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Interstate 684

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Map
Map of New York with I-684 highlighted in red
Route information
Maintained by NYSDOT
Length28.46 mi[2] (45.80 km)
ExistedJanuary 1, 1970[1]–present
HistoryCompleted in 1974[citation needed]
Major junctions
South end I-287 / Hutchinson River Parkway at White PlainsHarrison, NY border

Saw Mill River Parkway in Bedford, NY
I-84 in Southeast, NY

US 6 / US 202 / NY 22 in Southeast, NY
North end NY 22 in Southeast, NY
Location
CountryUnited States
CountiesWestchester, Fairfield (CT), Putnam
Highway system
I-678NY I-687
I-491CT I-691

Interstate 684 (I-684) is a 28.4 mile-long (45.7 km) north–south Interstate Highway in the states of New York and Connecticut in the United States. The highway connects I-84 with I-287 and the Hutchinson River Parkway, primarily serving commuter traffic to and from the northern suburbs of the New York metropolitan area. The route of the highway was originally designated as part of I-87 during the 1960s. The first section of the roadway opened to traffic in October 1968, and the final segment was completed in December 1974.

Route description

Cross-Westchester Expressway to Saw Mill River Parkway

I-684 begins as two separate spur routes. The primary spur (the one officially designated I-684) begins at the White PlainsHarrison line at exit 9A of the Cross-Westchester Expressway (I-287) in Westchester County, New York. The other, designated as New York State Route 984J (NY 984J) but still signed I-684, begins in Harrison at exit 26A of the Hutchinson River Parkway and has one independent exit with Manhattanville Road before joining with the I-287 spur into one route. The spurs, I-287 and the Hutch surround an office park. From the junction of the two spurs, the Interstate Highway takes a straight course to the north-northwest through a wooded corridor with a golf course on the west and residences on the east. After the Barnes Lane overpass a mile and a half (2 km) north of the spurs, it veers to the north-northeast for a half-mile (1 km) before turning to the north alongside Rye Lake, part of Kensico Reservoir, one of many that provide water to New York City. It remains in an increasingly narrow strip of woods between the lake and Westchester County Airport into its first exit, Airport Road, 4.4 miles (7.1 km) from its southern terminus. NY 120 parallels the highway to the east.

Three signs along a busy freeway. The one at the bottom says "Entering Greenwich Connecticut". The one above it has "Litter Removal" on it. The last one, at the top, is irregularly shaped with the number 684
Signs at Connecticut state line

Just north of that exit, NY 120 crosses over the road. Immediately after this exit, I-684 crosses the Connecticut state line. Signage indicates this, but it retains its New York reference markers as it curves more to the northeast for the next 1.4-mile (2.3 km) through wooded and swampy country in the western corner of Greenwich. There is no exit in Connecticut. A mile after it re-enters New York, in the town of North Castle, it reaches its next exit, where NY 22 serves that community and the nearby hamlet of Armonk. The short section of I-684 in Connecticut is owned by the Connecticut Department of Transportation, but maintenance and repairs to the stretch are performed by the New York State Department of Transportation, with the cost of maintenance being reimbursed to New York by Connecticut.

Past that exit, it bends even more to the northeast, continuing past houses, parks and golf courses located amidst dense woodlands. At Byram Lake Reservoir, it returns to a northward heading for a mile (1.6 km), crossing into the town of Bedford. The highway then curves northeasterly and then to the northwest once the reservoir is past. The Arthur W. Butler Memorial Sanctuary, a private nature preserve, replaces it on the east of the highway. Just south of the exit for NY 172, I-684 bends northwest again.

Over the next two miles (3.2 km), the interstate curves gently back and forth, maintaining its generally northerly heading, as its median strip widens slightly. The surrounding lands start to include some more cleared lots, larger estates that were once small farms. At the northern end of this section a rest area serves southbound traffic. The highway passes Bedford Hills Correctional Facility, one of New York's two main women's prisons, a short distance to its west, and then bends northwest into the most extensive junction since its beginning: the northern terminus of the Saw Mill River Parkway.

Saw Mill River Parkway to Brewster

Diagram of interchanges 5 and 6.

The Saw Mill merges from the southeast, its two roadways forming service roads flanking I-684 for the next mile as it passes a southern extension of Muscoot Reservoir just east of the village of Katonah. Entry from the interstate to the parkway (and NY 117, which has its northern terminus at the parkway just below the interstate) is from the southbound lanes only. A half-mile (1 km) north of the merger the frontage roads merge into the interstate at the exit for NY 35, serving Katonah and the hamlet of Cross River to the east. After that exit the electrified tracks of Metro-North Railroad's Harlem Line parallel the highway to the west. They cross into the town of Lewisboro. A mile north of that point, NY 22 parallels on the east. A northbound-only exit leads onto it, allowing access to NY 138, which crosses the interstate at the hamlet of Golden's Bridge. Its train station is prominently visible on the west side of the highway.

North of that station is the North Salem town line. NY 22 detours slightly eastward, away from the interstate, for a mile. When it returns, the roads and the railroad tracks bend strongly to the northeast, following the Croton River on their west. After a mile this brings them to I-684's next exit, at NY 116, again for only northbound traffic but with southbound entry. The Purdy's Metro-North station is also adjacent to the highway, but is screened from view by a line of trees. A quarter-mile (500 m) to the north, NY 22 crosses under to the opposite side. A short distance later, the Harlem Line veers northwest, followed quickly by NY 22, as the interstate veers northeast. The Hardscrabble Road exit serves both directions and, via NY 22, allows access to the nearby hamlet of Croton Falls. One mile past that junction, I-684 crosses into Putnam County and the town of Brewster.

Within a thousand feet (300 m) of the county line, the Brewster rest area serves northbound traffic. Beyond, the highway turns slightly more to the east, then swings back to the north into its northern terminus at I-84. An almost-complete cloverleaf interchange guides traffic east to Danbury, Connecticut or west towards Newburgh. Traffic continuing north remains on a limited-access route, designated but not signed as NY 981B, to the last signed exit with the concurrent routes of U.S. Route 6 (US 6) and US 202 adjacent to East Branch Reservoir. The highway carrying both roads parallels I-84 at this point. Just past it I-684 officially ends as NY 22 merges onto the highway, having left the 6/202 concurrency. Over the next quarter-mile the two roadways slowly converge into a two-lane surface road by the at-grade intersection with Sodom and Old Milltown roads, continuing north towards Pawling.[3]

History

Interstate 684 wends between Muscoot Reservoir to its west and Cross River Reservoir to its east near Katonah, New York. Byram Lake Reservoir just west of I-684 at bottom. (Aerial photo, 2013).

An expressway along the NY 22 corridor between White Plains and Brewster was planned by Westchester County in 1956. In 1961, the proposed routing of I-87 north of Elmsford along the east bank of the Hudson River was relocated to use the NY 22 corridor instead via modern I-287 and I-84. After much controversy, the routing of I-87 was approved by the Bureau of Public Roads in December 1964. Construction began soon after the approval with the southernmost section between White Plains and Armonk (including the short section in Connecticut) opened in October 1968. The northernmost section between Purdys and Brewster opened in 1969.

On January 1, 1970, I-87 was relocated to follow the New York State Thruway north of Elmsford. The old route was redesignated as I-684.[1] Later that year, a third segment of the new highway between Armonk and Bedford Hills opened to traffic as well. For a time, Route 22 was a four-lane superhighway extending from Bedford Hills/Katonah to Goldens Bridge. The final segment eventually utilized the footprint of Route 22 and the Route 22 designation was returned to "Old Route 22", a parallel local road. The portion from Goldens Bridge to Brewster, which proved to be difficult from an engineering standpoint, was completed in December 1974.

Exit list

StateCountyLocationmi[2]kmExitDestinationsNotes
New YorkWestchesterWhite PlainsHarrison line0.000.00 I-287 – Rye, White PlainsModule:Jct warning: "road" parameter is deprecated, Tappan Zee BridgeExit 9A on I-287
Harrison0.000.001
Hutchinson River Parkway south – Whitestone BridgeModule:Jct warning: "road" parameter is deprecated
Southbound exit and northbound entrance; access via unsigned NY 984J
North Castle4.427.112 NY 120 – North Castle, Harrison, County Airport
Connecticut Fairfield
No major junctions
New YorkWestchesterNorth Castle7.5712.183 NY 22 – Bedford, ArmonkSigned as exits 3N (north) and 3S (south) northbound
Town of Bedford12.6420.344 NY 172 – Bedford, Mount Kisco
Bedford Rest Area (southbound only)
16.7526.965
Saw Mill River Parkway to NY 117 – Mount Kisco
Southbound exit and northbound entrance
17.7128.506 NY 35 – Cross River, Katonah
Lewisboro19.9032.036A
NY 22 to NY 138 – Golden's Bridge, Lewisboro
Northbound exit and southbound entrance
North Salem22.3635.987
NY 116 to NY 22 – Purdys, Somers
Northbound exit and southbound entrance
8Hardscrabble Road – Croton Falls, Purdys
PutnamSoutheastBrewster Rest Area (northbound only)
9 I-84 – Newburgh, Danbury, CTSigned as exits 9E (east) and 9W (west); exit 20/20N-S on I-84
28.4645.8010
US 6 / US 202 / NY 22 south – Brewster

NY 22 north – Pawling
Continuation north
1.000 mi = 1.609 km; 1.000 km = 0.621 mi

See also

References

  1. ^ a b State of New York Department of Transportation (January 1, 1970). Official Description of Touring Routes in New York State (PDF). Retrieved June 3, 2009.
  2. ^ a b "2008 Traffic Volume Report for New York State" (PDF). New York State Department of Transportation. June 16, 2009. p. 243. Archived from the original (PDF) on September 27, 2012. Retrieved 2010-02-01. {{cite web}}: Unknown parameter |deadurl= ignored (|url-status= suggested) (help)
  3. ^ "Interstate 684" (Map). Google Maps. Retrieved June 8, 2009.
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