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Palisades Interstate Parkway

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Palisades Interstate Parkway route marker

Palisades Interstate Parkway
Map of the New York City area with the Palisades Interstate Parkway highlighted in red
Route information
Maintained by Palisades Interstate Park Commission
Length: 38.25 mi[4][5] (61.56 km)
Existed: 1958[1] – present
Restrictions: No commercial vehicles[2][3]
Major junctions
South end: I-95 / US 1-9 / US 46 in Fort Lee, NJ
  US 9W / Route 67 in Fort Lee, NJ
I-87 / I-287 / New York Thruway in Nanuet, NY
US 202 in Mount Ivy, NY
US 6 in Bear Mountain State Park, NY
North end: US 6 / US 9W / US 202 in Fort Montgomery, NY
Location
Counties: Bergen (NJ); Rockland, Orange (NY)
Highway system
Route 444 Route 445 Route 446
Palisade Interstate Parkway[6]
Palisades Interstate Parkway is located in Bergen County, New Jersey
Palisades Interstate Parkway
Coordinates Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
Area 3,311 acres (1,340 ha)
NRHP Reference # 99000940[7]
NJRHP # 102[8]
Significant dates
Added to NRHP August 2, 1999
Designated NJRHP October 3, 1999

The Palisades Interstate Parkway (PIP) is a 38.25-mile-long (61.56 km) limited-access highway in the U.S. states of New Jersey and New York. The parkway is a major commuter route into New York City from Rockland and Orange counties in New York and Bergen County in New Jersey. The southern terminus of the route is at the George Washington Bridge in Fort Lee, New Jersey, where it connects to Interstate 95 (I-95), U.S. Route 1–9 (US 1–9), US 46 and Route 4. Its northern terminus is at a traffic circle in Fort Montgomery, New York, where the PIP meets US 9W and US 202 at the Bear Mountain Bridge. At exit 18, the PIP forms a concurrency with US 6 for the remaining duration of its run.

The route is named for the New Jersey Palisades, a line of cliffs rising along the western side of the Hudson River. The PIP is designated, but not signed as Route 445 in New Jersey and New York State Route 987C (NY 987C), an unsigned reference route, in New York. As with most parkways in the New York metropolitan area, commercial traffic is prohibited from using the PIP. The Palisades Interstate Parkway was built from 1947–1958, and fully opened to traffic on August 28, 1958.

Route description

Palisades Interstate Parkway trailblazer

The main line of the parkway is designated as Route 445 in New Jersey and NY 987C in New York. The latter is one of New York's reference routes.[4][5] A 0.42-mile (0.68 km) spur connecting the parkway to US 9W in Fort Lee, New Jersey, is designated Route 445S.[9] All three designations are unsigned and used only for inventory purposes. The parkway is owned and maintained by the Palisades Interstate Park Commission but occasional maintenance is performed by the New Jersey and New York state departments of transportation.[10][11] Commercial vehicles are prohibited on the entire length of the Palisades Interstate Parkway.[2][3]

New Jersey

The Palisades Interstate Parkway begins at the George Washington Bridge (GWB) in Fort Lee, New Jersey. Passengers from the upper level of the GWB can directly get on the PIP northbound, while passengers from the lower level of the bridge must travel through GWB Plaza on US 9W before getting on the parkway. Passengers riding northbound on the New Jersey Turnpike (I-95) must be in local lanes to directly get on the PIP. Once the PIP leaves the GWB, it proceeds north along the New Jersey Palisades, breezing by the Englewood Cliffs Service Area. Unlike service areas further north along the parkway, there are two in Englewood, one for northbound drivers and one for southbound drivers. The others are in the center median shared by drivers going in both directions. There are also three different scenic lookout points over the Palisades about where Manhattan Island begins at the Harlem River. After this, the PIP parallels US 9W and the Hudson River for its entire run in New Jersey. In fact, all four exits in New Jersey are either with US 9W, or within mere feet of the route. The PIP leaves New Jersey into New York in the borough of Rockleigh.[12]

Welcome to the PIP sign posted at its northern terminus in Orange County

The entire New Jersey portion of the Palisades Interstate Parkway is within Bergen County. It is designated as a state scenic byway known as the Palisades Scenic Byway.[13] The PIP and the New Jersey Turnpike are the only highways that use sequential exit numbering in New Jersey; all others in the state are based on mileage, except for the Atlantic City–Brigantine Connector in Atlantic City, which uses lettered exits (no numerals).

New York

Rockland County

The Palisades enters Rockland County in the hamlet of Palisades. At about the border the PIP changes direction from due north along the Hudson River to a north-west direction. Shortly after the Kings Ferry Service Area in the center median, the first two exits in New York are key exits for two colleges in Rockland County. Exit 5 provides a link to St. Thomas Aquinas College, and exit 6 provides a link to Dominican College. In West Nyack, the PIP has a key interchange with the New York State Thruway (I-87 and I-287). This intersection is about seven miles (11 km) west of the Tappan Zee Bridge. After the PIP's interchange with the NY Thruway, the PIP turns slightly north-east and its speed limit increases to 55 miles per hour (89 km/h). From the GWB to the NY Thruway it is exclusively 50 miles per hour (80 km/h). At exit 13, the PIP intersects US 202 as the route crosses south of Harriman State Park in Mount Ivy. This is the first of two meetings between the PIP and US 202. At exit 15, the PIP has its last busy intersection in Rockland County with County Route 106 (CR 106, formerly part of NY 210) in Stony Point. From here, the PIP enters Harriman State Park, and at exit 16, the PIP intersects Lake Welch Parkway, which is one of several parkways commissioned within the park.[12]

Orange County

The Palisades enters Orange County north of Lake Welch Parkway at exit 16 and south of the Palisades Interstate Park Commission Visitor Center, located in the center median in what was originally a parkway service area. The first interchange in Orange County is exit 17 at Anthony Wayne Recreation Area. At exit 18, the PIP intersects US 6 and Seven Lakes Drive. US 6 west heads toward the Thruway and NY 17 five miles (8 km) west in Harriman. US 6 east forms the PIP's first, last, and only concurrency for the last two miles (3 km) of the PIP's run. Seven Lakes Drive joins the two routes for one mile (1.6 km) before departing at exit 19. The two routes then enter Bear Mountain State Park in an eastern direction. Finally, the Palisades Interstate Parkway meets its end at US 9W and US 202 at a traffic circle inches from the Hudson River and the Bear Mountain Bridge. US 6 and US 202 head east over the bridge, while US 9W heads north toward the United States Military Academy in West Point.[12] (Southbound US 9W, breaking off to the right, is the same road as westbound US 202.)

History

The parkway's northern terminus in Fort Montgomery, New York

In 1933–34, the first thoughts of a Palisades Interstate Parkway were developed by William A. Welch. The plan was to build a parkway to connect the New Jersey Palisades with the state parks along the Hudson River in Rockland and Orange counties. Welch would soon garner the support of John D. Rockefeller, who donated 700 acres (2.8 km2) of land along the New Jersey Palisades overlooking the Hudson River. With this favorable momentum for the new route, the proposed route was accepted as a Civil Works Administration project under Franklin D. Roosevelt's New Deal coalition. However, the New Jersey Highway Commission did not support construction, so the idea of a parkway was put on hold.[14]

During the 1940s, Rockefeller renewed the push for a parkway along the New Jersey Palisades, and teamed with ultimate PIP planner, Robert Moses, to establish and design the parkway. The plan originally was to have the PIP stretch from the Garden State Parkway, along the Hudson River, to the George Washington Bridge, and then north along its present-day route ending at the Bear Mountain Bridge. This southern extension was never built, but construction began on the current PIP in New York on April 1, 1947. Construction on the New Jersey portion began about one year later.[1] Construction was delayed twice due to material shortages, but that did not stop the PIP from being opened in stages during the 1940s and 1950s. The route was completed in New Jersey in 1957, and on August 28, 1958, the final piece of the PIP was completed between exits 5 and 9 in southern Rockland County.[1]

The PIP is well known for its stone arch overpasses throughout its route and its several scenic overlooks in New Jersey. All sorts of unique trees and flowers can be seen along the route as well. In 1998, because of all the natural and constructed beauty, the PIP was designated as a national landmark by the National Park Service.[15]

Exit list

State County Location mi
[4][5]
km Exit Destinations Notes
New Jersey Bergen Fort Lee 0.00 0.00 I-95 north / US 1-9 north (George Washington Bridge) – New York
0.18 0.29 George Washington Bridge – Palisades Parkway Toll Plaza (southbound only)
(Cash or E-ZPass)
Hudson Terrace / Myrtle Avenue Southbound exit and entrance
0.31 0.50 US 9W south to I-95 / I-80 / Route 4 / US 46 – Fort Lee Southbound exit and northbound entrance
Englewood Cliffs 1.89 3.04 1 Palisade Avenue (CR 505) – Englewood Cliffs, Englewood
Alpine 7.48 12.04 2 US 9W – Alpine, Closter
9.29 14.95 3 US 9W
10.34 16.64 4 US 9W
11.06
0.00
17.80
0.00
New Jersey–New York state line
New York Rockland Tappan 2.57 4.14 5 NY 303 – Orangeburg, Tappan Signed as 5N (north) and 5S (south)
Orangeburg 3.50 5.63 6 CR 20 (Orangeburg Road) – Orangeburg, Pearl River Signed as 6E (east) and 6W (west)
West Nyack
Nanuet line
6.40 10.30 7 CR 42 (Town Line Road) – Nanuet
7.13 11.47 8 NY 59 – Nyack, Spring Valley Signed as 8E (east) and 8W (west)
7.91 12.73 9 I-87 / I-287 / New York Thruway – White Plains, Albany Signed as 9E (east) and 9W (west)
New City 9.50 15.29 10 CR 33 (North Middletown Road) – New City, Nanuet
New Hempstead 11.62 18.70 11 CR 80 (New Hempstead Road) – New City, New Square
13.30 21.40 12 NY 45 – New Hempstead, Spring Valley
Mount Ivy 14.32 23.05 13 US 202 – Haverstraw, Suffern
Stony Point 16.71 26.89 14 CR 98 (Willow Grove Road)
17.92 28.84 15 CR 106 (Gate Hill Road) – Stony Point
Harriman State Park 19.05 30.66 16 Lake Welch Parkway south – Lake Welch, Sebago Beach No northbound entrance
Orange Palisades Interstate Park Commission Visitor Center Left exit; former service area
23.50 37.82 17 Anthony Wayne Recreation Area
24.37 39.22 18 US 6 west / Seven Lakes Drive west to I-87 / NY 17 – Central Valley Southern terminus of concurrency with US 6 and S.L. Drive
24.57 39.54 19 Seven Lakes Drive east to Perkins Memorial Drive – Bear Mountain Park Northern terminus of concurrency with S.L. Drive
Bear Mountain State Park 26.77 43.08 US 6 east / US 9W / US 202 – West Point, Haverstraw, Bear Mountain Bridge Bear Mountain Circle; northern terminus of concurrency with US 6
1.000 mi = 1.609 km; 1.000 km = 0.621 mi

See also

References

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Further reading

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External links

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