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Interchange Index

Garden State Parkway, US 9, NJ 440, CR 656
Woodbridge, NJ

Overhead Picture
Overhead Picture from terraserver-usa.com

Overview: I present to you one of the biggest, most sprawling, most screwed-up, but yet most functional interchanges I have ever seen. The major east-west highway at center is NJ 440, which runs from the New Jersey Turnpike in the west to Staten Island in the east. The two major north-south highways intersect NJ 440 to the right of the center of the photo. The Garden State Parkway (the wider of the two highways) enters just west of US 9, and the parkway leaves the north end of the photo inside US 9. Notice that both of these highways leave the south end of the interchange on bridges; they are about to cross the Raritan River, which runs just south of this photo. The interchange is also intersected by many local roads. Smith Street (Middlesex CR 656) runs parallel to and south of NJ 440, from left center to bottom right. The road leaving the north side of the aerial photo is Crows Mill Road, which is also CR 656. (The southern half of Crows Mill Road, although not directly involved with the interchange, is visible where it intersects Smith Street about halfway from the western edge of the photo to the Garden State Parkway.)

Interchange Description:The easiest way to narrate the complex structure of this interchange is to run through the entrances and exits of each highway. (Note: SB=southbound, NB-northbound, EB=eastbound, WB=westbound.)

Missing Connections: Despite the large number of ramps here, a number of connections are not available directly. Naturally, traffic cannot make the "U-turn movements," for example, from the Parkway NB to US 9 SB, or vice versa. However, one important pair of connections is missing: Traffic cannot directly access the Parkway NB/US 9 NB from NJ 440 WB, or NJ 440 EB from the Parkway SB/US 9 SB. Both of these connections are provided by New Brunswick Avenue, which intersects NJ 440 and US 9 just north of this photo, or via other streets through Woodbridge. Also, Crows Mill Road is not directly connected to NJ 440 EB or the Parkway/US 9; these connections are also available via New Brunswick Avenue.

History: Before the construction of the NJ 440 expressway, the interchange here had a totally different look. Very few of the ramps here existed, Smith Street did not exist west of US 9, and Crows Mill Road was continuous through what is now a mess of ramps. The Garden State Parkway actually ran outside of the US 9 lanes north of here; these two highways switched positions when NJ 440 was added. Exit 127 was for US 9, and Exit 127A (since removed) werved New Brunswick Avenue. (Thanks to the SPUI Freeway Website for a little help on this point - see the link at the bottom.)

Advantages: Despite the intimidating mess of ramps and roads, this interchange actually functions reasonably well. To begin with, there is very little weaving; there is none on NJ 440, the Parkway, or US 9. The design even avoids weaving between onramps to US 9 NB here and NB offramps at New Brunswick Avenue. Much of this is accomplished through the split in the NB traffic on US 9. What little weaving is present is relegated to lesser ramps and Smith Street. The designers here also avoided left exits and entrances on NJ 440 and the Garden State Parkway.

Disadvantages: The only real disadvantage here is sheer cost. The number of bridges present here is phenomonal, and much less pavement and concrete could have been used. (of course, at the cost of a less safe and leses functional interchange) The junction, especially the western half at Crows Mill Road and Smith Street, is sprawling, and uses a large amount of real estate in an important industrial area. However, these drawbacks are more than made up for in the functionality of the interchange.


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Corrections? Suggestions? More information is always welcome.
Suggestions for more interchanges to cover on this site are great too.
Contact the author, Dan (known as DanTheMan on misc.transport.road):
twowheel@email.com