U.S. Route 19 Truck (Pittsburgh)
Route information | |
---|---|
Truck route of US 19 | |
Maintained by PennDOT | |
Length | 19.4 mi[1] (31.2 km) |
NHS | Entire route[2] |
Major junctions | |
South end | US 19 in Mt. Lebanon |
PA 51 in Pittsburgh I-376 / US 22 / US 30 in Pittsburgh | |
North end | US 19 in McCandless Township |
Location | |
Country | United States |
State | Pennsylvania |
Counties | Allegheny |
Highway system | |
U.S. Route 19 Truck (US 19 Truck) is a truck route of US 19 located in Western Pennsylvania in Greater Pittsburgh that has a length of 19.4 miles (31.2 km). It is a loop off US 19; the southern terminus located in Mt. Lebanon and the northern terminus in McCandless, connecting to US 19 at both ends. The route is notable for a large, unorthodox interchange with the Penn–Lincoln Parkway (Interstate 376 [I-376]/US 22/US 30) just west of the Fort Pitt Tunnel, where the route joins the parkway and forms several wrong-way concurrencies, including one with its own opposing directions.[3] North of Pittsburgh, US 19 Truck is called McKnight Road and south of Pittsburgh it carries West Liberty Avenue and Washington Road.
Route description
Southern terminus to five-route concurrency
US 19 Truck begins as US 19 enters Mt. Lebanon along Washington Road. US 19 branches northwest to skirt Mt. Lebanon and Dormont, following Cochran Road, while US 19 Truck stays on Washington Road and continues through the centers of those towns. As US 19 Truck enters the southern parts of Pittsburgh, its name becomes West Liberty Avenue as it passes through the Beechview neighborhood. At the south portal of the Liberty Tunnel, US 19 Truck interchanges with Pennsylvania Route 51 (PA 51; Saw Mill Run Boulevard) and joins it, following it north.
After 1.4 miles (2.3 km), US 19 Truck and PA 51 encounter the Penn–Lincoln Parkway, carrying I-376/US 22/US 30, at a complex, unorthodox interchange complex that stretches roughly half a mile (0.80 km) along the parkway and rests just south of the Fort Pitt Tunnel. Mainline US 19 also resides within this interchange, exiting the parkway and traveling north to join PA 51. Here, US 19 Truck joins the parkway.
Northbound US 19 Truck exits PA 51 at a left exit, turning toward the westbound parkway, which also contains a right-in/right-out ramp for Woodville Avenue. The ramp merges into the southbound US 19 mainline ramp, forming a wrong-way concurrency, but remains separated from the Penn–Lincoln Parkway via a Jersey barrier. The ramp travels for roughly half a mile (0.80 km) in this fashion before making a U-shaped curve. Before this ramp passes under the parkway, it merges with southbound US 19 Truck (which exits the Penn–Lincoln Parkway from the Fort Pitt Tunnel), forming a wrong-way concurrency with itself. Mainline US 19 separates after the underpass and travels southbound as Banksville Road, and the ramp (carrying north and south US 19 Truck) curves northward, joining with the northbound US 19 mainline. The ramp now merges into the Penn–Lincoln Parkway, forming four lanes of I-376/US 22/US 30/both directions of US 19 Truck/US 19. After a short stretch, southbound US 19 Truck exits south at the next ramp, removing one lane from the Parkway, and, after passing under PA 51, northbound mainline US 19 exits as well, also removing a lane. The Penn–Lincoln Parkway, now with both directions carrying I-376/US 22/US 30/US 19 Truck and in an orthodox orientation, enter the Fort Pitt Tunnel.
Fort Pitt Tunnel to I-279 Interchange
After exiting the Fort Pitt Tunnel, US 19 Truck/I-376/US 22/US 30 cross the Monongahela River on the Fort Pitt Bridge, arriving on the Golden Triangle of Downtown Pittsburgh. The route meets the southern terminus of I-279 here, and I-376/US 22/US 30 head eastward, while US 19 Truck separates from them and joins I-279 on its northward trek. The two routes then cross the Allegheny River on the Fort Duquesne Bridge. North of the bridge, I-279 and US 19 Truck interchange with the southern terminus of PA 65 at exit 1C of I-279. Exit 1B is to PNC Park and exit 1C is for Acrisure Stadium. At exit 1D and 2A, I-279 southbound splits into high-occupancy vehicle (HOV) lanes at the I-279 Interchange. The I-279 interchange involves the northern terminus of I-579 and the southern terminus of PA 28.
Exit 2 to northern terminus
North of exit 2B, I-279 has HOV lanes and continues its concurrency with US 19 Truck toward the north. At exit 4, US 19 Truck splits from I-279 and US 19 Truck continues toward the north at-grade as McKnight Road, a frequently congested divided highway known locally as McNightmare Road.[4] In Ross Township, US 19 Truck interchanges with Babcock Boulevard and shifts toward the northwest. The remainder of the route widens to six lanes and heavily lined with shopping centers and large malls, including North Hills Village, Ross Park Mall, and McCandless Crossing. In McCandless, US 19 Truck interchanges with Ingomar Road. Northwest of Ingomar Road, US 19 Truck turns west, paralleling and crossing Pine Creek before it terminates (ends) at a partial Y interchange with US 19.[1]
The entire length of US 19 Truck is part of the National Highway System.[2]
History
The roadway was signed as US 19 from 1941 to 1948. The route was signed in 1946 as a bypass route for trucks that were not allowed on US 19. In 1948, the southern terminus was moved from Banksville Road to its current location. In 1989, US 19 Truck's designation was moved to I-279 to form a complete US 19 Truck from Mt. Lebanon to Wexford after the parkway north was completed. In 1997, construction began on the interchange at the southern portal of the Liberty Tunnel and opened to traffic on November 20, 1999.[5]
Major intersections
The entire route is in Allegheny County.
Location | mi[6] | km | Old exit | New exit | Destinations | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Mt. Lebanon | 0.0 | 0.0 | US 19 / Yellow Belt (Washington Road/Cochran Road) – Bethel Park | Southern terminus | ||
Dormont | Blue Belt (Potomac Avenue) – Green Tree | Southern end of concurrency with Blue Belt | ||||
Blue Belt (Pioneer Avenue) – Brentwood | Northern end of concurrency with Blue Belt | |||||
Pittsburgh | Buses only (South Busway) | Northbound exit and southbound entrance | ||||
PA 51 south (Saw Mill Run Boulevard) / Liberty Tunnel – Downtown, South Side, Uniontown | Interchange; southern end of concurrency with PA 51 | |||||
Woodruff Street to PA 837 – Wabash Tunnel, Mount Washington | ||||||
I-376 west / US 22 west / US 30 west (Penn Lincoln Parkway) – Carnegie, Pittsburgh International Airport US 19 north / PA 51 north (Saw Mill Run Boulevard) – West End Bridge, Downtown
| Interchange; northern end of concurrency with PA 51; southern end of concurrency with I-376/US 22/US 30; exits 69A-C (I-376/US 22/US 30) (old exits 5A-C) | |||||
Fort Pitt Tunnel under Mount Washington | ||||||
5C | 69C | PA 837 north to PA 51 – West End | Southbound exit and northbound entrance | |||
Monongahela River | Fort Pitt Bridge | |||||
Pittsburgh | 6B | 70A | Boulevard of the Allies/Liberty Avenue – PPG Arena | Northbound exit and southbound entrance | ||
6C | 70B | Fort Duquesne Boulevard – Convention Center, Strip District | Northbound exit and southbound entrance | |||
6A | I-376 east / US 22 east / US 30 east (Penn Lincoln Parkway) – Monroeville I-279 begins | Northern end of concurrency with I-376/US 22/US 30; southern end of concurrency with I-279 | ||||
6C | 1A | Fort Duquesne Boulevard – Convention Center, Strip District | Southbound exit and northbound entrance | |||
Allegheny River | Fort Duquesne Bridge | |||||
Pittsburgh | 7A | 1B | North Shore | No northbound entrance; access to Acrisure Stadium, PNC Park, and Carnegie Science Center | ||
7B | 1C | PA 65 north (Ohio River Boulevard) to US 19 | Southern terminus of PA 65 | |||
9th Street | Southbound left exit and northbound entrance | |||||
I-279 south | Southbound exit only | |||||
PPG Arena | Southbound left exit and northbound entrance | |||||
7C | 1D | PA 28 north / Chestnut Street/Ohio Street – Etna | Northbound exit and southbound entrance | |||
8A | 2A | I-579 south (Crosstown Boulevard) – Veterans Bridge | Southbound exit and northbound entrance; northern terminus of I-579 | |||
8B | 2B | East Ohio Street to PA 28 north | Southbound exit and northbound entrance | |||
9 | 3 | Hazlett Street | Northbound exit and entrance | |||
10 | 4 | East Street | Southbound exit and entrance | |||
I-279 north to I-79 – Erie | North end of concurrency with I-279; I-279 exit 4 | |||||
I-279 south – Pittsburgh | Southbound left exit and northbound entrance | |||||
Evergreen Road – Millvale | Northbound access via exit ramp | |||||
Nelson Run Road to Blue Belt | Interchange | |||||
Ross Township | Babcock Boulevard – West View, Millvale | Interchange | ||||
McCandless | Green Belt (Babcock Boulevard/Peebles Road) to PA 8 / PA 65 – Hampton Township, Emsworth | |||||
Perrymont Road/Babcock Boulevard to US 19 – La Roche University, UPMC Passavant McCandless | ||||||
Cumberland Road – La Roche University, UPMC Passavant McCandless | ||||||
Yellow Belt (Ingomar Road) – North Park, Hampton, Franklin Park, Ingomar | Interchange; northbound exit and southbound entrance | |||||
Pine Creek Road to US 19 south/Rinaman Road | ||||||
US 19 north (Perry Highway) – Wexford | Northern terminus; northbound exit and southbound entrance | |||||
1.000 mi = 1.609 km; 1.000 km = 0.621 mi
|
References
- ^ a b DeLorme Street Atlas USA 2007
- ^ a b National Highway System: Pennsylvania (PDF) (Map). Federal Highway Administration. 2010. Retrieved February 10, 2012.
- ^ Moraseski, Dan. "Map of the Parkway West & Saw Mill Run Boulevard Interchange and Quintuplex". Archived from the original on September 17, 2018. Retrieved May 5, 2023.
- ^ Vernon, August. "Progressing Pittsburgh". Pittsburgh's Outdoor Murals and Art. Archived from the original on November 9, 2014. Retrieved May 5, 2023.
McKnight Rd did not aquire [sic] the nickname 'McNightmare Rd' by mistake.
- ^ Kitsko, Jeffrey J. (April 18, 2020). "US 19 Auxiliary Routes". Pennsylvania Highways. Retrieved May 5, 2023.
- ^ Google (February 1, 2012). "overview of U.S. Route 19 Truck" (Map). Google Maps. Google. Retrieved February 1, 2012.