved from Avella to Independence.[7]
In 1940, the interchange that led to the PA turnpike was constructed.
In 1958, the highway was upgraded to freeway standards at the Pennsylvania Turnpike interchange.[7]
On July 15, 1960, the highway's southern terminus was moved from Independence to PA 8 in Etna. The former section of PA 28 from South Main Street in the West End Valley to the intersection of Noblestown Road and Crafton Boulevard in Crafton Heights was redesignated as PA 60. The remaining 83-mile stretch from Crafton Heights to Independence was renumbered PA 50. This designation change was made to reduce the number of concurrent routes in Pittsburgh. The changes took effect a few months later and signs were changed by spring 1961.[8]
In 1963, this section opened to traffic from PA 8 north to the Highland Park Bridge interchange and the following year to Blawnox. Also that year, the Pittsburgh Area Transportation Plan recommended upgrading PA 28 and then PA 8, to a six-lane, limited-access highway starting 2,200 feet (670 m) west of the 31st Street Bridge and ending at the 40th Street Bridge. Full interchanges would be constructed at both bridges; however, this recommendation was not carried out. It also laid out a plan that would turn PA 28 into an expressway from Pittsburgh to Brookville, this too was not carried out.Cite error: A <ref>
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In 2012, an excavation lowered the roadbed of PA 28 at the 31st Street Bridge, which had been partially demolished and rebuilt to allow this.[9]
Though technically limited access for its first two miles near downtown Pittsburgh since the 2012 construction, all lanes were clear of lane closures and construction by November, 2014 when Governor Tom Corbett attended the official groundbreaking ceremony to celebrate all 44.5 miles being expressway-grade. The widening included a small park with a promenade and a retaining wall which features several murals on the city's history, including that of the Saint Nicholas Croatian Catholic Church on the aforementioned structure's site.[10]
On December 12, 2017, PennDOT announced that they planned on widening PA 28 at the Highland Park interchange to have two through lanes on each side while having a designated exit and entrance lanes for the bridge, with work scheduled to start in 2020 with some residual work lasting into 2021. The only other thing keeping PA-28 from having the possibility of receiving an interstate designation are the 45-mph speed limits near the Millvale and Etna Exits, as well as the section of the southbound one-lane expressway between Exit 9 (Blawnox Exit), and Exit 8,(Waterworks Exit). If these are ever to be upgraded to Interstate Highway standards, PA 28 will be up to Interstate Highway standards from its southern terminus all the way to Kittanning, and could potentially receive an Interstate designation in the future.[11]
Major intersections
County | Location | mi[1] | km | Exit | Destinations | Notes |
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Allegheny | Pittsburgh | 0.000 | 0.000 | Anderson Street | Southern terminus of PA 28 | |
0.073– 0.111 | 0.117– 0.179 | River Avenue | Northbound entrance / exit only | |||
0.375 | 0.604 | Chestnut Street | Northbound exit only | |||
0.414– 0.746 | 0.666– 1.201 | 1B | To I-279 north / East Ohio Street – PNC Park, Acrisure Stadium, Allegheny Center | No southbound entrance; signed as exit 1B southbound only | ||
0.458 | 0.737 | 1A | I-579 south (Veterans Bridge) / I-279 south (Fort Pitt Bridge) to I-376 – Monroeville, Airport | Southbound exit and northbound entrance | ||
1.497– 1.750 | 2.409– 2.816 | 2 | 31st Street Bridge – Strip District | Former at grade intersection. | ||
Millvale | 2.319– 2.456 | 3.732– 3.953 | 3A | 40th Street Bridge – Lawrenceville | Inverted SPUI/continuous green T hybrid interchange; no northbound entrance (northbound traffic directed to 3B entrance);Former at grade intersection | |
2.647– 2.857 | 4.260– 4.598 | 3B | Blue Belt – Millvale | No southbound entrance (southbound traffic directed to 3A entrance), southern terminus of Blue Belt concurrency | ||
Etna | 3.968 | 6.386 | 4 | Etna | Northbound exit and southbound entrance | |
4.522– 4.539 | 7.277– 7.305 | 5A | PA 8 south (R.D. Fleming Bridge) – Sharpsburg | Northbound exit and southbound entrance | ||
4.567– 4.813 | 7.350– 7.746 | 5B | PA 8 north – Butler, Etna | Signed as exit 5 southbound | ||
6.218– 6.418 | 10.007– 10.329 | 6 | To PA 8 south / Highland Park Bridge / Blue Belt / Green Belt – Aspinwall | Northern terminus of Blue Belt concurrency, southern terminus of Green Belt concurrency | ||
Aspinwall | 6.846– 7.123 | 11.018– 11.463 | 7 | Delafield Avenue | No southbound exit | |
7.618– 7.771 | 12.260– 12.506 | 8 | Freeport Road, Fox Chapel Road ( Green Belt), Waterworks Drive | Northern terminus of Green Belt concurrency | ||
Blawnox | 8.003– 8.029 | 12.880– 12.921 | 9 | Blawnox | Northbound exit and southbound entrance | |
8.922– 9.250 | 14.359– 14.886 | 10 | R.I.D.C. Drive | |||
Harmar Township | 12.038– 12.493 | 19.373– 20.106 | 11 | PA 910 / Yellow Belt to I-76 / Penna Turnpike – Harmarville, Harmar | ||
Cheswick | 13.715– 14.191 | 22.072– 22.838 | 12 | Cheswick, Springdale | ||
14.990– 15.462 | 24.124– 24.884 | 12A | Pittsburgh Mills Boulevard | |||
Creighton | 16.373– 17.236 | 26.350– 27.739 | 13 | Orange Belt – Russellton, Creighton | Northbound exit and southbound entrance | |
Tarentum | 18.125– 19.382 | 29.169– 31.192 | 14 | PA 366 / Red Belt – Tarentum, Brackenridge, New Kensington, Arnold, Lower Burrell, Fawn Township | Western terminus of PA 366 | |
Harrison Township | 20.805– 21.226 | 33.482– 34.160 | 15 | Natrona Heights, Natrona, Brackenridge | Brackenridge appears on southbound signs only. | |
23.717– 24.147 | 38.169– 38.861 | 16 | Freeport, Millerstown | Freeport appears on northbound signs only. | ||
Butler | Buffalo Township | 25.337– 25.816 | 40.776– 41.547 | 17 | PA 356 – Freeport, Butler | |
Armstrong | North Buffalo Township | 31.346– 31.842 | 50.446– 51.245 | 18 | PA 128 – Slate Lick, Northpointe | |
East Franklin Township | 37.480– 38.000 | 60.318– 61.155 | 19 | US 422 west – Butler, West Kittanning | Southern terminus of US 422 concurrency | |
Manor Township | 39.915– 40.001 | 64.237– 64.375 | A | PA 66 south – Ford City | Southern terminus of PA 66 (southbound) concurrency; exits to PA 66 southbound only | |
40.256– 40.590 | 64.786– 65.323 | B | To US 422 Bus. – Kittanning | Southern terminus of PA 66 (northbound) concurrency; no access to PA 66 southbound | ||
41.511– 42.302 | 66.805– 68.078 | US 422 east / US 422 Bus. west – Indiana, Kittanning | Northern terminus of US 422 concurrency; eastern terminus of US 422 Bus. | |||
42.806 | 68.890 | Northern terminus of freeway | ||||
Rayburn Township | 42.806 | 68.890 | PA 85 east – Rural Valley, Plumville | Western terminus of PA 85 | ||
South Bethlehem | 59.871 | 96.353 | PA 839 south – Mahoning Dam | Northern terminus of PA 839 | ||
Clarion | New Bethlehem | 60.176 | 96.844 | PA 66 north – Clarion | Northern terminus of PA 66 concurrency | |
Redbank Township | 65.661 | 105.671 | PA 536 east (Mayport Road) / Wallwork Road – Mayport | Western terminus of PA 536 | ||
Jefferson | Clover Township | 73.103 | 117.648 | PA 949 north (Summerville-Corsica Road) / Water Street – Corsica | Southern terminus of PA 949 | |
Brookville | 79.500 | 127.943 | US 322 west (28th Division Highway) / PA 36 north (Allegheny Boulevard) / PA 28 Truck north to I-80 – Leeper, Clarion | Southern terminus of US 322/PA 36 concurrency; southern terminus of PA 28 Truck | ||
80.282 | 129.201 | PA 36 south (White Street) – Punxsutawney | Northern terminus of PA 36 concurrency | |||
Pine Creek Township | 81.421 | 131.034 | US 322 east – Reynoldsville | Northern terminus of US 322 concurrency | ||
82.580– 82.696 | 132.900– 133.086 | I-80 / PA 28 Truck south – Clarion, DuBois | Exit 81 (I-80); northern terminus of PA 28 Truck | |||
Brockway | 98.264 | 158.141 | US 219 (Main Street / Cherry Street) – Ridgway, DuBois | Northern terminus of PA 28 | ||
1.000 mi = 1.609 km; 1.000 km = 0.621 mi
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PA 28 Truck
Location | Brookville, Pennsylvania |
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Length | 3.3 mi[12] (5.3 km) |
Existed | 1963–present |
Pennsylvania Route 28 Truck is a 3-mile-long (4.8 km) truck route in Brookville, Jefferson County, Pennsylvania. As Route 28 travels through the Brookville city center, it becomes a narrow main street and features a relatively sharp turn just west of the bridge over North Fork Creek. As a result, after the completion of Interstate 80, Route 28's truck traffic was shifted onto this freeway bypass from Exit 78 at Pennsylvania Route 36 (which Truck 28 is cosigned for its first 1/2 mile of existence) to Exit 81, where Route 28 meets the highway.
See also
References
- ^ a b Bureau of Maintenance and Operations (January 2019). Roadway Management System Straight Line Diagrams (Report) (2019 ed.). Pennsylvania Department of Transportation. Retrieved April 13, 2019.
- Allegheny County (PDF)
- Butler County (PDF)
- Armstrong County (PDF)
- Clarion County (PDF)
- Jefferson County (PDF)
- ^ Quadrant marker 10 for PA Route 28 marking the beginning of the route (Map). Google Maps. Retrieved 2014-04-28.
- ^ End quadrant marker for PA Route 28 marking the end of the route (Map). Google Maps. Retrieved 2014-04-28.
- ^ Schmitz, Jon (17 November 2014). "After six years, Route 28 reconstruction project ends". Pittsburgh Post-Gazette. Retrieved 12 July 2020.
- ^ "Pennsylvania Route 28" (Map). Google Maps. Retrieved August 13, 2014.
- ^ "Dream of 'nicer commute' genesis of Route 28". TribLive. Retrieved 13 October 2020.
- ^ a b c https://pittsburgh.pahighways.com/expressways/avexpressway.html
- ^ "Designations Of Highways Are Changed". The Evening Standard. Uniontown, PA. July 16, 1960. p. 7. Retrieved August 28, 2015 – via Newspapers.com.
- ^ Cite error: The named reference
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was invoked but never defined (see the help page). - ^ Plaza, historic marker to memorialize St. Nicholas Church in Troy Hill Pittsburgh Post-Gazette (06/15/2015)
- ^ PennDOT Plans Improvements To Route 28 At Highland Park Bridge KDKA-TV (12/12/2017)
- ^ "PA Route 28 Truck" (Map). Google Maps. Retrieved August 13, 2014.
External links
- State highways in Pennsylvania
- Limited-access roads in Pennsylvania
- Freeways in the United States
- Transportation in Allegheny County, Pennsylvania
- Transportation in Armstrong County, Pennsylvania
- Transportation in Butler County, Pennsylvania
- Transportation in Clarion County, Pennsylvania
- Transportation in Jefferson County, Pennsylvania