New Jersey Route 29
Route information | ||||
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Maintained by NJDOT and Hunterdon County | ||||
Length | 34.76 mi[1] (55.94 km) | |||
Existed | 1927–present | |||
Tourist routes | Delaware River Scenic Byway | |||
NHS | Southern terminus to US 202[1][2] | |||
Restrictions | Hazmats, bottled gas, and trucks over 13 tons GVWR prohibited in South Trenton Tunnel | |||
Major junctions | ||||
South end | I-195 / I-295 in Hamilton Township | |||
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North end | Route 12 in Frenchtown | |||
Location | ||||
Country | United States | |||
State | New Jersey | |||
Counties | Mercer, Hunterdon | |||
Highway system | ||||
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Route 29 is a state highway in the U.S. state of New Jersey. Signed north-south, it runs 34.76 mi (55.94 km) from an interchange with Interstate 295 (I-295) in Hamilton Township in Mercer County, where the road continues east as I-195, northwest to Route 12 (Bridge Street/Race Street) in Frenchtown, Hunterdon County. Between the southern terminus and I-295 in Ewing Township, the route is a mix of freeway and expressway that runs along the Delaware River through Trenton. This section includes a truck-restricted tunnel that was built along the river near historic houses and Riverview Cemetery. North of I-295, Route 29 turns into a scenic and mostly two-lane highway. North of the South Trenton Tunnel, it is designated the Delaware River Scenic Byway, a New Jersey Scenic Byway and National Scenic Byway, that follows the Delaware River in mostly rural sections of Mercer County and Hunterdon County. The obsolete Delaware & Raritan Canal usually stands between the river and the highway. Most sections of this portion of Route 29 are completely shaded due to the tree canopy. Route 29 also has a spur, Route 129, which connects Route 29 to U.S. Route 1 (US 1) in Trenton.
Route 29 was initially designated in 1927 to run from downtown Trenton northeast to Newark, following present-day Route 179 and US 202 between Lambertville and Somerville and US 22 between Somerville and Newark. The route between Lambertville and Frenchtown was originally Route 29A. In 1953, Route 29 was shifted to follow the alignment of Route 29A to avoid the concurrencies with the U.S. Routes. Route 29 between South Warren Street in Trenton and I-95 (now I-295) in Ewing Township was upgraded to a four-lane expressway, with a portion of freeway, in the 1950s and 1960s. In 1995, the southern freeway part of Route 29 between I-195/I-295 and Route 129 in Hamilton Township was completed. This freeway section was linked to the rest of Route 29 by a tunnel completed in 2002. A realignment of Route 29 in Lambertville by the 2000s made the route concurrent with the entire length of 0.26-mile-long (0.42 km) Route 165.
Route description
Route 29 is part of the National Highway System south of the US 202 interchange in Delaware Township.[1][2]
Mercer County
Route 29 begins at a modified cloverleaf interchange with I-195 and I-295 in Hamilton Township, and it serves as the western continuation of I-195, heading to the northwest as a six-lane freeway. The route has an interchange with Route 129, a spur of Route 29 which connects to US 1, with a northbound exit and southbound entrance. At this interchange, the route passes over NJ Transit's River Line.[1] Route 29 narrows to four lanes past this interchange and crosses into Trenton. The route comes to a southbound exit and entrance for Lamberton Road. At this point, Route 29 becomes the Delaware River Scenic Byway, a state scenic byway that was also designated a National Scenic Byway in 2009.[3][4] Route 29 runs along the bank of the Delaware River and enters a truck-restricted tunnel that passes by historic houses and Riverview Cemetery.[1][5][6] Within this tunnel, Route 29 features a southbound exit and northbound entrance for Lalor Street.[1] The route emerges from the tunnel as the John Fitch Parkway and passes east of Trenton Thunder Ballpark, the home ballpark of the Trenton Thunder baseball team. The road comes to a traffic light at Thunder Road/Cass Street where it widens back to six lanes.[1][7] Route 29 meets South Warren Street at another traffic light. The median widens and it passes under the Morrisville–Trenton Railroad Bridge, which carries Amtrak's Northeast Corridor over the Delaware River.[1]
Route 29 passes under the Trenton–Morrisville Toll Bridge, which carries US 1 over the Delaware River. Access to US 1 southbound is provided by ramps from Route 29 while access to Route 29 from northbound US 1 is provided by South Warren Street.[1] Route 29 passes under the Lower Trenton Bridge and the median narrows again. It interchanges with Market Street, which provides access to Route 33, and then features an interchange with Memorial Drive which provides access to the New Jersey State House with a northbound exit and southbound entrance. Route 29 crosses the Assunpink Creek and features an interchange which provides access to South Warren Street with exits in both directions but only a northbound entrance.[1] Route 29 continues to a cloverleaf interchange with Calhoun Street (County Route 653, CR 653), which provides access to the Calhoun Street Bridge over the Delaware River. Riverside Avenue exits as a frontage road paralleling the northbound lanes of Route 29 before the road features a northbound exit for Hermitage Avenue. Route 29 comes to a partial interchange with Parkside Avenue, with a northbound exit and southbound entrance, and then features a northbound exit for South Eastfield Avenue.[1]
The freeway portion of Route 29 ends at the intersection with Lee Avenue and it continues northwest along the Delaware River as a four-lane expressway. The route meets the southern terminus of CR 579 (Sullivan Way). The median widens again and then narrows as the route meets the southern terminus of Route 175, a former alignment of Route 29 that currently serves as a frontage road. Route 29 crosses into Ewing Township and becomes the Daniel Bray Highway. It passes under the West Trenton Railroad Bridge, which carries CSX's Trenton Subdivision and SEPTA's West Trenton Line over the Delaware River.[1] Route 29 intersects Route 175 again and then comes to a complex interchange with I-295, with the ramps within the median of Route 29, just to the east of the Scudder Falls Bridge.[1]
Upon crossing the Delaware and Raritan Canal, Route 29 narrows down to a two-lane undivided road called River Road. It continues along the Delaware River, next to the Delaware and Raritan Canal, which runs between Route 29 and the river. The route intersects the northern terminus of Route 175. Farther north, Route 29 enters Hopewell Township and continues into a more rural setting shaded with trees.[7] Route 29 heads to Washington Crossing State Park, where it intersects CR 546, which heads east on Washington Crossing-Pennington Road, and the approach to the Washington Crossing Bridge, which continues into Pennsylvania and connects to Pennsylvania Route 532 (PA 532).[1][7] Route 29 continues north along the Delaware River through Titusville, passing by Washington Crossing State Park.[7]
Hunterdon County
Location | Lambertville |
---|---|
Length | 0.26 mi[8] (420 m) |
Route 29 crosses into West Amwell Township in Hunterdon County. It enters Lambertville, where Route 29 becomes a four-lane divided highway.[1] At the intersection of South Main Street, Route 29 becomes concurrent with Route 165.[8] The route becomes an undivided highway again and meets the western terminus of CR 518 (Brunswick Street). It meets Route 179 (Bridge Street), where Route 165 ends and Route 29 turns west for a one-block wrong-way concurrency with the two-lane, undivided Route 179, lasting to the intersection of Main Street, where Route 29 turns north on Main Street.[1][8]
Route 29 follows Main Street north through Lambertville, crossing into Delaware Township. It comes to an interchange with US 202 just east of the New Hope–Lambertville Toll Bridge, with access to northbound US 202 and from southbound US 202 provided by way of Alexauken Creek Road.[1] Route 29 continues along the Delaware River and enters Stockton. The route intersects Bridge Street, which crosses the Delaware River on the Centre Bridge–Stockton Bridge and continues into Pennsylvania as PA 263.[1][7] Shortly after that intersection, Route 29 intersects the southern terminus of CR 523 (Stockton-Flemington Road). Route 29 crosses back into Delaware Township, where it meets the southern terminus of CR 519 (Kingwood-Stockton Road).[1]
Route 29 makes a sharp left turn and heads west along the river as a rural road, crossing into Kingwood Township, where the name of the road changes from Main Street to Daniel Bray Highway. Here, it intersects with CR 651 (Byram-Kingwood Road). The route bends to the north and continues along the Delaware River for several miles, crossing into Frenchtown, where the route becomes Trenton Road.[1] Upon entering Frenchtown, an end shield for northbound Route 29 is posted to mark the end of state maintenance, which officially ends at the Washington Street intersection, where maintenance is transferred to the county.[1][9] Despite this, Route 29 officially continues farther north along Trenton Road to its northern terminus at Route 12 (Bridge Street/Race Street), a short distance east of Route 12’s western terminus at the Uhlerstown–Frenchtown Bridge. The southern terminus of CR 513 is located a block north of the northern terminus of Route 29 along Route 12.[1]
History
The current route was originally legislated in 1911 as part of the Delaware River Drive, a named state highway that was proposed to run from along the Delaware River from Trenton north to the New York border in Montague Township.[10] Route 29 was originally defined in 1927 to run from Trenton to Newark. The original route ran from downtown Trenton along State Street and Sanhican Drive. From there, it followed its current alignment to Lambertville, where it followed present-day Route 179 to Ringoes to present-day CR 514, which it followed to Woods Tavern. The route turned north on US 206 (also designated Route 31) and followed that route to Somerville, where it followed US 22 to Newark. The current alignment of Route 29 from Lambertville to Route 12 in Frenchtown was designated Route 29A in 1927.[11][12]
Location | Lambertville–Frenchtown |
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Existed | 1927–1953 |
The alignment of Route 29 between Ringoes and Somerville was eventually shifted to follow present-day US 202, which was also Route 30 (now Route 31) between Ringoes and Flemington and Route 12 between Flemington and Somerville.[13] In 1938, Route 29B was planned as an extension of Route 29A from Frenchtown to Route 28 (now Route 122) in Alpha. While this road was never built, much of the alignment north of Milford is served by CR 519.[14] In 1948, a spur route, Route S29, was created, running along US 202 (Bridge Street) in Lambertville to the New Hope–Lambertville Bridge.[15]
In the 1953 New Jersey state highway renumbering, Route 29 was redefined to continue north from Lambertville to Frenchtown on Route 29A, and the Route 29 designation between Lambertville and Newark was removed in favor of US 202 between Lambertville and Somerville and US 22 between Somerville and Newark. The section of former Route 29 between Route 29A and Route S29 became Route 165.[16]
Plans for a limited-access route along the Route 29 corridor go back to 1932, when a parkway was proposed along the Delaware River between Trenton and Lambertville; this proposal never materialized.[17] On April 24, 1954, the Greater Philadelphia-Delaware-South Jersey Council released a proposal for a freeway system in the Philadelphia area that included an extension of the Trenton Freeway following Route 29 between the center of Trenton and the northern border of the city.[18] Plans to construct a freeway from Hamilton Township to I-95 (now I-295) in Ewing Township were resurrected in the early 1950s. This road was built between 1954 and 1957 from South Warren Street in Trenton to present-day I-295 in Ewing Township. From just south of Calhoun Street north to I-295, Route 29 utilized the right-of-way of what remained of the Trenton Water Power Canal, a 19th century waterway utilized by the mills of Trenton for water power. The freeway's construction resulted in the filling of the canal, and also took up much of Trenton’s available waterfront along the Delaware River.[19][20] As part of constructing the highway, the state purchased much of Stacy Park, a large waterfront park in the downtown area, in the 1950s.[21] The former alignment of Route 29 in the northern part of Trenton and in Ewing Township became Route 175.[22]
Between 1990 and 1995, the Route 29 freeway was built between the I-195/I-295 interchange and Route 129 in Hamilton Township. A two-lane street, Lamberton Road, connected the two freeway sections. Plans were then made to fill the gap between the two freeway sections in Trenton. Construction began in 1997 on the Route 29 freeway between Route 129 and the Morrisville–Trenton Railroad Bridge. The road was to include two traffic lights at Cass Street and South Warren Street and a tunnel which was to be built as a covered roadway on the bank of the Delaware River.[23] The tunnel was originally scheduled to be complete by 2001 but was delayed after the Army Corps of Engineers discovered many environmental violations that occurred with construction of the tunnel.[24] The roof was put in place in October 2001 and the tunnel officially opened to traffic on March 2, 2002.[25] A restriction to trucks over 13 tons was put in place and made permanent in November 2002.[26]
By the 2000s, the state gave the part of Route 29 (South Main Street) between Route 165 and Route 179 in Lambertville to the city, and Route 29 was rerouted to use all of Route 165 and one block of Route 179. Prior to this, South Main Street had been turned one-way southbound.[27] Route 165, which is only signed on overhead street signs, still exists, though it is fully concurrent with Route 29.[8]
A part of Route 29 was designated in 1959 as the John Fitch Parkway, honoring inventor John Fitch, "beginning with the bridge crossing over the Assunpink Creek at the conjunction of Factory Street with John Fitch Way in the city of Trenton and including the traffic circle surrounding the War Memorial building and the freeway extending in a westerly direction therefrom, along the bank of the Delaware river, to the city line of the city of Trenton..."[28] During the 1960s the War Memorial and the surrounding circle were bypassed by a realignment of Route 29 closer to the Delaware River.
In 1960, the New Jersey Legislature designated the portion of Route 29 north of Trenton as the Daniel Bray Highway to commemorate American Revolutionary War Captain Daniel Bray, a native of Kingwood Township.[29]
There are plans to reconstruct the portion of Route 29 along the Delaware River in Trenton from Landing Street north to Calhoun Steeet into an urban boulevard in order to restore access to the the waterfront that was lost when the highway was built. The proposal would reroute the section of the route further from the river to allow for the land adjacent to the river to be redeveloped. In July 2023, the Delaware Valley Regional Planning Commission issued a $1.016 million grant toward the project.[21]
Major intersections
County | Location | mi[1] | km | Destinations | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Mercer | Hamilton Township | 0.00 | 0.00 | I-195 east to I-95 / N.J. Turnpike – Belmar | Continuation east |
I-295 – Camden, Princeton | I-195 exits 1A-B; I-295 exits 60A-B; partial cloverleaf interchange; southern terminus | ||||
1.64 | 2.64 | Route 129 north (Canal Boulevard) – Trenton | Northbound exit only | ||
1.64 | 2.64 | South Lamberton Road – Duck Island | Northbound exit only | ||
Trenton | 1.77 | 2.85 | Southbound exit only | ||
South Trenton Tunnel | |||||
2.56 | 4.12 | Lalor Street (CR 650 east) | Southbound exit and northbound entrance | ||
Cass Street | At-grade intersection; northern end of freeway section | ||||
South Warren Street | At-grade intersection; southern end of freeway section | ||||
3.37 | 5.42 | US 1 south (Trenton–Morrisville Toll Bridge) – Morrisville | |||
3.63 | 5.84 | To Route 33 (Market Street) / US 1 north / Route 129 – Arena | US 1/Route 129 and Arena not signed northbound; access to Trenton Transit Center | ||
3.84 | 6.18 | Memorial Drive – Capitol Complex | |||
4.34 | 6.98 | Calhoun Street – Capitol Complex, Thomas Edison State University, Morrisville, PA | |||
4.81 | 7.74 | Riverside Avenue | Northbound exit only | ||
5.01 | 8.06 | Hermitage Avenue | Northbound exit only | ||
5.45 | 8.77 | Parkside Avenue – Cadwalder Park | Northbound exit and southbound entrance | ||
5.60 | 9.01 | South Eastfield Avenue | Northbound exit only | ||
Lee Avenue | At-grade intersection; northern end of freeway section | ||||
6.18 | 9.95 | CR 579 north (Sullivan Way) / Sanhican Drive/Mount Vernon Avenue – West Trenton | At-grade intersection; southern terminus of CR 579 | ||
6.74 | 10.85 | Route 175 north (Sanhican Drive) | Northbound exit only; southern terminus of Route 175 | ||
Ewing Township | Lower Ferry Road | At-grade intersection | |||
8.49 | 13.66 | Route 175 (West Upper Ferry Road) – West Trenton | At-grade intersection | ||
9.13 | 14.69 | I-295 (Scudder Falls Bridge) to I-95 – Princeton, Philadelphia | Interchange; I-295 exit 76 | ||
North end of expressway section | |||||
9.55 | 15.37 | Route 175 south – West Trenton | Interchange; northern terminus of Route 175 | ||
Hopewell Township | 11.95 | 19.23 | CR 546 east (Washington Crossing-Pennington Road) / Washington Crossing Bridge – Pennington, Newtown | Western terminus of CR 546 | |
Hunterdon | Lambertville | 18.60 | 29.93 | Route 165 begins | South end of Route 165 overlap |
18.77 | 30.21 | CR 518 east (Brunswick Street) – Hopewell | Western terminus of CR 518 | ||
18.87 | 30.37 | Route 179 north (Bridge Street) – Ringoes Route 165 ends | North end of Route 165 overlap, south end of Route 179 overlap | ||
18.89 | 30.40 | Route 179 south (Bridge Street) – New Hope | North end of Route 179 overlap | ||
Delaware Township | 20.06 | 32.28 | US 202 – Pennsylvania, Flemington | Interchange | |
Stockton | 22.37 | 36.00 | Bridge Street to PA 263 – Solebury, PA | ||
22.48 | 36.18 | CR 523 north (Stockton-Flemington Road) – Sergeantsville, Flemington | Southern terminus of CR 523 | ||
Delaware Township | 23.03 | 37.06 | CR 519 north (Kingwood-Stockton Road) – Rosemont | Southern terminus of CR 519 | |
Frenchtown | 34.71 | 55.86 | Route 12 (Bridge Street/Race Street) | Northern terminus | |
1.000 mi = 1.609 km; 1.000 km = 0.621 mi
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See also
- Pennsylvania Route 32, parallel route on the opposite side of the Delaware River
References
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w "Route 29 straight line diagram" (PDF). New Jersey Department of Transportation. Retrieved March 17, 2020.
- ^ a b National Highway System: New Jersey (PDF) (Map). Federal Highway Administration. September 30, 2020. Retrieved April 11, 2024.
- ^ "Delaware River Scenic Byway". National Scenic Byways Program. Retrieved October 27, 2008.
- ^ "Delaware River Scenic Byway - Official Designations". National Scenic Byways Program. Retrieved November 6, 2010.
- ^ "NJDOT Traffic Regulations - Weight Limit - Route 29". New Jersey Department of Transportation. Retrieved October 27, 2008.
- ^ "CSD Case Study No. 9 - Route 29 through Trenton, New Jersey" (PDF). Context Sensitive Design. Archived from the original (PDF) on August 31, 2006. Retrieved October 27, 2008.
- ^ a b c d e Google (April 1, 2009). "overview of New Jersey Route 29" (Map). Google Maps. Google. Retrieved April 1, 2009.
- ^ a b c d "Route 165 straight line diagram" (PDF). New Jersey Department of Transportation. Retrieved October 22, 2008.
- ^ Google (April 4, 2013). "View of end New Jersey Route 29 sign in Frenchtown" (Map). Google Maps. Google. Retrieved April 4, 2013.
- ^ State of New Jersey, Laws of 1911, Chapter 114
- ^ State of New Jersey, Laws of 1927, Chapter 319.
- ^ 1927 New Jersey Road Map (Map). State of New Jersey. Archived from the original on October 31, 2007. Retrieved October 8, 2008.
- ^ Map of Pennsylvania and New Jersey (Map). Cartography by H.M. Gousha. Mid-West Map Co. 1941. Retrieved March 29, 2009.
- ^ State of New Jersey, Laws of 1938, Chapter 183.
- ^ State of New Jersey, Laws of 1948, Chapter 407.
- ^ 1953 renumbering. New Jersey Department of Highways. Archived from the original on June 28, 2011. Retrieved July 31, 2009.
- ^ Regional Plan of the Philadelphia Tri-State District. Regional Planning Federation. 1932.
- ^ "Billion-Dollar Expressway Network in Three States Urged". The Philadelphia Inquirer. April 25, 1954. p. 41, 61.
- ^ Report on Route 29 Connection. New Jersey State Highway Department. 1960.
- ^ "History Traced by Route 29 - Power To the City - The Trenton Water Power" (PDF). New Jersey Department of Transportation. 2005.
- ^ a b Burns, P. Kenneth (August 1, 2023). "Trenton's Route 29 Boulevard Project takes a step forward". Philadelphia, PA: WHYY. Retrieved November 16, 2023.
- ^ Map of New Jersey (Map). Cartography by H.M. Gousha. Chevron Oil Company. 1969.
- ^ Route 29 Construction. New Jersey Department of Transportation. 2001.
- ^ Hester Jr., Tom (April 6, 2000). "Route 29 Work Halt Ordered". The Trenton Times.
- ^ "Route 29 Tunnel To Open To Traffic Saturday, March 2 New Traffic Patterns In Area For Monday's Commute". New Jersey Department of Transportation. February 27, 2002. Retrieved April 1, 2012.
- ^ "Route 29 truck restriction to be made permanent". New Jersey Department of Transportation. November 6, 2002. Retrieved April 1, 2012.
- ^ "NJDOT Traffic Regulations - One Way Street - Route 29". New Jersey Department of Transportation. Retrieved April 1, 2009.
- ^ State of New Jersey; Laws of 1959, Joint Resolution No. 12, pg. 806
- ^ State of New Jersey; Laws of 1960, Joint Resolution No. 10, pg. 855
External links
- An enlarged view of road jurisdiction in Trenton at the confluence of US 1, US 206, NJ 29, NJ 33 and NJ 129
- An enlarged view of road jurisdiction in Ewing Township at the confluence of I-95, NJ 29 and NJ 175
- An enlarged view of road jurisdiction in Lambertville at the confluence of NJ 29, NJ 165, NJ 179 and CR 518
- New Jersey Roads: Route 29
- New Jersey Highway Ends: 29
- Speed Limits for Route 29