Interstate 87
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Interstate 87 is a 346 mile (558 km) intrastate interstate highway located entirely within the state of New York. Its southern end is at an intersection with Interstate 278 in New York City's The Bronx; its northern end is in Champlain, New York at the Canadian border, where it connects with Quebec Autoroute 15. From that point, motorists can continue northward to Montréal.
The section of highway south of its junction with Interstate 90 at Albany is part of the New York State Thruway, for which it was originally constucted in the middle 1950s. The section received its designation as Interstate 87 in 1958.
The Tappan Zee Bridge was created as an extension of the original Thruway route to Suffern, New York. It crosses the Hudson River enabling the route to New York City.
In New York City I-87 is known as the Major Deegan Expressway, which was opened in 1956 before the Interstate highway system was created. The expressway was named for William Francis Deegan, a civil servant and architect, member of the Army Corps of Engineers.
North of Albany, I-87 loses its New York Thruway designation. This region of road is known as the Adirondack Northway or just the Northway. The Northway was designated in 1967 by Parade Magazine as America’s Most Scenic Highway.
NewYorkStateThruway(I-87).jpg
Contents |
Major Cities Along the Route
Exits
For exits south of Albany, see Major Deegan Expressway and New York State Thruway.
- 1 – I-90/New York Thruway - New York/Buffalo/Boston
- 2 – Central Ave (NY 5) - W: Schenectady, E: Albany
- 4 – Wolf Road, Albany International Airport
- 5 – Albany-Shaker Road (NY 155) - Latham
- 6 – NY 7 west/NY 2 - Schenectady/Watervliet
- 7 – NY 7 east - Troy/Cohoes
- 8 – Crescent/Vischers Ferry
- 8A – Grooms Road
- 9 – NY 146 - Clifton Park/Mechanicville
- 10 – Ushers Rd/Jonesville/Ballston Lake
- 11 – Round Lake/Burnt Hills
- 12 – NY 67 - Malta/Ballston Spa
- 13 – US 9 - Saratoga Springs/Saratoga Lake
- 14 – NY 29/NY 9P - Saratoga Lake/Schuylerville
- 15 – NY 50 - Saratoga Springs/Gansevoort
- 16 – Ballard Road/Wilton/Corinth
- 17 – US 9 - South Glens Falls/Moreau State Park
- 18 – Glens Falls/Corinth
- 19 – NY 254 - Glens Falls/Queensbury
- 20 – NY 149 - Fort Ann/Whitehall
- 21 – NY 9N - Lake George Village/Fourth Lake
- 22 – US 9 - Lake George Village
- 23 – Warrensburg/Diamond Point
- 24 – Bolton Landing
- 25 – NY 8 - Hague/Chestertown/Brandt Lake
- 26 – US 9 - Pottersville/Minerva
- 27 – US 9 - Schroon Lake
- 28 – NY 74 east - Ticonderoga/Crown Point
- 29 – Newcomb/North Hudson
- 30 – US 9/NY 73 - Keene Valley/Keene/Lake Placid
- 31 – NY 9N - Elizabethtown/Westport
- 32 – Lewis/Willsboro
- 33 – US 9/NY 22 - Keeseville
- 34 – NY 9N - Ausable Forks/Keeseville
- 35 – NY 442 - Peru/Valcour/Port Kent
- 36 – NY 22 - International TradeParc
- 37 – NY 3 - Plattsburgh
- 38 – NY 22/NY 374 - Plattsburgh/Dannemora/Tupper Lake
- 39 – Moffitt Rd (NY 314) - Cumberland Head/Plattsburgh Bay
- 40 – NY 456 - Beekantown/Point au Roche
- 41 – NY 191 - Sciota/Chazy
- 42 – US 11 - Mooers/Rouses Point
- 43 – US 9 - Champlain
Intersections with other Interstates
- Interstate 95 in New York City, New York
- Interstate 84 in Newburgh, New York
- Interstate 90 in Albany, New York
Spur Routes
- Tarrytown, New York - I-287
- Suffern, New York - I-287
- Kingston, New York - I-587
- Albany, New York - I-787
Notes
I-287 connects with its parent in a 15-mile (24 km) long multiplex in the middle of the highway. It is a partial beltway around New York City. West of the multiplex, it loops around New York to meet the New Jersey Turnpike in Middlesex County, New Jersey; the northern sections of this part near the New York state line have nice mountain scenery. East of the multiplex, I-287 continues as the Cross Westchester Expressway to end at I-95 (the New England Thruway) in Rye, New York, near the Connecticut border. Note that I-287 leaves New York state, while its parent does not.
Intersections of I-287 with other interstates:
- Interstate 78 and Interstate 80 in New Jersey
- Interstate 87 - multiplex from Suffern, New York to Tarrytown, New York
- Interstate 684 in White Plains, New York
I-587 has no exits at all, and is less than 2 miles (3.2 km) long. It's kind of odd, going from a traffic circle to a traffic light.
I-687 was planned as a bypass around Albany, New York, but it was never built. In fact, an interchange that accesses another road to I-90 would have connected I-90 to I-687.
I-87 and its Autoroute 15 successor provide a very popular New York-to-Montréal route because of the breathtaking scenery.
Not counting the Canadian border crossing, I-87 is longest Interstate Highway that does not cross any state lines.
External links
- The Major Deegan at NYC Roads (http://www.nycroads.com/roads/major-deegan/)
- Straight Dope on Major Deegan (http://www.straightdope.com/mailbag/mdeegan.html)
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