New Jersey Route 14

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Route 14

The area of the western terminus for Route 14 in the area of Butler as viewed by OpenStreetMap
Route information
Maintained by NJDOT
Length25 mi[1] (40 km)
Existed1969[2]–1970s (never built)
Major junctions
West end Route 23 in Butler
East end Cross County Parkway at the New York state line in Alpine
Location
CountryUnited States
StateNew Jersey
CountiesMorris, Passaic, Bergen
Highway system
Route 13 Route 15

Route 14 was a proposed state highway through Morris, Passaic and Bergen Counties in the late 1960s and early 1970s. The plans called for a freeway extending from Route 23 in Butler, across the state to Bergen County, where it would cross over a new Hudson River crossing near Alpine. From there, the highway continue as an extension of the Cross County Parkway in Yonkers, New York. The proposal was submitted to the Federal Highway Administration for possible interstate status in 1970, but opposition from Bergen and Westchester County residents along with the engineering difficulties involved with building the proposed Hudson River bridge atop the New Jersey Palisades prevented the freeway from being built.[1]

Route description

Route 14 was to begin at New Jersey Route 23 (which was to be converted to a freeway) and Kiel Avenue in the community of Butler in Morris County. The route was to head eastward from Butler, following a four-lane freeway for 2.5 miles (4.0 km) to an interchange with Interstate 287 at Milepost 54 in Bloomingdale. The route was to be concurrent with Interstate 287 through the northern portions of Morris County and entering Passaic County towards Interchange 59, where it would follow current-day New Jersey Route 208 through Franklin Lakes in Bergen County. Route 14 was to continue for the next two miles on current-day Route 208 before forking to the northeast. From there, the highway would continue eastward through Wyckoff, Ridgewood, Oradell, New Milford, Cresskill, and into Alpine, where it would reach the Hudson River and continue in New York as the Cross County Parkway.[1][2]

History

While Interstate 80 was being constructed during the 1960s, the New Jersey State Highway Department started conceiving plans to construct another east–west link across New Jersey. In 1969, the now-Department of Transportation brought forth plans for a new 25-mile-long (40 km) freeway from New Jersey Route 23 and Interstate 287 near Butler, heading eastward through Morris, Passaic and Bergen Counties to a new bridge crossing over the Hudson River at Alpine.[2] Although the freeway was a brand new proposal, this was not the first time a freeway through northern Bergen County has been conceived. The Tri-State Transportation Commission also proposed extending New Jersey Route 19 from Paterson to Alpine, where a bridge would be constructed. The bridge would relieve the rising amount of traffic on the nearby Tappan Zee and George Washington Bridges. On the Westchester side of the river, the Cross County Parkway was to be built and extended two miles to the bridge approach for opening to commercial traffic.[3] Rumors indicated that Route 14 would possibly be extended westward from Butler to the vicinity of a proposed national recreation area along the Delaware River that would have been built in conjunction with the controversial Tocks Island Dam project. Also in the meantime, Butler officials along with their mayor, opposed widening of Route 23 through the community.[2] In 1970, the states of New York and New Jersey began to pursue getting the portion of Route 14 and the Cross County from Franklin Lakes to Yonkers for interstate status, but financial issues, public opposition in Bergen and Westchester Counties along with design problems helped kill the freeway.[4]

Exit list

CountyLocationmikmExitDestinationsNotes
MorrisButler00.0 Route 23Proposed western terminus
PassaicBloomingdale
I-287 south
Milepost 54 on I-287; Beginning of proposed concurrency
BergenFranklin Lakes
I-287 north
Interchange 59 on I-287; End of proposed concurrency
Alpine2540
Cross County Parkway east
Proposed eastern terminus; Proposed bridge over the Hudson River
1.000 mi = 1.609 km; 1.000 km = 0.621 mi

See also

References

  1. ^ a b c Anderson, Steve (2009). "NJ 14 Freeway (unbuilt)". New York, New York: Eastern Roads. Retrieved November 13, 2009.
  2. ^ a b c d "Proposed Route 14-F Will Link at Kiel Avenue, State Discloses". Butler, New Jersey: The Butler Argus. May 22, 1969.
  3. ^ "Transportation 1985: A Regional Plan". Tri-State Transportation Commission. 1969. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  4. ^ New Jersey Highway Facts. Trenton, New Jersey: New Jersey Department of Transportation. 1969.

External links