Massachusetts Route 2

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Route 2 marker

Route 2
Template:Maplink-road
Route 2 highlighted in red
Route information
Length: 142.29 mi[1] (228.99 km)
Existed: 1927, 1971 (current alignment) – present
Major junctions
West end: NY 2 in Petersburgh, NY
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East end: Route 28 in Boston
Location
Counties: Berkshire, Franklin, Worcester, Middlesex, Suffolk, Norfolk
Highway system
x20px Route C1 Route 2A
Template:Infobox road/meta/browse

Route 2 is a 142.29-mile-long (228.99 km) major east–west state highway in Massachusetts. Along with Route 9 and U.S. Route 20 to the south, these highways are the main alternatives to the Massachusetts Turnpike/I-90 toll highway. Route 2 runs the entire length of the northern tier of Massachusetts, beginning at the New York border, where it connects with New York State Route 2, and ending near Boston Common in Boston. Most of the route is an expressway through the northern tier of Massachusetts, with the longest surface road segments being the western portion (the Mohawk Trail). Older alignments of Route 2 are known as Route 2A.

Route description

Route 2 proceeds east from the New York state line on a winding, scenic path in Berkshire County through Williamstown, where it serves the Williams College area, and through North Adams, where it serves the Massachusetts College of Liberal Arts. East of North Adams, Route 2 ascends via a hairpin turn into the Hoosac Range along what is known as the Mohawk Trail.

Route 2 then enters Franklin County, meeting Interstate 91 at an interchange in Greenfield and briefly runs concurrently with I-91. While the old Route 2 becomes Route 2A and goes through downtown Greenfield, Route 2 exits off I-91 as a short expressway before becoming a two-lane freeway. Outside Greenfield, Route 2A temporarily ends and merges with Route 2. Route 2 remains a regular two-lane surface road in Gill and through Erving, though it has some grade-separated interchanges in Millers Falls at its intersection with Route 63. There is another gap in the two-lane expressway in the Erving area. Recently, the road in Erving was routed to the north and straightened to avoid the paper mill next to the river. This rerouting led to the road being shortened by less than a tenth of a mile.

Once the road enters the Town of Orange, Route 2A resumes and diverges from Route 2. At this point, Route 2 again becomes a two-lane limited-access highway. In Orange, Route 2 runs concurrently with U.S. Route 202. The road at this point enters the town of Athol in Worcester County. After its eastern interchange in Phillipston when US-202 departs to the north, Route 2 becomes a four-lane limited-access highway, though not to Interstate standards at most points. It continues through Gardner into Fitchburg where Route 2 has several at-grade intersections with Oak Hill Rd, Palmer Rd, Mt. Elam Rd and Abbott Ave. At the intersection with Mt. Elam Rd, a traffic light remains in use on the eastbound side. Continuing east into Leominster, Interstate 190 splits off, heading south to Worcester.

Route 2 continues east to Middlesex County and enters Boston's outer loop at the interchange with Interstate 495 in Littleton. It continues into Acton, where Route 2 reduces its speed to 45 miles per hour, and becomes a four-lane expressway with at-grade intersections. At the Concord Rotary, a major traffic choke point, Route 2 intersects with Route 2A and the eastern terminus of Route 119 (which is concurrent with Route 2A). After the rotary, the road loses its dividing wall as it passes by the State Police (who have an emergency-only traffic light) and over the Assabet River. Route 2A formerly broke away from Route 2 at the next traffic light to go left into Concord but is now overlaid with Route 2. At Crosby's Corner, the sixth intersection after the rotary, Route 2A exits under the highway while Route 2 veers right (but still heads east). While the highway is an expressway through Lincoln, there is a signalized at-grade intersection with Bedford Road.

Convergence of Routes 2, 3, and 16 in Cambridge.

At this point, Route 2 enters Lexington and still is an expressway with at-grade intersections. It then heads to Boston's inner belt, and as it crosses Interstate 95/Route 128, it becomes a six lane freeway with a speed limit of 55 miles per hour. In Belmont, Route 2 remains a six-lane highway, and then becomes an eight-lane freeway at Exit 132 (formerly 57) in Arlington, where U.S. Route 3 would have joined it from the north. At Exit 135 (formerly 60), the freeway narrows width to six lanes. The section of freeway from Route 128 to the Cambridge line meets the standards of an interstate highway.[citation needed] The highway enters Cambridge, the highway reduces its speed limit back to 45 miles per hour and becomes a five-lane freeway (three lanes heading east, two lanes heading west), with a strip of residential and transit-oriented development on its eastbound side, including an off-ramp that serves the MBTA Alewife Station, Cambridge Discovery Park and development to the south and west of the station. After the Alewife exit, the highway narrows again to four lanes.

The shield for Massachusetts Route 2, located across from Boston Common

The highway then meets a large at-grade intersection with Routes 3 and 16, where Route 2 east merges with U.S. Route 3 south and Route 16 and continues as a four-lane, 35 mile per hour arterial parkway — managed by the Department of Conservation and Recreation — for the rest of its time in Cambridge. Route 2 follows Alewife Brook Parkway and Fresh Pond Parkway along its wrong way concurrency with Routes 3 and 16, before Route 16 heads west into Watertown. Route 2 and Route 3 concurrently start paralleling the Charles River as Memorial Drive, passing by Harvard University’s campus. It then heads southward on the Boston University Bridge into Boston proper, as it separates from Route 3. It winds through the Boston University campus as Mountfort Street and crosses over both the Massachusetts Turnpike and Commonwealth Avenue before heading due east towards Kenmore Square, while running parallel to U.S. Route 20. Immediately east of the Boston University campus, it crosses into Kenmore Square, which is also the eastern terminus of U.S. Route 20. From Kenmore Square, Route 2 follows Commonwealth Ave to Arlington St. It circles the Boston Public Garden, using Arlington, Boylston, and Charles Streets. Route 2 east goes along northbound Route 28 north at the intersection of Charles and Beacon Streets between Boston Common and the Boston Public Garden. As Route 28 north joins Storrow Drive, which shortly after would join Route 3, Route 28 south joins Route 2 and completes the loop around Boston Public Garden.

History

The route amalgamates and supersedes various named highways in some cases going back to the pre-automobile era. For example, parts of Route 2 are sometimes known as the Cambridge and Concord Turnpike and the Mohawk Trail.

New England 7.svg

In the early 1920s, Route 2 was known as New England Interstate Route 7 (NE-7), a major road connecting Boston with Troy, New York. NE-7 ran roughly where Route 2A (the original surface alignment of Route 2) does now except near the New York state line. NE-7 used current Massachusetts Route 43, New York State Route 43 and New York State Route 66 to reach Troy. Current Route 2 from Williamstown to Petersburgh was previously numbered as Route 96.

Route 2 connected as a highway in its current right-of-way at Alewife Brook Parkway at some point before 1937.[2]

An upgraded Route 2 was originally planned to continue as Boston's Northwest Expressway (merging with a re-routed U.S. Route 3 at the Arlington-Lexington or Arlington-Cambridge border) to a junction with Interstate 695, the Inner Beltway, but this, along with the Inner Beltway itself, was cancelled in 1970, accounting for the abrupt narrowing at Alewife.[3][4] In place of the highway project, the MBTA Red Line was extended from Harvard to Alewife in the 1980s.[citation needed]

The Leominster to Ayer section opened on July 3, 1953, completing the expressway portion from Westminster to West Concord.[5] Full grade separation between Route 128 and Alewife Brook Parkway was completed around 1970.

Crosby's Corner intersection

Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found. This major project has been planned since 1999. The intersection had an average of 90 accidents a year. The project was intended to solve the traffic and safety problems that had long occurred at the Crosby's Corner intersection (junction of Route 2 and 2A) in Concord. The project, which was expected to cost $71.9 million, widened Route 2 from Bedford Rd in Lincoln to 300 feet west of Sandy Pond Rd in Concord. The project eliminated the at grade intersection, realigned Route 2, and constructed new entrance and exit ramps along with new service roads next to Route 2.

The full project included building a new overpass bridge over Route 2 and building multiple service roads next to Route 2. Work also consisted of a new signalized intersection. The project was put out to bid for contractors on September 19, 2011. A contractor was expected to be chosen over the winter and construction was expected to begin in Spring 2012 on the estimated $55 million project.

The Army Corps of Engineers published a notice[6] for this project, because of its impact on wetlands at Crosby's Corner. During the summer of 2012, activity on this portion of Route 2 included surveying and the installation of orange-painted stakes. Signs were added in January 2013 indicating that construction would start on January 14. As of April 2014 the project was underway and predicted completion was spring 2016.[7] The project was completed in 2016, with a large improvement in traffic flow.[citation needed]

Future

Concord rotary

A project to improve the Concord Rotary, at the convergence of Route 2, Route 2A/119 (Elm Street), Barrett's Mill Road and Commonwealth Avenue, has been in planning since 2003 or even earlier. More than 61,000 cars use this rotary on a typical day, and the backed up traffic can be significant. The improved intersection would include overpasses for local streets, while Route 2 traffic would continue unimpeded at grade. However, the project was removed from the funded portion of the Boston Region Metropolitan Planning Organization's (MPO) Long Range Transportation Plan (LRTP) in August 2009 and is currently on hold.[8]

Major intersections

MassDOT was scheduled to replace the old sequential exit numbers with the new milepost-based exit numbers beginning in summer 2020,[9][10] which had been delayed since 2016.[11][12] On March 16, 2021, MassDOT announced that the Route 2 exit numbers would get renumbered for four weeks starting on March 23.

County Location[13] mi[13] km Old exit[14] New exit[10] Destinations Notes
Berkshire Williamstown 0.000 0.000 NY 2 west – Troy, NY Continuation into New York
3.824 6.154 US 7 south – Pittsfield Western end of concurrency with US 7
6.221 10.012 US 7 north – Pownal, VT, Montreal, Que Eastern end of concurrency with US 7, the beginning of the Mohawk Trail
6.746 10.857 Route 43 south – Hancock, Stephentown, NY Northern terminus of Route 43
North Adams 11.571 18.622 Route 8 south – Adams[15] Western end of concurrency with Route 8
11.740 18.894 Route 8A south Northern terminus of Route 8A "U" segment
12.405 19.964 Route 8 north – Clarksburg, Stamford, VT Eastern end of concurrency with Route 8
Franklin Charlemont 29.807 47.970 Route 8A south – Hawley, Windsor Western end of concurrency with Route 8A
30.4 48.9 Route 8A north – Heath, Jacksonville, VT Eastern end of concurrency with Route 8A
Buckland 37.390 60.173 Route 2A east – Shelburne Falls Former western terminus of Route 2A
37.806 60.843 Route 112 south – Buckland, Ashfield Western end of concurrency with Route 112
Shelburne 38.062 61.255 Route 112 north – Shelburne Falls, Colrain Eastern end of concurrency with Route 112
38.942 62.671 Route 2A west – Shelburne Falls, Buckland Former western end of concurrency with Route 2A
Greenfield 47.398 76.280 Western end of freeway section
26 43 I‑91 south / Route 2A east – Springfield, Greenfield Center Western end of concurrency with I-91 and Route 2A; current western terminus of Route 2A
50.139 80.691 27 46 I‑91 north – Brattleboro, VT Eastern end of concurrency with I-91
50.789 81.737 US 5 / Route 10 – Greenfield, Bernardston Interchange
51.480 82.849 Eastern end of freeway section
52.242 84.075 Route 2A west – Greenfield Center Western end of concurrency with Route 2A
Erving 57.1 91.9 Invalid type: road to Route 63 – Northfield, Millers Falls
57.4 92.4 Invalid type: road to Route 63 – Northfield, Hinsdale, NH
57.7 92.9 Invalid type: road to Route 63 – Millers Falls
64.865 104.390 Route 2A east to Route 78 – Orange, Wendell[16] Eastern end of concurrency with Route 2A
65.060 104.704 Western end of expressway section
Orange 66.571 107.136 14 67 Invalid type: road – Orange, Lake Mattawa
69.788 112.313 15 70 Route 122 – Orange Ctr, Worcester
70.676 113.742 16 71 US 202 south / Invalid type: road – Belchertown, Athol Western end of concurrency with US 202
Worcester Athol 75.155 120.950 17 75 Route 32 – Athol, Petersham
Phillipston 76.474 123.073 18 77 Route 2A – Athol, Phillipston
79.009 127.153 19 79 US 202 north / Route 2A – Baldwinville, Winchendon, Phillipston Eastern end of concurrency with US 202; roadway widens to four lanes east of this interchange
Templeton 81.915 131.829 20 82 Invalid type: road – Templeton, Baldwinville
83.459 134.314 21 83 Route 2A / Route 101 – East Templeton, Ashburnham
Gardner 86.500 139.208 22 86 Route 68 – Gardner, Hubbardston
87.253 140.420 23 87 Invalid type: road – Gardner
Westminster 89.738 144.419 24 90 Route 140 north / Invalid type: road – Winchendon, Westminster Western end of concurrency with Route 140; signed as exits 90A (south) and 90B (north) westbound[10]
91.764 147.680 25 92 Route 2A / Route 140 south – Westminster Eastern end of concurrency with Route 140
92.568 148.974 26 93 Willard Road / Village Inn Road Eastbound exit only
93.479 150.440 27 94 Narrows Road / Depot Road
Fitchburg 94.495 152.075 28 95 Route 31 – Fitchburg, Princeton
FitchburgLeominster line Oak Hill Road Westbound at-grade intersection; eastern end of freeway section
Palmer Road Eastbound at-grade intersection
96.279 154.946 29 Mount Elam Road Intersection with right-in/right-out connections
98.007 157.727 30 98 Merriam Avenue / South Street
Leominster Abbott Avenue Intersection with right-in/right-out connections; western end of freeway section
99.269–
99.278
159.758–
159.772
31 99 Route 12 – Fitchburg, Leominster Signed as exits 99A (south) and 99B (north) westbound[10]
100.355 161.506 32 100 Route 13 – Leominster, Lunenburg
101.125 162.745 33 101 I‑190 south / Invalid type: road – Worcester, Leominster Northern terminus of I-190; exits 19A-B on I-190
Lancaster 102.429 164.843 34 102 Mechanic Street / Harvard Street Exit partially in Leominster
103.497 166.562 35 103 Route 70 south / Invalid type: road – Lancaster, Lunenburg Northern terminus of Route 70
104.917 168.848 36 105 Invalid type: road – Shirley
106.419 171.265 37 106 Invalid type: road – Devens, Reserve Forces Training Area Signed as Exits 106A (no public access) and 106B westbound, exit partially in Harvard[10]
Harvard 109.348–
109.357
175.979–
175.993
38 109 Route 110 / Route 111 – Harvard, Ayer Signed as exits 109A (south/west) and 109B (north/east)[10]
Middlesex Littleton 113.050 181.936 39 112 Invalid type: road – Littleton
113.285–
113.317
182.315–
182.366
40 113 I‑495 – Marlboro, Lowell Signed as exits 113A (south) and 113B (north);[10] exits 78A-B on I-495[17]
Boxborough 115.505 185.887 41 115 Invalid type: road – West Acton, Littleton
Acton 117.612 189.278 42 117 Route 27 – Maynard, Acton
118.013 189.924 43 118 Route 111 north – West Acton Westbound left exit and eastbound entrance; western terminus of concurrency with Route 111; eastern end of freeway section
Concord 120.465 193.870 Route 2A west / Route 119 west / Route 111 north – Littleton Rotary; western end of concurrency with Route 2A; eastern terminus of Routes 119; southern terminus of Route 111
121.691 195.843 Route 62 (Main Street) – West Concord, Maynard, Concord Ctr, Bedford
123.901 199.399 Route 126 south (Walden Street) to Route 117 – Walden Pond, Waltham Northern terminus of Route 126; western end of limited-access section
124.824 200.885 50 125 Route 2A east / Invalid type: road – Concord, Lincoln Partial interchange; eastern end of concurrency with Route 2A
Lincoln 126.256 203.189 51 Bedford Road At-grade intersection; to Route 2A
Lexington 128.527 206.844 52 127 I‑95 / Route 128 – Attleboro, Peabody Signed as exits 127A (south) and 127B (north); western end of freeway section
129.010 207.621 53 128 Invalid type: road – Lexington No westbound exit
130.002 209.218 54 129 Invalid type: road – Lexington, Waltham Signed as Exits 129A (Waltham) and 129B (Lexington);[10] westbound exits and eastbound entrances
130.894 210.653 55 130 Invalid type: road – Lexington Eastbound exit and westbound entrance
131.435 211.524 56 131 Invalid type: road – Belmont Eastbound signage
Route 4 north / Route 225 west / Invalid type: road – Lexington, Bedford Westbound signage; southern terminus of Route 4; eastern terminus of Route 225
ArlingtonBelmont line 131.990 212.417 57 132 Invalid type: road – Arlington, Belmont
Belmont 132.711 213.578 58 133 Invalid type: road – Arlington
BelmontArlington line 133.690 215.153 59 134 Route 60 – Belmont, Arlington
ArlingtonBelmont
Cambridge tripoint
134.130 215.861 60 135 Invalid type: road – East Arlington
Cambridge 134.649 216.697 Alewife station Eastbound exit only
134.915 217.125 Eastern end of expressway section
135.005 217.269 US 3 north / Route 16 east (Alewife Brook Parkway) – Medford, Woburn Western end of concurrency with US 3 and Route 16
136.354 219.440 Route 16 west (Huron Avenue) – Watertown, West Newton Eastern end of concurrency with Route 16
139.280 224.149 US 3 south (Memorial Drive) Eastern end of concurrency with US 3
Charles River 139.349 224.260 Boston University Bridge
Suffolk Boston 139.531 224.553 US 20 (Commonwealth Avenue) – Brighton, Kenmore Square
Norfolk
No major junctions
Suffolk Boston 140.446 226.026 US 20 west (Commonwealth Avenue) Kenmore Square; eastern terminus of US 20
140.881 226.726 Route 2A west (Massachusetts Avenue) Eastern terminus of Route 2A
141.556 227.812 Route 28 south (Clarendon Street) One-way southbound
142.35 229.09 Beacon Street Eastern terminus
1.000 mi = 1.609 km; 1.000 km = 0.621 mi

See also

References

  1. Executive Office of Transportation, Office of Transportation Planning - 2005 Road Inventory
  2. http://www.schlichtman.org/mahighways/bosmap37.gif[bare URL image file]
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  6. http://www.nae.usace.army.mil/reg/09/2009-01425.pdf[permanent dead link]
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External links

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