New Mexico State Road 599
Veterans Memorial Highway Santa Fe Relief Route | ||||
Route information | ||||
Maintained by NMDOT | ||||
Length | 14.019 mi[1] (22.561 km) | |||
Major junctions | ||||
South end | NM 14 southwest of Santa Fe | |||
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North end | US 84 / US 285 in Santa Fe | |||
Location | ||||
Country | United States | |||
State | New Mexico | |||
Counties | Santa Fe | |||
Highway system | ||||
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New Mexico Road 599 (NM 599) is a 14.019-mile (22.561 km) state highway in northern Santa Fe County, New Mexico, United States. The divided highway expressway is also known as the Veterans Memorial Highway and the Santa Fe Relief Route; and both names are used on road signs.[2][3] The latter name alludes to the highway's original purpose of bypassing the urbanized areas of Santa Fe and thereby relieving it from shipments of hazardous waste. It passes through less densely developed terrain in and around the northwestern boundary of the municipality. Speed limits on it range from 45 to 65 miles per hour (70 to 105 km/h).
Route description
NM 599 begins at a traffic light–controlled intersection with Cerrillos Road (State Road 14 [NM 14]), about two miles (3.2 km) south of the eastern municipal boundaries of Santa Fe. (From the intersection the road heads east as Aveneda del Sur. NM 14 heads north as a divided highway to a diamond interchange with Interstate 25/U.S. Route 85 [I‑25/US 85] and then on to Santa Fe. NM 14 heads south [initially as a divided highway] through Madrid and several other smaller communities to eventually end at Intestate 40.)[4]
From its southern terminus NM 599 heads very briefly west to East I‑25 Frontage Road before turning northwest. (East I‑25 Frontage Road heads north toward the Santa Fe County/NM 599 RailRunner station.) The speed limit increases to 45 mph (70 km/h) as the expressway continues through its diamond interchange with I‑25/US 85, where it passes under the freeway. North of the freeway, NM 599 briefly enters La Cienega, a census-designated place, and crosses West I‑25 Frontage Road, which provides access to a horse racetrack (formerly known as Downs at Santa Fe). Northwest of the frontage road, the speed limit increases from 45 to 65 mph (70 to 105 km/h) for approximately two miles (3.2 km), as the expressway turns to the north and leaves La Cienega.
Next along the NM 599 is a diamond interchange with Jaguar Drive (Exit 2), that is located directly east of the Santa Fe Municipal Airport. (This interchange was added in 2015, years after the construction of the original highway, and, while it is directly east of the airport, the roadway does not yet continue west beyond the interchange.) Continuing north, and to the west of some of the Santa Fe's newer neighborhoods, the highway returns to a 45-mile-per-hour (72 km/h) speed limit before it approaches the remaining traffic light controlled intersection on the route at Airport Road (formerly State Route 284, now Santa Fe County Road 56). The Santa Fe Municipal Airport is accessed by heading west on Airport Road.[4]
As the highway leaves the industrial and residential area near the intersection with Airport Road, the speed limit increases to 55 mph (90 km/h) as the expressway curves to the northeast and crosses the Santa Fe River. Northeast of the river NM 599 gains a western frontage road. Continuing northeast the expressway begins a long moderate climb through rolling terrain with grasses and juniper shrubs punctuated by mostly light residential development, as the road follows (at a distance) Santa Fe's northwestern boundary, until it reaches a dumbbell interchange (Exit 6) with South Meadows Drive (CR 62). While South Meadow drive does not yet continue northwest beyond the interchange, it provides a connection with CR 62, which originally crossed NM 599, just northeast of the newer interchange. Continuing its northeasterly course, and its climb through rolling hills, the expressway reaches an intersection with Via Veteranos. (Northwest of this junction, the West Frontage Road was built to allow for this intersection to eventually be replaced by a diamond interchange.) Still further northeast along the route is the diamond interchange (unnumbered exit) with Camino La Tierra (north) and Paseo Nopal (south). The West Frontage Road ends at Camino La Tierra.[4]
Beyond the Camino La Tierra/Paseo Nopal interchange, the expressway assumes a more east–northeasterly course, re-enters the city limits of Santa Fe, and passes through largely open space (that is projected to be developed). About one mile (1.6 km) along this section is a T intersection with Miranda Road, which only connects with the southbound lanes of NM 599. After an intersection with Camino De Las Montoyas the route turns to the south–southeast and reaches its highest point at a diamond interchange (unnumbered exit) with Ridgetop Road. At 7,265 feet (2,214 m), this interchange is almost 1,000 feet (300 m) higher than the route's junction with I‑25/US 85, approximately 12 miles (19 km) to the southwest. As the expressway crosses under Ridgetop Road the speed limit decreases to 45 mph (70 km/h) and the highway descends promptly into a canyon named Cañada Rincon.[5] Less than a mile later, after turning to the southeast, NM 599 reaches its northern terminus at a trumpet interchange with the U.S. Route 84/U.S. Route 285 (US 84/US 285) freeway, which is part of the Camino Real de Tierra Adentro. (US 84/US 285 heads north out of Santa Fe to Pojoaque and Española and heads south to connect with I‑25/US 85, immediately south of the Santa Fe city limits.)[4]
Design
In contrast to several other state highways in northern New Mexico, NM 599 is paved for its entire length. Functionally, it is an expressway by being a divided highway with no driveway access. Instead, local access is provided by linked frontage roads or by way of other connecting roads. There are four diamond interchanges and a dumbbell interchange along the route, as well as a trumpet interchange at its northern terminus. (The diamond interchange with I‑25/US 85 was originally constructed as a partial cloverleaf interchange, but was rebuilt as a diamond interchange in 2009 as part of the construction of the Santa Fe County/NM 599 RailRunner station in the median of I‑25/US 85.)[6] A few of the local highways that cross it at intervals are controlled by stop signs (but none on NM 599 itself) or traffic lights near the southern end of the route. Upgrades to the expressway are a consideration being undertaken by the New Mexico Department of Transportation's NM 599 Corridor Study.[7]
History
The NM 599 is significant as part of the road network traversed by vehicles transporting radioactive waste from Los Alamos National Laboratory (LANL) north of Santa Fe to the Waste Isolation Pilot Project (WIPP) in southern New Mexico (near Carlsbad). Much of the funding for construction of the route was supplied by the United States Department of Energy so that WIPP-bound waste from LANL would not have to pass through the center of Santa Fe. However, most of the traffic on the road is general public use and has nothing to do with WIPP waste, which is moved only at infrequent intervals in special convoys. Construction of the expressway took place over a period of several years in the 1990s.
Major intersections
The entire route is in Santa Fe County.
Location | mi[1] | km | Exit | Destinations[4] | Notes |
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| 0.000 | 0.000 | — | Avenida del Sur east | Road east beyond southern terminus |
NM 14 north – Santa Fe, U.S. Route 84/U.S. Route 285 NM 14 south – Los Cerrillos, Tijeras, Interstate 40 | Southern terminus | ||||
La Cienega | 0.449– 0.765 | 0.723– 1.231 | — | I-25 / US 85 north – Santa Fe, Las Vegas (New Mexico) I-25 / US 85 south – Albuquerque, Las Cruces | Diamond interchange; I‑25/US 84 Exit 276 |
Santa Fe | 2 | Jaguar Drive east – Santa Fe, State Road 14 | Diamond interchange; (opened to traffic on November 18, 2015) | ||
| 3.581 | 5.763 | — | CR 56 west (Airport Road) – Santa Fe Regional Airport, La Cienega Airport Road east (formerly State Road 284) – Santa Fe, State Road 14, State Road 300 | |
Bridge over the Santa Fe River | |||||
6.300 | 10.139 | 6 | CR 62 south (South Meadows Road) – Santa Fe | Dumbbell interchange | |
8.130 | 13.084 | — | CR 70 north (West Alameda Street) – County Road 62 CR 70 south (Camino Cemeterio) | ||
0.978– 10.230 | 1.574– 16.464 | — | Camino La Tierra north Paseo Nopal south | Diamond interchange; unnumbered exit | |
Santa Fe | 11.670 | 18.781 | — | CR 85 (Camino de los Montoyas) | |
12.580 | 20.246 | — | North Ridge Top Road north South Ridge Top Road south | Diamond interchange; unnumbered exit | |
13.040– 14.019 | 20.986– 22.561 | — | US 84 / US 285 north – Pojoaque, Española US 84 / US 285 south – Santa Fe, I‑25/US 85 | Northern terminus; Trumpet interchange; US 84/US 285 Exit 166 | |
1.000 mi = 1.609 km; 1.000 km = 0.621 mi
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See also
References
- ^ a b "NMDOT Highway Log" (PDF). dot.state.nm.us. New Mexico Department of Transportation. 8 Jun 2016. p. 89-90. Retrieved 2 Aug 2020.
- ^ "Untitled Street View along New Mexico State Road 599" (Map). Google Maps. Retrieved 2 Aug 2020.
- ^ "Untitled Street View along Interstate 25/U.S. Route 85" (Map). Google Maps. Retrieved 3 Aug 2020.
- ^ a b c d e "NM-599, New Mexico" (Map). Google Maps. 2 Aug 2020.
- ^ U.S. Geological Survey Geographic Names Information System: Cañada Rincon
- ^ "Local news in brief March 21: Railrunner work to close 599 exit". The Santa Fe New Mexican. Santa Fe, New Mexico: Robin McKinney Martin. 21 Mar 2009. Retrieved 3 Aug 2020.
- ^ "NM 599 Corridor Study project page". nmshtd.state.nm.us. New Mexico Department of Transportation. Archived from the original on 8 October 2011. Retrieved 3 Aug 2020 – via Wayback Machine.
External links
- Geographic data related to New Mexico State Road 599 at OpenStreetMap
- Road 599 on Steve Riner's New Mexico Highway Page