Interstate 95 in Maine
This article needs additional citations for verification. (December 2010) |
Route information | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|
Maintained by MaineDOT and Maine Turnpike Authority | ||||
Length | 303.2 mi[1] (488.0 km) Maine Turnpike: 101.43 miles (163.24 km)[2] | |||
Existed | 1956–present | |||
NHS | Entire route | |||
Major junctions | ||||
South end | I-95 in Portsmouth, NH | |||
I-195 in Saco I-295 near Portland I-495 in Portland US 202 / SR 4 / SR 100 in Gray and Auburn I-295 near Gardiner US 202 / SR 11 / SR 17 / SR 100 in Augusta US 201 in Fairfield I-395 / SR 15 in Bangor US 2 / SR 100 in Bangor US 1 in Houlton | ||||
North end | Route 95 / US 2 at the Houlton–Woodstock Border Crossing | |||
Location | ||||
Country | United States | |||
State | Maine | |||
Counties | York, Cumberland, Androscoggin, Kennebec, Somerset, Waldo, Penobscot, Aroostook | |||
Highway system | ||||
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In the U.S. state of Maine, Interstate 95 (I-95) is a 303-mile-long (488 km) highway running from the New Hampshire state line near Kittery, to the Canadian border near Houlton. It is the only two-digit Interstate Highway in Maine. In 2004, the highway's route between Portland and Gardiner was changed so that it encompasses the entire Maine Turnpike (including the former I-495 between Falmouth and Gardiner), which runs from Kittery to Augusta.
Route description
I-95 enters Maine from New Hampshire on the Piscataqua River Bridge, which connects Portsmouth, New Hampshire with Kittery. At mile 2 (Spruce Creek) in Kittery, the highway becomes the Maine Turnpike. The highway runs in a general northeasterly direction, parallel with U.S. 1, at this point. I-95 bypasses the Biddeford/Saco area, with a spur route (Interstate 195) connecting to Old Orchard Beach.
At Scarborough, Interstate 95 meets Interstate 295. The highway turns north, serving the Portland International Jetport and bypassing Portland to the west. At Falmouth, the highway meets unsigned Interstate 495, also called the Falmouth Spur. Until January 2004, I-95 followed the Falmouth Spur and I-295 between Falmouth and Gardiner.
The highway continues north along the Maine Turnpike (which was I-495 prior to 2004) through Gray to Auburn and Lewiston, which the Turnpike bypasses to the south. The highway then runs in an easterly direction to meet Interstate 295 at Gardiner. From there, I-95 parallels the Kennebec River past Augusta and Waterville. The highway then crosses the river at Fairfield and then turns northeast along the Sebasticook River past Pittsfield to Newport.
I-95 then continues east alongside U.S. Route 2 from Newport to Bangor, where Interstate 395 connects to the city of Brewer. The highway runs along the northern edge of Bangor's center, then turns northeast, following the Penobscot River past Orono and Old Town (Prior to the early 1980s, I-95 was a super two highway north of Old Town).
The highway continues north, still running near the river, towards Howland. Near Lincoln, Interstate 95 runs north through uninhabited forest land, crossing the Penobscot River at Medway. The highway goes northeast and east, passing a series of small Aroostook County farming towns before reaching Houlton, where it connects to New Brunswick Route 95 and U.S. Route 2 at the international border. North of Bangor, traffic levels drop noticeably, with AADT averaging only about 5,000 in northern Penobscot County and going down to as low as 2,000–4,000 in Houlton.[3]
Speed limits
The Maine Turnpike had a posted speed limit of 70 mph (113 km/h) in the early 1970s, but as Maine then had no law against traveling less than 10 mph (16 km/h) over the posted speed, the de facto speed limit was 79 mph (127 km/h). In 1974, as part of a federal mandate, the speed limit was reduced to 55 mph (89 km/h), with a new law including a "less than 10 over" violation. In 1987, Congress allowed states to post 65 mph (105 km/h) on rural interstate highways. Following the relaxation, Maine increased its speed limit. In May 2011, a bill was introduced to raise the speed limit from Old Town to Houlton from 65 mph (105 km/h) to 75 mph (121 km/h). It passed, with Maine the first state east of the Mississippi River since the 1970s to establish a 75 mph (121 km/h) speed limit.[4][5]
A further law passed in 2013 by the Maine Legislature allowed the Maine Department of Transportation and the Turnpike Authority to change speed limits with the approval of the Maine State Police. Per that law, Maine DOT increased the 65 mph (105 km/h) limit to 70 mph (113 km/h) on several sections of Interstate 95 on May 27, 2014. These areas included the section from mile marker 114 just outside Augusta to mile 126 just before Waterville. In addition, the section from Fairfield (just north of Waterville) to Bangor also saw an increase to 70 mph (113 km/h).[6] Speed limits on sections controlled by the Turnpike Authority increased on August 11, 2014. The sections from mile marker 2.1 in Kittery to mile marker 44.1 in Scarborough and the section from mile marker 52.3 in Falmouth to mile marker 109 in Augusta increased from 65 mph (105 km/h) to 70 mph (113 km/h). The section from mile marker 44.1 in Scarborough to mile marker 52.3 in Falmouth increased from 55 mph (89 km/h) to 60 mph (97 km/h). The Falmouth Spur, outside the toll plaza area, increased from 50 mph (80 km/h) to 60 mph (97 km/h).[7]
Exit list
Note: toll rates listed in this exit list are for Class 1 vehicles paying cash. They do not reflect lower rates for drivers using E-ZPass tags or higher rates for other vehicle classes.
County | Location[8] | mi[8] | km | Exit | Destinations | Notes | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
York | Kittery | 0.00 | 0.00 | – | I-95 south – Portsmouth, Boston | Continuation from New Hampshire over the Piscataqua River | ||
0.62 | 1.00 | 1 | To SR 103 – Eliot, Kittery Foreside Navy Yard | Northbound exit and southbound entrance | ||||
1.24 | 2.00 | 2 | US 1 / SR 236 / US 1 Byp. – Kittery, South Berwick | Southbound signage | ||||
US 1 south / SR 236 south / US 1 Byp. south – Kittery Center, Memorial Circle | Northbound signage | |||||||
3 | US 1 north (Coastal Route) / SR 236 north – Kittery, South Berwick | |||||||
York | 6.79 | 10.93 | 7 | To SR 91 / US 1 – The Yorks, Ogunquit, The Berwicks | The Yorks only appears on northbound signage; The Berwicks only appears on southbound signage | |||
7.20 | 11.59 | Maine Turnpike York Toll Barrier—Cars $3 | ||||||
Wells | 19.00 | 30.58 | 19 | SR 9 / SR 109 – Wells, Sanford | Northbound entrance toll $1.50 | |||
Kennebunk | 25.01 | 40.25 | 25 | SR 35 – Kennebunk, Kennebunkport | Entrance toll $1 | |||
Biddeford | 31.09 | 50.03 | 32 | SR 111 – Biddeford | Entrance toll $1 | |||
Biddeford–Saco line | 32.53 | 52.35 | Saco River | |||||
Saco | 35.20 | 56.65 | 36 | I-195 east – Saco, Old Orchard Beach | Entrance toll $1 | |||
Cumberland | Scarborough | 41.90 | 67.43 | 42 | To US 1 – Scarborough | Entrance toll $1 | ||
43.51 | 70.02 | 44 | I-295 north – South Portland, Downtown Portland | Northbound exit and southbound entrance; $1 toll | ||||
South Portland | 44.24 | 71.20 | 45 | To I-295 / US 1 / SR 114 | Entrance toll $1; I-295 only appears on southbound signage | |||
Portland | 45.64 | 73.45 | 46 | To SR 22 (Congress Street) / SR 9 – Jetport | Entrance toll $1 | |||
46.02 | 74.06 | Stroudwater River | ||||||
46.65 | 75.08 | 47 | SR 25 (Rand Road / Westbrook Arterial) | Entrance toll $1 | ||||
47.83 | 76.97 | 48 | To SR 25 / US 302 | Entrance toll $1 | ||||
50.87 | 81.87 | 52 | To I-295 / US 1 – Falmouth, Freeport | $1 toll on the Falmouth Spur | ||||
Portland–Falmouth line | 51.03 | 82.12 | Presumpscot River | |||||
Falmouth | 51.62 | 83.07 | 53 | SR 26 / SR 100 – West Falmouth | Entrance toll $1 | |||
Gray | 62.33 | 100.31 | 63 | US 202 / SR 115 / SR 4 to SR 26 – Gray, New Gloucester | Southbound entrance toll $1.50 | |||
New Gloucester | 66.03 | 106.26 | Maine Turnpike New Gloucester Toll Barrier—Cars $2.25 | |||||
Androscoggin | Auburn | 74.17 | 119.37 | 75 | US 202 / SR 4 / SR 100 – Auburn | |||
Auburn–Lewiston line | 77.78 | 125.17 | Androscoggin River | |||||
Lewiston | 79.11 | 127.32 | 80 | To SR 196 – Lewiston | ||||
Sabattus | 84.91 | 136.65 | 86 | SR 9 – Sabattus, Lisbon | ||||
Kennebec | Litchfield–West Gardiner line | 97.79 | 157.38 | Cobbosseecontee Stream | ||||
West Gardiner | 98.74 | 158.91 | Maine Turnpike West Gardiner Toll Barrier—Cars $1.75 | |||||
100.50 | 161.74 | 102 | SR 9 / SR 126 to I-295 south – Gardiner, Litchfield | Northbound exit and southbound entrance | ||||
101.25 | 162.95 | 103 | I-295 south / SR 9 / SR 126 – Gardiner, Brunswick | Southbound exit and northbound entrance; $1 toll | ||||
Augusta | 108.09 | 173.95 | 109A | US 202 east / SR 11 east / SR 17 east / SR 100 east – Augusta, Airport | Signed as Exit 109 northbound; Airport only appears on southbound signage | |||
109B | US 202 west / SR 11 west / SR 17 west / SR 100 west – Winthrop | |||||||
110.57 | 177.95 | 112 | SR 8 / SR 11 / SR 27 – Augusta, Belgrade | Signed as Exits 112A (south) and 112B (north) northbound | ||||
111.43 | 179.33 | 113 | SR 3 – Augusta, Belfast | |||||
Sidney | 119.02 | 191.54 | 120 | Lyons Road – Sidney | ||||
Waterville | 122.92 | 197.82 | 124 | Trafton Road | Opened July 14, 2017 | |||
125.72 | 202.33 | 127 | SR 11 / SR 137 – Waterville, Oakland | |||||
128.79 | 207.27 | 130 | SR 104 (Main Street) – Waterville, Winslow | Winslow only appears on southbound signage | ||||
Somerset | Fairfield | 130.84 | 210.57 | 132 | SR 139 – Fairfield, Benton | |||
131.87 | 212.22 | 133 | US 201 – Fairfield, Skowhegan | |||||
Somerset–Kennebec county line | Fairfield–Benton line | 132.15 | 212.67 | Kennebec River | ||||
Kennebec | Clinton | 136.46 | 219.61 | 138 | Hinckley Road – Clinton, Burnham | |||
Waldo |
No major junctions | |||||||
Somerset | Pittsfield | 148.34 | 238.73 | 150 | Somerset Avenue – Pittsfield, Hartland, Burnham | Hartland only appears on northbound signage; Burnham only appears on southbound signage | ||
149.65 | 240.84 | Sebasticook River | ||||||
Palmyra | 155.27 | 249.88 | 157 | SR 11 / SR 100 to SR 7 / US 2 – Newport, Dexter, Skowhegan | SR 7 and Dexter only appear on northbound signage; US 2 and Skowhegan only appears on southbound signage | |||
Penobscot | Newport | 157.18 | 252.96 | 159 | Ridge Road – Newport, Plymouth | Southbound exit and northbound entrance | ||
Plymouth | 159.45 | 256.61 | 161 | SR 7 – East Newport, Plymouth | ||||
Etna | 165.42 | 266.22 | 167 | SR 69 / SR 143 – Etna, Dixmont | ||||
Newburgh | 172.20 | 277.13 | 174 | SR 69 – Carmel, Winterport | ||||
Hampden | 175.04 | 281.70 | Souadabscook Stream | |||||
175.54 | 282.50 | |||||||
176.31 | 283.74 | |||||||
178.12 | 286.66 | 180 | Cold Brook Road – Hermon, Hampden | |||||
Bangor | 180.89 | 291.11 | 182A | I-395 / SR 15 south to US 1A / SR 9 – Bangor, Brewer | Southern end of concurrency with SR 15; Exit 1 on I-395 | |||
182B | To US 2 west / SR 100 west – Hermon | |||||||
181.76 | 292.51 | 183 | US 2 / SR 100 (Hammond Street) – Airport | |||||
182.61 | 293.88 | 184 | SR 222 (Union Street) – Airport | Ohio Street only appears on southbound signage | ||||
183.08 | 294.64 | Kenduskeag Stream | ||||||
183.82 | 295.83 | 185 | SR 15 north (Broadway) / SR 15 Bus. – Bangor, Brewer | Northern end of concurrency with SR 15; SR 15 Bus., Bangor, and Brewer only appear on southbound signage | ||||
184.95 | 297.65 | 186 | Stillwater Avenue | No northbound entrance or exits to southbound Stillwater Avenue; access to Bangor Mall | ||||
185.73 | 298.90 | 187 | Hogan Road – Bangor, Veazie | |||||
Orono | 189.20 | 304.49 | 191 | Kelly Road – Orono, Veazie | Orono only appears on northbound signage; Veazie only appears on southbound signage | |||
191.37 | 307.98 | 193 | Stillwater Avenue – Stillwater, Old Town, Orono | Old Town only appears on northbound signage; Orono only appears on southbound signage | ||||
Old Town | 194.59 | 313.16 | Pushaw Stream | |||||
195.38 | 314.43 | 197 | SR 43 – Old Town, Hudson | |||||
197.86 | 318.42 | 199 | SR 16 – Alton, Lagrange, Milo | Northbound exit and southbound entrance | ||||
Alton–Argyle line | 199.84 | 321.61 | Birch Stream | |||||
Howland | 214.97 | 345.96 | 217 | SR 6 / SR 155 – Howland, Lagrange | ||||
217.01 | 349.24 | Piscataquis River | ||||||
| 225.74 | 363.29 | 227 | To US 2 / SR 6 / SR 116 – Lincoln, Mattawamkeag | Mattawamkeag only appears on northbound signage | |||
Medway | 242.23 | 389.83 | Penobscot River | |||||
242.66 | 390.52 | 244 | SR 157 – Medway, Millinocket, Mattawamkeag | Medway only appears on northbound signage; Mattawamkeag only appears on southbound signage | ||||
245.15 | 394.53 | Salmon Stream | ||||||
Penobscot–Aroostook county line | Herseytown–Benedicta line | 257.18 | 413.89 | 259 | Benedicta | Northbound exit and southbound entrance | ||
Penobscot |
No major junctions | |||||||
Aroostook | Sherman | 262.43 | 422.34 | 264 | SR 158 to SR 11 – Sherman, Patten | Patten only appears on northbound signage | ||
Island Falls | 274.10 | 441.12 | 276 | SR 159 – Island Falls, Patten | Patten only appears on southbound signage | |||
274.71 | 442.10 | Fish Stream | ||||||
275.44 | 443.28 | West Branch Mattawamkeag River | ||||||
Oakfield | 283.95 | 456.97 | 286 | Oakfield Road – Oakfield, Smyrna Mills | ||||
284.16 | 457.31 | East Branch Mattawamkeag River | ||||||
Smyrna | 289.42 | 465.78 | 291 | US 2 – Smyrna | ||||
Houlton | 300.05 | 482.88 | 302 | US 1 – Houlton, Presque Isle | ||||
300.92 | 484.28 | Meduxnekeag River | ||||||
302.93 | 487.52 | 305 | US 2 – Houlton International Airport, Houlton Industrial Park | Houlton International Airport only appears on northbound signage; eastern terminus of US 2 | ||||
303.12 | 487.82 | – | Route 95 east – Woodstock | Continuation beyond Houlton–Woodstock Border Crossing into New Brunswick | ||||
1.000 mi = 1.609 km; 1.000 km = 0.621 mi
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Maine Turnpike
History
The Maine Turnpike Authority was created by the Maine Legislature in 1941 to connect Kittery and Fort Kent. In 1947, the first section of highway, designated the Maine Turnpike, opened between Kittery and Portland. In 1953, the Turnpike Authority began construction on an extension to the state capital at Augusta using the former right-of-way of the Portland–Lewiston Interurban railway from Portland through Falmouth.[9] The original turnpike was the largest construction project in the state's history until the construction of the extension, which opened to the public on December 13, 1955.[10]
The Maine Turnpike was the first highway funded using revenue bonds. It remains self-financed and does not receive funding from the state or federal government. When the first section opened in 1947, it was only the second superhighway in the United States following the October 1940 opening of the Pennsylvania Turnpike. For these reasons, the Maine Turnpike was named a National Historic Civil Engineering Landmark by the American Society of Civil Engineers in 1999[11] .
In 1956, one year after the Portland-Augusta extension opened, Congress created the Interstate Highway System. The remaining sections to be built—from Augusta to Fort Kent—would be publicly funded freeways instead of toll roads under the Maine Turnpike Authority. Today this highway, which ends at Houlton instead of Fort Kent, is signed as Interstate 95 throughout and the Maine Turnpike between the New Hampshire line at Kittery and the junction with US 202 near Augusta.
Tolls
The segment of Interstate 95 from Kittery to Augusta runs along the Maine Turnpike. This is a toll road for all of its length except for south of York and the section between Auburn and Sabattus. Flat-fee tolls are paid upon entering the turnpike and at toll barriers in York, New Gloucester, and West Gardiner. The turnpike joined the E-ZPass electronic toll collection network in 2005, replacing the former Maine-only system designated Transpass that was implemented in 1997.[12]
The tollbooths on the Maine Turnpike were not supposed to be permanent. Toll collections were to stop once the Maine Turnpike Authority paid off the debt from the road's construction. In the 1980s the bonds were going to be paid off but the Maine Legislature authorized the Maine Turnpike Authority in 1982 to continue as a quasi-governmental agency and to continue to collect tolls in order to fund the maintenance of the section of highway controlled by the MTA.[13]
Service areas
There are five service areas on the turnpike. Two are accessible northbound, two southbound, and one is accessible from both directions. All are open 24 hours and provide food and fuel services. They also have ATMs. Some have small gift shops. The plazas are at the following locations:
- Kennebunk plazas northbound and southbound at milepost 25 the plazas offer food, fuel, gift shops. The original plazas opened in 1947 and incorporated a pedestrian tunnel under the highway to connect the two. These original plazas were replaced in 1972 and the tunnel was sealed. These 1972 plazas were replaced during the winter of 2006–2007.
- Gray plaza (northbound) and Cumberland plaza (southbound) at milepost 58 offer food and fuel. Both plazas were rebuilt in the mid-2000s.
- West Gardiner plaza: At the I-95/I-295/ME 126 intersection, accessible by both directions of I-95 and I-295. Food court, fuel, gift shop, information are available.
There is a rest area and tourist welcome center located on the turnpike northbound at milepost 3 in Kittery. There are weigh stations located on the turnpike northbound and southbound in York at milepost 4 (southbound) and milepost 6 (northbound). There are ramps to and from the northbound turnpike to the Saco Ramada Hotel and Conference Center in Saco at milepost 35.[14] The ramps are from the original exit 5 which was replaced when I-195 was opened just to the north. The hotel was built on the site of the old toll plaza. Ramps connecting the hotel to and from the southbound turnpike were removed as part of the widening project in the early 2000s when hotel ownership opted not to pay nearly $1 million to build a new bridge.
Previous to the West Gardiner rest area's opening, which serves both directions of the turnpike, there were rest areas located in Lewiston (southbound at milepost 83) and Litchfield (northbound at milepost 98).
References
- ^ Maine State Route Log Archived February 28, 2008, at archive.today (via floodgap.com)
- ^ "Welcome to the Maine Turnpike Authority". Maineturnpike.com. Retrieved September 19, 2011.
- ^ "Interstate 95 Annual Average Daily Traffic". Interstate-Guide. Retrieved September 19, 2011.
- ^ Miller, Kevin (May 12, 2011). "Bill would boost speed limit to 75 mph on northern highway". Bangor Daily News. Archived from the original on July 15, 2012. Retrieved May 22, 2011.
{{cite news}}
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suggested) (help) - ^ "Lawmakers OK 75-mph speed limit between Old Town, Houlton, Bangor Daily News, June 29, 2011". The Bangor Daily News. Retrieved October 4, 2014.
- ^ Koenig, Paul (May 27, 2014). "Speed limit increasing by 5 mph on parts of I-295, I-95". Kennebec Journal. Retrieved May 27, 2014.
- ^ "Turnpike News: Travel Advisories". Turnpike Traveler Services. Maine Turnpike Authority. Archived from the original on October 2, 2014. Retrieved October 4, 2014.
{{cite web}}
: Unknown parameter|deadurl=
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suggested) (help) - ^ a b Maine Department of Transportation. MaineDOT Public Map Viewer (Map). Maine Department of Transportation. Retrieved April 7, 2017.
- ^ Cummings, Osmond Richard. "Portland-Lewiston Interurban: a history of the finest electric interurban railway to run in the State of Maine". Bangor Public Library. Retrieved September 5, 2014.
- ^ "Maine Turnpike Authority History".
- ^ "Maine Turnpike". Archived from the original on June 2, 2013.
{{cite web}}
: Unknown parameter|deadurl=
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suggested) (help) - ^ "E-ZPass Information Frequently Asked Questions".
- ^ "Keep the change: Toll highways aren't going away".
- ^ "Ramada Saco / Old Orchard Beach Area (official site)". Retrieved October 4, 2014.
External links
- Interstate Highways in Maine
- Interstate 95
- Toll roads in Maine
- Tolled sections of Interstate Highways
- Transportation in York County, Maine
- Transportation in Cumberland County, Maine
- Transportation in Androscoggin County, Maine
- Transportation in Kennebec County, Maine
- Transportation in Somerset County, Maine
- Transportation in Waldo County, Maine
- Transportation in Penobscot County, Maine
- Transportation in Aroostook County, Maine