Interstate 84 in New York

Interstate 84 marker
Interstate 84
Map
Map of New York with I-84 highlighted in red
Route information
Maintained by NYSDOT and NYSBA
Length71.46 mi[1] (115.00 km)
Existed1963[2]–present
NHSEntire route
Major junctions
West end I-84 at the Pennsylvania state line at the Delaware River
Major intersections
East end I-84 at the Connecticut state line in Southeast
Location
CountryUnited States
StateNew York
CountiesOrange, Dutchess, Putnam
Highway system
NY 83 NY 84

Interstate 84 (I-84) is a part of the Interstate Highway System that runs from Dunmore, Pennsylvania, to Sturbridge, Massachusetts, in the eastern United States. In New York, I-84 extends 71.46 miles (115.00 km) from the Pennsylvania state line at Port Jervis to the Connecticut state line east of Brewster. As it heads east–west across the mid Hudson Valley, it goes over two mountain ranges and crosses the Hudson River at the Newburgh–Beacon Bridge.

It is the only freeway to cross New York from west to east between New York City and the Capital District. As such it is the main vehicular route between southern New England and Pennsylvania and points west. It is maintained by the New York State Department of Transportation (NYSDOT), which resumed full control in 2010 after two decades in which routine maintenance was performed by the New York State Thruway Authority under yearly contract from DOT. The New York State Bridge Authority charges a toll for eastbound traffic crossing the Newburgh–Beacon Bridge.

Construction of the highway began later than other Interstates in New York as legal hurdles to the construction of the bridge had to be removed, and federal funding was more limited when it finally began in 1960. It was completed 12 years later, becoming a major commercial artery and mainstay of the Hudson Valley economy and offering travelers a view of some of the state's scenic areas in the Shawangunks and Hudson Highlands.

Route description

I-84 passes through three counties. The entire stretch between the Delaware and Hudson, more than half the road's total length in New York alone, is in Orange County. East of the river the road begins in Dutchess County and then drops southward into Putnam County. As an Interstate Highway, all of I-84 in New York is included in the National Highway System, a network of roads important to the country's economy, defense, and mobility.[3]

Two other highways parallel the Interstate for some length. U.S. Route 6 (US 6) follows it closely near the state lines, but takes a southerly course between those two areas. New York State Route 52 (NY 52) joins I-84 from Newburgh to Fishkill and remains parallel from there to Lake Carmel.

West of the Hudson River (Orange County)

I-84 bridge over the Delaware River, with the Tri-State Rock in the foreground

I-84 enters New York near Port Jervis via a long bridge that crosses both the Delaware and Neversink rivers just above their confluence. This bridge is owned and maintained by the NYSDOT, including the portion in Pennsylvania. South of the road at the confluence is Tri-State Rock, where New Jersey, New York and Pennsylvania converge.[4] For its first mile in New York, the Interstate is immediately north of the New Jersey state line in the city of Port Jervis. The first exit is signed for US 6 and New Jersey Route 23, which begins just south of the exit.

US 6 remains parallel to the north of the freeway as I-84 begins an immediate climb away from the state line up the Shawangunk Ridge, beginning an east-northeast slant in its direction that will continue for almost 30 miles (48 km). The roadway crests at 1,275 feet (389 m), its highest elevation in New York. Scenic overlooks on either side allow travelers to stop and take in the expansive view of Port Jervis, the lower Neversink valley and adjacent regions of Pennsylvania. On the descent, US 6 crosses under the Interstate again, reachable by a short drive south on Mountain Road at exit 4.

East of the Shawangunks it is 13 miles (21 km) to the next exit. The freeway winds through swamps from which the obelisk atop High Point, New Jersey's highest mountain, is visible. These give way to wooded areas eventually broken by fields in Wawayanda where Route 6 crosses over again to merge with NY 17M and recross at exit 15, the first of two that serve the city of Middletown. A mile and a half (2.4 km) further east along that roadway is the Middletown rest area, with restrooms and a state police substation. The other Middletown exit serves NY 17, the long freeway slowly being transformed into I-86, another mile farther to the east.

Farmland in central Orange County

This junction is the western corner of Orange County's "golden triangle" of Interstates, so-called for its attractiveness to businesses for their distribution centers.[5][6] Immediately afterward I-84 passes between the Galleria at Crystal Run, the county's largest mall, and the eponymous office park to the south. More farms begin to break up the landscape off the road. Westbound traffic is served by the Wallkill rest area four miles (6 km) east of Route 17. The tracks of Metro-North Railroad's Port Jervis Line runs just north of the highway for a short distance, and NY 211 also parallels for several miles past the hills of Highland Lakes State Park.

After crossing the Wallkill River and NY 416, I-84 climbs slightly to its first exit in almost 10 miles (16 km), NY 208, serving nearby Walden and Maybrook. Heavy truck traffic at this exit reflects a nearby truck stop,[7] Yellow Freight's (Now YRC) large presence in Maybrook,[8] and rail-to-truck transload facility in the old Maybrook Freight train yard. In the area is a Staples warehouse[9] north of the Interstate along NY 208 and numerous distribution centers (Home Depot, Do-it-Best and others) and truck terminals (including UPS, FedEx and 3 others), along an adjacent roadway on the south side. The highway continues, now almost due east, of this exit through more wooded area, forming the northern border of Stewart State Forest, for four miles (6.4 km) to the recently built exit with NY 747 intended to improve access to nearby Stewart International Airport.

A mile beyond, the road reaches the first of four exits serving Newburgh, the largest community along it in New York. It veers slightly to the north again after the interchange with NY 17K, which has been running parallel to the north since NY 208. Another truck stop[10] is located off this exit, with a major FedEx[11] and the U.S. Postal Service's Mid-Hudson General Mail Facility[12] in the industrial park between the Interstate and the airport.

The freeway resumes its eastern heading again and descends a gentle slope to its junction with the New York State Thruway (I-87) and NY 300. Traffic was routed to the Thruway via a short section of 300 when the Interstate was built, but a major project to build a connector directly to the toll road was completed in December 2009, after being under construction for five years.[13][14][15]

Newburgh–Beacon Bridge

After passing through a rock cut, I-84 levels off and begins following the northern border of the city of Newburgh, where first NY 52 joins it, beginning the only concurrency with the Interstate in the state. A mile and a half (2.4 km) east, US 9W and NY 32 provide the last exit before the road crosses the Newburgh–Beacon Bridge, with views of Newburgh Bay and the Hudson Highlands to the south.

East of the Hudson River (Dutchess and Putnam counties)

The bridge also crosses Metro-North's Hudson Line tracks on the east side of the river. The NY 9D exit after the toll plaza is the first of two serving the city of Beacon, just to the south of the freeway. It then curves slightly to the north, passing Dutchess Stadium, home of the Hudson Valley Renegades, to the north and then the large open area between Downstate and Fishkill state prisons, where signs warn motorists not to stop. To the south a panoramic view from Beacon to Schunemunk mountains is available.

US 9 near I-84 in Fishkill

The road resumes its eastern heading and descends slightly to the next exit, where NY 52 leaves the freeway for the village of Fishkill. I-84 bends through the lowlands north of Sour Mountain, northern end of the Hudson Highlands, and crosses Fishkill Creek. Just north of the historic Van Wyck Homestead, and south of a large Old Navy regional distribution center,[16] it intersects US 9, which becomes a divided highway from north of the exit to Poughkeepsie.

It begins to climb into the hills east of this exit, passing through some rock cuts in the four miles (6.4 km) to the Lime Kiln Road exit, which allows easy access to a nearby former IBM facility now known as Hudson Valley Research Park.[17] From there it descends gently over two miles (3.2 km), with Hosner Mountain looming to the east, to the sprawling interchange with the Taconic State Parkway. It ascends again afterwards, passing scenic overlooks on either side that allow views of the valley and the Catskills to the northwest. At the crest, near where the Appalachian Trail crosses over, signs indicate the road has once again reached 1,000 feet (305 m) in elevation.

I-84 begins to veer to the south at this point, and soon it descends through some rock cuts to cross into Putnam County just before the Ludingtonville Road exit, with NY 52 a short distance to the south. The road heads in a more south-southeast direction the next 10 miles (16 km). The NY 311 exit offers the last connection to NY 52, a short distance to the south over Lake Carmel, and after crossing Metro-North's Harlem Line the interchange with NY 312 offers access to the large strip mall on a hill southeast of the exit and the Southeast train station.

Long overpass at Brewster

After a quarter-mile-long (400 m) bridge over the Croton River, US 6, US 202 and NY 22 just north of Brewster, the Interstate returns to its eastern heading for the northern terminus of I-684, an exit that also provides access to the other three highways. For eastbound travelers this is the last exit in New York.

US 6 and US 202 closely parallel I-84 to the north, between the freeway and one of the upper basins of East Branch Reservoir, part of New York City's water supply system. The northern terminus of NY 121 lets eastbound traffic on and westbound traffic off. Two miles (3.2 km) to the east, Signs appear for Saw Mill Road, exit 1 on Connecticut's stretch of I-84, and its ramps leave the highway just a hundred feet (30 m) before the state line.

History

1950s: Planning

The route of what became I-84 through New York state began in the late 1940s, when the then-New York State Department of Public Works (now NYSDOT) was planning Gov. Thomas Dewey's proposed Thruway system. The plan was for the Thruway's main line to cross the river between Newburgh and Beacon, an area then in the middle of a 30-mile (48 km) gap in fixed river crossings. The remainder of the expressway would be toll-free.[2]

Politicians in the Newburgh area had also been lobbying for a bridge over Newburgh Bay, as the ferry service in that section of the river was becoming financially nonviable. In 1951 they were able to authorize test boring in the riverbed to see if a bridge was feasible. It was, but their counterparts further up the river got legislation passed that prohibited any construction of the Newburgh Bay bridge until the Kingston–Rhinecliff Bridge was completed.

By the early 1950s the road plan had changed. The Thruway had been rerouted to cross the Hudson at the present site of the Tappan Zee Bridge. Dewey suggested that the future I-84 be built as a separate toll road instead. After the passage of the Federal Aid Highway Act of 1956, during the Averell Harriman administration, state officials changed it back to a free road in order to get federal funding for the project. It remained on paper as other New York Interstates got underway.[2]

Assemblyman Lee Mailler of Cornwall, that body's majority leader, was able to get the bridge construction prohibition repealed in 1954. A bond issue the next year made the first money available for the construction of both the Kingston and Newburgh bridges. In 1959, it looked it would be delayed again when the federal funding formula was changed and less money was available, making a four-lane bridge too expensive to construct.[18]

1960s–70s: Construction and expansion

Construction began in 1960 after the new governor, Nelson Rockefeller, promised to expedite it during his campaign by building a single span, within the limits of what the state could afford without federal aid. The new plans called at first for a freeway connection for I-87 from Beacon to the Bronx and a concurrency across the river. After that project was cancelled after heavy local opposition. I-87 was routed to join I-84 at Brewster (where it would have followed the route of the current I-684). The first segment, the 16 miles (26 km) between the Thruway mainline in the Town of Newburgh and US 9 in Fishkill, was opened November 2, 1963.[2] The Newburgh–Beacon Bridge crossed nearly two miles (3.2 km) of Newburgh Bay and led to the last run of the original Newburgh–Beacon Ferry the day after it opened.[18]

The following year the eastern terminus of the new Interstate was extended to the Taconic State Parkway. The rest of the route would be slowed by both the hilly terrain and local resistance over what was felt to be inadequate eminent domain payments to affected landowners. In 1970 the road was complete to NY 311, with the former route of I-87 re-designated as I-684, and no concurrency along the Interstate save the seven miles (11 km) shared with NY 52. A year later, all the mileage east of the river was open. The last segment finished was the one between NY 208 and the Thruway.[2][19]

Closeup of mid-century USGS Montgomery quad showing NY 84/416 along current route of NY 211.

With I-84 complete soon after from Scranton to Hartford, the heavy traffic created traffic jams at the bottlenecks at either end of the bridge. In 1975 a second span was approved. It was opened on November 1, 1980, almost 17 years to the day traffic first crossed the original span. Two lanes could still not handle all the traffic, and four years later, in 1984, the bridges were reconfigured to their present three-lane configuration.[2][19]

Effect on western Orange County state highways

The highway's route number prompted the renumbering of several existing state routes in western Orange County, where there was already an NY 84. To avoid confusion, the NY 84 designation was eliminated and replaced with other routes in the mid-1960s. The portion south of US 6 at Slate Hill became NY 284 while the section of NY 84 north from Middletown to its northern terminus at NY 17K in Montgomery was added to NY 211, which had previously terminated at its junction with NY 17M and NY 84 in Middletown. The rest of NY 84 remained part of US 6 and NY 17M, which NY 84 had overlapped through Middletown.[20][21] Lastly, NY 416 was truncated to its current northern terminus just south of Montgomery rather than ending at 17K as it had before.[citation needed] In addition, New Jersey renumbered its own Route 84 to Route 284 to match New York renumbering NY 84 to NY 284.[22]

1990s–2000s: Thruway Authority and interchange work

Thruway Authority maintenance sign at onramps, 1991–2010

In 1991, with New York facing a large budget deficit, Mario Cuomo's administration decided that the state DOT would essentially sell I-84 and the Cross-Westchester Expressway (I-287), to the cash-rich New York State Thruway Authority (NYSTA) as one way of closing it. No tolls could be charged since the roads were built with federal money, and the DOT remained in charge of large capital projects, but the Thruway Authority took over routine maintenance. During this time two interchanges were expanded and a new one created. The authority had the option of, at any time, returning the road to the state's control at a year's notice.[23]

The first was the US 9 exit, revamped in 1999 at a cost of $25 million.[16] I-84 was widened in both directions approaching the exit, a second overpass was added and the exit ramps were widened and signage improved. Around that time the two agencies also announced plans, and received federal funding, to redo the current exit 36 allowing traffic to go directly between I-84 and the Thruway instead of using a short stretch of NY 300, which by then was more heavily developed than it had been when the Interstates were first built. The three-phase construction project was initialized in May 2003[24] and completed in December 2009.[25]

The new exit also replaced 13 old buildings with a few new ones: a separate toll plaza to handle traffic entering the Thruway (the existing toll plaza is now dedicated to exiting traffic), offices and garages for NYSTA and the New York State Police. The new buildings use green techniques to minimize energy use such daylighting and rainwater collection. The ramps have been rerouted, using six new bridges and five new miles (8.0 km) of roadway, so that almost all traffic from routes 17K and 300 now use the latter route to access both Interstates. The existing connector from the toll plaza to NY 17K remains as an E-ZPass–only lane from that highway to the northbound Thruway.[26]

Exit 32 (formerly exit 5A) under construction in early 2007

After lengthy litigation by environmental groups concerned about the impact on nearby Stewart State Forest, in 2005 construction began on exit 32 (then exit 5A). Local road Drury Lane was upgraded and widened into newly designated NY 747 to allow easier access to Stewart International Airport via an almost-full diamond interchange. It was completed in November 2007, at the same time the briefly privatized airport was turned over to the Port Authority of New York and New Jersey with the intent of making it the New York City metropolitan area's fourth major airport.

The Thruway Authority's involvement with the road would have ended in 2006 when its board voted to transfer the highway back to the state DOT, a move it suggested did not commit it to doing so. The proceeds would have covered NYSTA's expenses in eliminating the toll barrier for a year on I-190 south of Buffalo.[27] This was seen as an election-year move to help Republican candidates in Western New York. But residents of the mid-Hudson region felt NYSTA had done a better job plowing the road in winter, and Thruway workers assigned to I-84 feared having to move or working for the DOT at lower pay and with different union representation.[23]

State Senator John Bonacic, a member of that body's then-Republican majority whose district covers western Orange County, introduced legislation at the beginning of 2007 to block the changeover. He succeeded, as the budget lawmakers and new governor Eliot Spitzer agreed to appropriate enough money for DOT to continue paying the Thruway Authority for snow removal, litter pickup and mowing along the entire highway save the bridge.[23] The DOT picked up the cost of having state police Troop T, which patrols the Thruway, continue to cover I-84. This agreement was renewed in 2008.[28]

2010s: Back to NYSDOT and new exit numbers

In 2010, maintenance fully reverted to DOT. With the state facing financial difficulties in the slow economy, Governor David Paterson decided that DOT could save a few million dollars doing the work itself. In August of that year, the department bought $6 million worth of new equipment and hired 54 new employees to handle maintenance duties on the highway.[29]

In October 2010, Thruway insignia and signs indicating its maintenance responsibilities were removed from the roadway, and authority employees assigned to the road began transferring to jobs elsewhere, after the union waived several contract provisions to smooth the transfer. New York State Troopers who patrolled the road were reassigned from Thruway-based Troop T to Troop F in Orange County and Troop K in Dutchess and Putnam Counties, which cover the west and east sides of the Hudson respectively. At the DOT's request, the two state police substations in Wallkill and East Fishkill remained open.[30]

In 2019, a $13.9 milion project was completed that rebuilt the overpass carrying traffic over US 9W in Newburgh, in order to provide better clearance for truck traffic below on Route 9W and to meet current interstate highway standards.[31]

Signage awaiting installation during the renumbering, stored in Newburgh

Also in 2019, the exits were renumbered from sequential to mile-based as part of a sign replacement project by NYSDOT, in accordance with MUTCD regulations.[32] The Putnam County section of I-84 was changed to mile-based in June, with Dutchess County's exits renumbered before September 2. As of February 2020 exits west of the Hudson have been fully renumbered up to the NY 17 interchange. Eastbound, NY 208 is fully renumbered in that direction but has both exit numbers on its signage approaching eastbound.

Incidents

Many traffic accidents, some fatal, have caused traffic jams and closures since I-84 was opened. One was notable for the type of vehicle involved; another led to a still-open murder investigation.

Air accident

On August 6, 1976, drivers along I-84 near exit 18 (NY 311; now exit 61) in the Putnam County town of Patterson saw a low-flying helicopter cross over the Interstate and then get entangled in the power lines passing overhead. The craft flipped over and fell onto the eastbound lanes of the highway. Both pilot and passenger were killed, and 4,000 customers in the area lost power. A traffic backup of several miles was rerouted onto the road's shoulder around the crash site until the road was reopened two and a half hours later.[19] The National Transportation Safety Board investigated and ruled the cause to be pilot error.[33]

Murder investigation

Sketch of the man Aderson described as his killer.

A road rage incident on the side of the highway led to the death of Richard Aderson in 1997. Aderson, an assistant superintendent at the Valley Central School District in Montgomery, was returning to his LaGrange home on the evening of February 5, 1997, when he had a minor collision with a relatively new green Jeep Cherokee carrying what appeared to be New Hampshire license plates just before crossing the Newburgh–Beacon Bridge. The two drivers pulled over near what was then exit 12 (now exit 44), and after a brief argument the other driver shot Aderson and left the scene. Aderson was able to give the 9-1-1 operator he called on his cell phone a description of his assailant and the vehicle before dying at the scene. A police sketch based on Aderson's description has been widely circulated and is still posted prominently in kiosks at the freeway's rest areas. The case has been dramatized on both America's Most Wanted and Unsolved Mysteries, generating many leads since then. It remains open.[34][35]

2023 bus crash

On September 21, 2023, a chartered bus carrying ninth-grade members of the Farmingdale High School marching band from Long Island to a weekend at a camp in Pennsylvania suffered a tire failure along westbound I-84 in Wawayanda near Slate Hill and rolled down a 50-foot (15 m) slope into the highway's median strip. Many students were injured, some critically, and two adults on the bus were killed. The highway was closed in both directions between exits 4 and 15 (formerly exits 2 and 3), with traffic diverted onto US 6, in order to clear the accident and create a landing zone for helicopters to evacuate the most seriously injured to Westchester Medical Center.[36] At the end of the year, the Federal Highway Administration approved the addition of a crash gate for emergency vehicles, the absence of which had hampered response to the crash, along that stretch of the interstate.[37]

Exit list

I-84 exits within New York were changed from sequential numbering to mile-based numbering in 2019.[38]

CountyLocationmi[1][39]kmOld exitNew exit[40]DestinationsNotes
Delaware River0.000.00
I-84 west – Scranton
Continuation into Pennsylvania
OrangeTown of Deerpark0.661.061
US 6 / Route 23 south – Port Jervis, Sussex
Access to Route 23 via CR 15
Greenville3.405.47Parking Area
4.767.6624 Mountain Road (CR 35)
Wawayanda15.4424.85315 US 6 / NY 17M – Goshen, MiddletownSigned as exits 15A (east) and 15B (west)
16.9027.20Middletown Rest Area (eastbound)
Wallkill19.1030.74419 Future I-86 / NY 17 – New York City, BinghamtonSigned as exits 19A (east) and 19B (west); exit 121 on Future I-86 / NY 17
23.6338.03Middletown Rest Area (westbound)
Montgomery28.7846.32528 NY 208 – Maybrook, WaldenTruck Parking; to Orange County Airport
Town of Newburgh32.9953.095A32 NY 747 – Stewart AirportExit opened 2007[41]
34.1454.94634 NY 17K – Montgomery, NewburghTo Stewart Air National Guard Base
36.5458.817A36A I-87 / New York Thruway – Albany, New York CityExit 17 on I-87 / Thruway; exit opened 2009
7B36B NY 300 (Union Avenue)To NY 17K
37.4460.25837
NY 52 west – Walden
Western terminus of NY 52 concurrency
39.0462.831039 US 9W / NY 32 – Newburgh, HighlandSigned as exits 39A (south) and 39B (north) westbound; to Newburgh–Beacon Ferry
Hudson River40.2364.74Hamilton Fish Newburgh–Beacon Bridge (eastbound toll only)
DutchessTown of Fishkill41.4966.771141

NY 9D / NY 52 Bus. east – Beacon, Wappingers Falls, Cold Spring
To Beacon station and Newburgh–Beacon Ferry
44.7772.051244


NY 52 east / NY 52 Bus. west – Fishkill
Eastern terminus of NY 52 concurrency; NY 52 Bus. not signed
46.2474.421346 US 9 – Poughkeepsie, PeekskillSigned as exits 46A (south) and 46B (north) westbound; to Hudson Valley Regional Airport
East Fishkill50.4481.181550 Lime Kiln Road (CR 27)
52.6484.721652 Taconic State Parkway – Albany, New York CitySigned as exits 52A (south) and 52B (north); exits 37A-B on Taconic State Parkway
55.2088.84Stormville Rest Area
DutchessPutnam
county line
East FishkillKent line58.8494.691758 NY 52 / CR 43 (Ludingtonville Road)NY 52 not signed
PutnamKentPatterson line61.8099.461861 NY 311 – Lake Carmel, Patterson
Southeast65.44105.321965 NY 312 – Carmel, BrewsterTo Southeast station; former NY 52; Brewster not signed westbound
68.30109.922068
I-684 south / NY 22 / US 6 / US 202 – White Plains, New York City, Pawling
Signed as exits 68A (I-684) and 68B (NY 22) eastbound; exits 9E-W on I-684
69.26111.462169
US 6 / US 202 / NY 121 south – North Salem, Brewster
Westbound exit and eastbound entrance
71.46115.00
I-84 east – Danbury
Continuation into Connecticut
1.000 mi = 1.609 km; 1.000 km = 0.621 mi

See also

References

  1. ^ a b "Interchange Listing with Mileposts". New York State Thruway Authority. Archived from the original on January 11, 2010. Retrieved January 27, 2010.
  2. ^ a b c d e f Anderson, Steve. "Interstate 84-New York Historic Overview". NYCRoads. Retrieved January 12, 2009.[self-published source]
  3. ^ Natzke, Stefan; Neathery, Mike & Adderly, Kevin (September 26, 2012). "What is the National Highway System?". National Highway System. Federal Highway Administration. Archived from the original on August 28, 2012. Retrieved January 1, 2013.
  4. ^ Graff, Bill (Summer 2006). "Sentinels at the Northern Border" (PDF). Unearthing New Jersey. Vol. 2, no. 2. New Jersey Geological Survey.
  5. ^ Doherty, John (December 13, 2005). "Drivers face risky ride on jam-packed I-84". Times Herald-Record. Middletown, NY. Archived from the original on February 13, 2012. Retrieved January 16, 2009. that stretch of I-84 – dubbed the Golden Triangle by traffic experts for its proximity to Route 17 and the New York Thruway
  6. ^ Scott, Brendan (July 24, 2006). "Diana recycling Water Loop plan". Times Herald-Record. Middletown, NY. Archived from the original on February 13, 2012. Retrieved January 16, 2009. Then: Hoping to feed Orange County's growing thirst, County Executive Louis Heimbach lays plans for a huge circular water system, a 'water loop,' to link the 'Golden Triangle' framed by Route 17 and Interstates 84 and 87.
  7. ^ "Maybrook, New York #210". TravelCenters of America. Retrieved January 17, 2009.[permanent dead link]
  8. ^ "New York Terminals". Yellow Transportation. 1994–2009. Retrieved January 17, 2009.
  9. ^ "Staples Purchases Multi-channel Fulfillment Center in Montgomery, New York; New Site Enables Staples to Better Serve Contract, Catalog and E-Commerce Customers" (Press release). September 28, 2000. Retrieved January 17, 2009 – via Business Wire.
  10. ^ "#394 Newburgh, NY". Pilot Travel Centers. 2009. Retrieved January 22, 2009.
  11. ^ "Location Details". FedEx. 1995–2009. Archived from the original on January 15, 2009. Retrieved January 21, 2009.
  12. ^ "Stewart International Airport". Town of New Windsor. 2008. Archived from the original on August 30, 2009. Retrieved January 22, 2009. ... the U.S. Postal Service general mail facility is located at Stewart.
  13. ^ Rife, Judy (July 14, 2009). "New I-87 ramp nearly done". Times Herald-Record. Middletown, NY. p. 31. Retrieved June 3, 2010.
  14. ^ Rife, Judy (September 22, 2009). "I-84/87 interchange 90% done". Times Herald-Record. Middletown, NY. p. 28. Retrieved June 3, 2010.
  15. ^ Fitzpatrick, Meghan (December 8, 2009). "Interchange Creates A True 'Crossroad'". The Sentinel. New Windsor, NY. p. 1.
  16. ^ a b Bagli, Charles (October 31, 1998). "Gap to Create 1,000 Jobs at Fishkill Site". The New York Times. Retrieved January 17, 2009. The company, which is based in San Francisco and owns the Gap, Old Navy and Banana Republic clothing chains, is buying a 200-acre tract at Interstate 84 and Route 9 in the Merrit Park section of Fishkill and is expecting to begin construction in January ... Gap said the site was all the more attractive because the State Department of Transportation is completing a $28 million project to reconfigure the intersection of Interstate 84 and Route 9, which has been a traffic bottleneck
  17. ^ "Buildings and Sites". Dutchess County. February 23, 2006. Archived from the original on October 28, 2007. Retrieved April 22, 2012. The facility is located on I-84, just 18 miles [29 km] east of the New York State Thruway and only 90 minutes north of New York City
  18. ^ a b "New York State Bridge Authority Newburgh–Beacon Bridge Page". New York State Bridge Authority. Archived from the original on February 8, 2009. Retrieved January 13, 2009.
  19. ^ a b c "From Dirt Roads to the Interstate Highway". Town of Patterson. 2006–2009. Retrieved January 14, 2009.
  20. ^ New York and Metropolitan New York (Map). Cartography by Rand McNally and Company. Sinclair Oil Corporation. 1964.
  21. ^ New York (Map) (1969–70 ed.). Cartography by General Drafting. Esso. 1968.
  22. ^ New Jersey (Map). Cartography by American Oil Company. American Oil Company. 1968.
  23. ^ a b c Rife, Judy (March 31, 2007). "Bonacic wins war over I-84; Thruway Authority to remain in charge". Times Herald-Record. Middletown, NY. Retrieved January 14, 2009.
  24. ^ "I-84/I-87 Interchange 17 Reconstruction Project". New York State Thruway Authority. December 7, 2009. Archived from the original on June 13, 2010. Retrieved April 22, 2012.
  25. ^ "Thruway Authority Announces Completion of Project to Connect I-87 & I-84" (Press release). New York State Thruway Authority. December 7, 2009. Archived from the original on May 27, 2010. Retrieved January 10, 2010.
  26. ^ Rife, Judy (April 13, 2008). "I-84, Thruway soon to meet". Times Herald-Record. Middletown, NY. Retrieved January 14, 2009.
  27. ^ Rife, Judy (October 30, 2006). "I-84 maintenance could be at stake". Times Herald-Record. Middletown, NY. Retrieved January 14, 2009.
  28. ^ Rife, Judy (April 14, 2008). "Thruway Authority gets $10.3M to maintain I-84". Times Herald-Record. Middletown, NY. Retrieved January 14, 2009.
  29. ^ Rife, Judy (August 24, 2010). "DOT prepares to resume Interstate 84 care". Times Herald-Record. Middletown, NY. Retrieved October 13, 2010.
  30. ^ Rife, Judy (October 11, 2010). "DOT takes over maintenance on I-84". Times Herald-Record. Middletown, NY. Retrieved October 13, 2010.
  31. ^ Rife, Judy (November 20, 2019). "I-84/9W bridge project completed early and under budget". Times Herald-Record.
  32. ^ Rife, Judy. "State will convert current I-84 exit signs to mileage-based numbers". recordonline.com. Retrieved February 26, 2019.
  33. ^ "NYC76AN120". National Transportation Safety Board. Retrieved January 22, 2009.
  34. ^ Lynch, Elizabeth (February 4, 2002). "5 years after road rage killing on Interstate 84, mystery remains". Poughkeepsie Journal. Retrieved January 14, 2009.
  35. ^ "Memorial to making a difference". Times Herald-Record. Middletown, NY. February 12, 2007. Retrieved January 14, 2009.
  36. ^ Fadulu, Lola; Nir, Sarah Maslin (September 21, 2023). "Two Dead and Dozens Injured as Bus Carrying High School Students Crashes". The New York Times. Retrieved September 22, 2023.
  37. ^ Randall, Mike (December 27, 2023). "Plan for I-84 crash gate, highlighted by charter bus crash, OK'd by Highway Administration". Times-Herald Record. Retrieved January 6, 2024.
  38. ^ https://www.dot.ny.gov/news/press-releases/2018/2018-11-29 [bare URL]
  39. ^ "2014 Traffic Data Report for New York State" (PDF). New York State Department of Transportation. July 22, 2015. Retrieved January 14, 2020.
  40. ^ "Interstate 84 Guide Signs, Pennsylvania to Connecticut, S.H. Various, Orange, Dutchess, Putnam Counties". New York State Department of Transportation. May 2018. Retrieved June 12, 2018.
  41. ^ Randall, Michael (November 20, 2007). "Drury Lane interchange opens in time for holidays". Times Herald-Record. Middletown, NY. Retrieved January 22, 2009. A ceremony at 1:30 p.m. today will celebrate the official dedication and opening of the long-awaited Drury Lane interchange that will allow drivers to get from Interstate 84 to the airport more directly.
KML is from Wikidata


Interstate 84
Previous state:
Pennsylvania
New York Next state:
Connecticut

Read other articles:

Konstantinos Mitroglou Informasi pribadiTanggal lahir 12 Maret 1988 (umur 36)Tempat lahir Kavala, YunaniTinggi 1,88 m (6 ft 2 in)Posisi bermain StrikerInformasi klubKlub saat ini Atromitos F.C.Nomor 23Karier junior2004–2005 MSV Duisburg II2005–2007 Borussia Mönchengladbach IIKarier senior*Tahun Tim Tampil (Gol)2004-2005 MSV Duisburg II 12 (5)2005–2007 Borussia Mönchengladbach II 35 (38)2007– Olympiacos 48 (16)2010–2011 → Panionios (pinjaman) 11 (8)2011– → At…

Belebas terlihat dari belakang dengan lapisan turap putih menggelember melaluinya Belebas dan turap adalah proses bangunan yang digunakan terutama untuk menyelesaikan dinding pemisah interior dan langit-langit. Ini terdiri dari potongan kayu sempit ( belebas ) yang dipaku secara horizontal pada rangka dinding atau balok tarik langit-langit dan kemudian dilapisi dengan turap . Teknik ini berasal dari proses sebelumnya yang lebih primitif yang disebut sasak dan tampal . [1] Keterangan Pros…

Bendera Franche-Comté County merdeka Burgundy atau Franche-Comté (Prancis: Franche Comté de Bourgognecode: fr is deprecated ; Jerman: Freigrafschaft Burgundcode: de is deprecated ), adalah sebuah county Abad Pertengahan (dari tahun 982 hingga 1678) di Kekaisaran Romawi Suci, pendahulu wilayah modern Franche-Comté. Nama franc(he) comté diambil dari gelar count, franc comte, dalam bahasa Jerman Freigraf 'count merdeka', menunjukkan Reichsfreiheit. Wilayah ini berbeda dengan Kadipaten Burgundy…

Artikel ini tidak memiliki bagian pembuka yang sesuai dengan standar Wikipedia. Mohon tulis paragraf pembuka yang informatif sehingga pembaca dapat memahami maksud dari Daftar penulis Mesir. Contoh paragraf pembuka Daftar penulis Mesir adalah .... (Pelajari cara dan kapan saatnya untuk menghapus pesan templat ini) Naguib Mahfouz Mustafa Mahmoud Ahmed Shawki (1868–1932) Hafez Ibrahim (1872–1932) Mustafa Lutfi al-Manfaluti (1876-1920) Salama Moussa (1887–1958) Edwar al-Kharrat (1926-2015) Ta…

 Nota: Para outros significados, veja Ancona (desambiguação). Ancona    Comuna   Arco de Trajano e ClementinoArco de Trajano e Clementino Símbolos Bandeira Brasão de armas Localização AnconaLocalização de Ancona na Itália Coordenadas 43° 37' 01 N 13° 31' E Região Marcas Província Ancona Características geográficas Área total 124,84 km² População total 100 908 (30/11/2 017) hab. Densidade 808,3 hab./km² Altitude 16 …

This article needs additional citations for verification. Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources. Unsourced material may be challenged and removed.Find sources: Just You and I Namie Amuro song – news · newspapers · books · scholar · JSTOR (January 2019) (Learn how and when to remove this template message) 2017 single by Namie AmuroJust You and ILimited edition / digital download coverSingle by Namie Amurofrom the alb…

Radio station in Henderson, KentuckyWKDQHenderson, KentuckyBroadcast areaEvansville, IndianaFrequency99.5 MHzBranding99.5 WKDQProgrammingFormatCountryAffiliationsCompass Media NetworksOwnershipOwnerTownsquare Media(Townsquare Media of Evansville/Owensboro, Inc.)Sister stationsWDKS, WGBF, WGBF-FM, WJLTTechnical informationFacility ID6871ClassC0ERP100,000 wattsHAAT300 meters (980 ft)LinksWebcastListen LiveWebsitewkdq.com WKDQ (99.5 FM) is a country music formatted radio station in Henderson, …

Pour les articles homonymes, voir CTT. Cet article est une ébauche concernant le Portugal. Vous pouvez partager vos connaissances en l’améliorant (comment ?) selon les recommandations des projets correspondants. Un véhicule du CTT. CTT Correios de Portugal, plus couramment appelé CTT Correios ou CTT (pour Correios, Telégrafos e Telefones), est l'opérateur postal national du Portugal. Histoire Boîte aux lettres traditionnel des CTT CTT Correios figurait sur la liste des entreprises …

Pour les articles homonymes, voir Faucher. Léon Faucher Léon Faucher. Fonctions Président du conseil de facto[réf. nécessaire][N 1]et Ministre de l'Intérieur 10 avril – 26 octobre 1851(6 mois et 16 jours) Gouvernement Faucher Législature Assemblée législative Prédécesseur Alphonse Henri d'Hautpoul (de facto) Successeur Émile Ollivier (indirectement) Biographie Date de naissance 8 septembre 1803 Lieu de naissance Limoges, Haute-Vienne (France) Date de décès …

Johan Mohammad Cai[1] atau Djohan Mohammad Tjai adalah aktivis dari Jong Islamieten Bond yang ambil bagian pada Kongres Pemuda. Dalam Kongres Pemuda yang melahirkan Sumpah Pemuda, Djohan Mohammad Tjai berperan sebagai Pembantu I di Kepanitiaan Kongres Pemuda. Sejarawan Universitas Indonesia Rushdy Hoesein seperti dilansir Detik.com melalui tulisan Abdurrahman Baswedan dan Kwee Thiam Hong dalam Sumpah Pemuda, menyebut Mohammad Tjai adalah salah satu peranakan Tionghoa yang terlibat aktif …

1947 film by Zoltan Korda The Macomber AffairTheatrical release posterDirected byZoltan KordaScreenplay bySeymour BennettCasey RobinsonAdaptation:Frank ArnoldBased onThe Short Happy Life of Francis Macomber1936 Cosmopolitanby Ernest HemingwayProduced byBenedict BogeausCasey RobinsonStarringGregory PeckJoan BennettRobert PrestonCinematographyKarl StrussEdited byGeorge FeldJack WheelerMusic byMiklós RózsaProductioncompanyBenedict Bogeaus ProductionsDistributed byUnited ArtistsRelease date April&…

Pharaoh of Egypt Senusret ISesostris, SesonchosisStatue of Senusret I in the Cairo Museum, EgyptPharaohReign1971–1926 BC; (1920–1875 BC)PredecessorAmenemhat ISuccessorAmenemhat IIRoyal titulary Horus name Ankhmesutˁnḫ-msw.tLiving of births Nebty name Ankhmesutˁnḫ-msw.tLiving of births Golden Horus Ankhmesutˁnḫ-msw.tLiving of births Turin canon:[...]ka…k3 Prenomen  (Praenomen) KheperkareḪpr-k3-RˁThe Ka of Ra is created Nomen SenusretS(j)-n-WsrtMan of Wosret ConsortN…

Flight Check Squadron飛行点検隊Flight Check Squadron U-125(2017)ActiveOctober 1, 1958CountryJapanAllegianceAir Support CommandBranchJapan Air Self-Defense ForceGarrison/HQIruma Air BaseAircraft flownYS-11FC, U-125Military unit Flight Check Squadron (飛行点検隊, hikoutenkentai) is a unit of the Japan Air Self-Defense Force based at Iruma Air Base in Saitama Prefecture north of Tokyo. Under the authority of Air Support Command,[1] it operates YS-11FC and U-125 aircraft.[2]…

Type of surveillance camera For broader coverage of this topic, see Closed-circuit television. This article needs additional citations for verification. Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources. Unsourced material may be challenged and removed.Find sources: Closed-circuit television camera – news · newspapers · books · scholar · JSTOR (September 2014) (Learn how and when to remove this template message) Vandal dome-style ca…

King of Scotland from 1292 to 1296 For his father, see John I de Balliol. For the 1825 play, see John Balliol (play). John BalliolKing John, with his crown and sceptre symbolically broken and with an empty coat of arms as depicted in the 1562 Forman Armorial, produced for Mary, Queen of ScotsKing of ScotsReign17 November 1292 – 10 July 1296Coronation30 November 1292PredecessorMargaret (1290)SuccessorRobert I (1306)Bornc. 1249Diedlate 1314 (aged around 65)Château de Hélicourt, Picardy, …

Model Walkman pertama. Walkman II Interior of a Walkman II Walkman adalah pemutar audio kaset sebagai pemutar audio dan video portabel. Walkman mengubah kebiasaan mendengarkan musik, sehingga seseorang dapat mendengarkan musik di mana saja. Walkman dirilis pada tahun 1979 dengan nama Walkman di Jepang, dan disebut Soundabout di negara seperti Amerika Serikat, Freestyle di Swedia dan Stowaway di Inggris Raya. Peralatan ini dibuat pada tahun 1978 oleh enjiner audio Nobutoshi Kihara untuk mantan ke…

Dinosaurus Periode Trias Akhir–Sekarang, 233.23 – 0 Jtl (Rentang fosil termasuk burung (Aves)) PreЄ Є O S D C P T J K Pg N (Kemungkinan pertengahan Trias) Dinosauria TaksonomiKerajaanAnimaliaFilumChordataKelasReptiliaSuperordoDinosauria Owen, 1842 Kelompok utama †Ornithischia †Stegosauria †Ankylosauria †Ornithopoda †Ceratopsia Saurischia †Sauropodomorpha Theropoda lbs Dinosaurus adalah kelompok binatang purba atau reptil[note 1] dari klad Dinosauria. Dinosaurus pertama …

В Википедии есть статьи о других людях с такой фамилией, см. Маккарти. Том Маккартиангл. Tom McCarthy Имя при рождении Томас Джозеф Маккарти Дата рождения 7 июня 1966(1966-06-07)[1] (57 лет) Место рождения Нью-Джерси, США Гражданство  США Профессия актёрсценаристкинорежиссёр…

马来亚大学University of Malaya(英語)Universiti Malaya(馬來語)老校名七州府医学堂、爱德华七世医学院、莱佛士学院校训Knowledge is the Source of Progress(英語)Ilmu Punca Kemajuan(馬來語)校訓中譯「知识乃成功之本」创办时间1905年9月28日,​118年前​(1905-09-28)[1][2]学校类型国立综合研究型大学捐贈基金$385 million(2017年8月)校监Sultan Nazrin Muizzuddin Shah ibni Almarhum…

周處除三害The Pig, The Snake and The Pigeon正式版海報基本资料导演黃精甫监制李烈黃江豐動作指導洪昰顥编剧黃精甫主演阮經天袁富華陳以文王淨李李仁謝瓊煖配乐盧律銘林孝親林思妤保卜摄影王金城剪辑黃精甫林雍益制片商一種態度電影股份有限公司片长134分鐘产地 臺灣语言國語粵語台語上映及发行上映日期 2023年10月6日 (2023-10-06)(台灣) 2023年11月2日 (2023-11-02)(香港、…

Kembali kehalaman sebelumnya