Charlotte Route 4

Charlotte Route 4

Charlotte Route 4 shield.svg

Route 4
Route information
Maintained by NCDOT (roads) and CDOT (signage)
Length: 18.6 mi[1][2] (29.9 km)
Major junctions
West end: I-85 near Charlotte/Douglas International Airport
  I-77 near Paul Buck Blvd
US 74 in Eastland
East end: I-85 near Derita
Highway system

North Carolina Highway System

Route 4 is an 18.6-mile (30.0 km) partial ring road around Uptown Charlotte, North Carolina, United States, marked along four-lane state-maintained secondary roads;[1] it is sometimes considered to use Interstate 85 to complete the loop,[3] though this part is not signed. The route is posted by the Charlotte Department of Transportation using a modified pentagonal county road shield, with a green background and the city's crown logo above the number. The loop has a radius of about four miles (6 km), hence the number.[4] Although most of the route, where it does not use I-85, is a typical four-lane surface road, the western section is the limited-access Billy Graham Parkway, connecting I-77 and I-85 with the Charlotte/Douglas International Airport.

Contents

Route description

The west end of Route 4 is at exit 33 of I-85; local traffic can continue north on the short Mulberry Church Road. This part of Route 4 is named Billy Graham Parkway, after evangelist Billy Graham, and is a limited-access road, meaning that abutting property owners cannot construct driveways.[5] After crossing Scott Futrell Drive, the south frontage road of I-85, the parkway crosses over Wilkinson Boulevard (US 29/US 74); access between the two roads is indirect, via Boyer Street, Morris Field Drive or another piece of Mulberry Church Road. The few intersections on Billy Graham Parkway include a trumpet interchange with Josh Birmingham Parkway, the main access to Charlotte/Douglas International Airport, an intersection with West Boulevard (NC 160), and a partial cloverleaf interchange with Tyvola Road near Paul Buck Boulevard. Billy Graham Parkway ends at South Tryon Street (NC 49), where Route 4 continues east on Woodlawn Road. Woodlawn Road crosses Bill Lee Freeway (I-77/US 21).

Access to the Freeway is unique, with southbound Route 4 drivers needing to go on South Tryon Street (North) to access I-77/US 21 North. This is also true for drivers on the freeway to take Exit 6B (South Tryon Street/Billy Graham Parkway) instead of Exit 6A (Woodlawn Road), to travel northbound Route 4.

Woodlawn Road, and the rest of Route 4, is a more typical four-lane arterial road with numerous driveways. Shortly after crossing I-77/US 21, Route 4 meets South Boulevard, where US 521 used to turn south off Woodlawn Road (coming from Billy Graham Parkway). The road continues east, eventually crossing Selwyn Avenue and becoming Runnymede Lane, which ends at Sharon Road after several curves. A short jog north on Sharon Road takes Route 4 to the beginning of Wendover Road; in either direction, two lanes turn to and from Sharon Road, maintaining a four-lane cross section on Route 4. Wendover Road soon crosses Providence Road (NC 16), and becomes Eastway Drive at a cloverleaf interchange with Independence Boulevard (US 74/NC 27). Eastway Drive runs north to North Tryon Street (US 29/NC 49), but Route 4 does not follow the entire road, instead forking northwest on Sugar Creek Road. Unlike the turns at Sharon Road, this turn only has one lane in each direction. Sugar Creek Road crosses North Tryon Street (US 29/NC 49) and then I-85 at exit 41, where Route 4 ends. The road however continues north through Derita, leading part of the way to Huntersville.

Signing for Route 4 is very scarce, and neither I-85 nor I-77 recognize Route 4 on exit signs for the road.

History

The idea of a ring around uptown, roughly along what were the city limits at the time, was first suggested in the 1960 city transportation plan. In order to implement this, a number of existing two-lane roads around the south and east sides of Charlotte were connected and widened. Woodlawn Street, then running from Tryon Street (NC 49) east to Fairfax Drive, was through-routed with Runnymede Lane via a new bridge across Briar Creek and a short piece of Barclay Downs Drive. Wendover Road was extended northeast from its end at Randolph Road to Independence Boulevard (US 74), absorbing a short piece of Beal Street (east of Ellington Street) and most of Brookhurst Drive (Monroe Road to just shy of Independence Boulevard). Eastway Drive was already complete, and Sugar Creek Road only required a railroad bridge between The Plaza and Atmore Street, which allowed the short Highway Place to become part of Sugar Creek Road.[6][7] These roads, along with a proposed southwestern segment that would partially replace Yorkmont Road, were added to the state highway system (where not already part of it) as secondary roads, and, except for Sugar Creek Road, to the federal-aid primary system. Not every turn was eliminated; plans for a straighter Runnymede Lane west of Colony Road and a bypass of Sharon Road were not carried through.[8]

The first portions to be completed as four-lane roads were Woodlawn Road and the segment north of Monroe Road, including the cloverleaf interchange with Independence Boulevard, where there had been a five-way intersection (with Commonwealth Avenue crossing through).[7][8] The rest of the eastern half was finished in the late 1970s,[9] at which time the Charlotte DOT chose the "Route 4" label, in order to give the road one designation but avoid renaming the existing street names.[4] The remainder of the loop was completed in 1981,[9] connecting to an existing I-85 interchange that served Mulberry Church Road,[7] and was named after Reverend Billy Graham, a Charlotte-born evangelist.[10] This portion, being a new roadway, was built to higher standards, with interchanges at several major intersections and no driveway access. US 521, which had ended uptown at US 29 via mainly South Boulevard,[8] was moved onto the Billy Graham Parkway via a short piece of Woodlawn Road, taking US 521 to a new terminus at I-85 west of uptown.[11] The American Association of State Highway and Transportation Officials approved truncating US 521 to I-485, the new outer beltway, in May 2003,[12] and now the entire length of Route 4 is a secondary road.

Major intersections

Mile[1][2] Road(s) Notes
0.00 I-85 – Gastonia, Concord
0.50 US 29 / US 74 (Wilkinson Boulevard)
1.19 Charlotte/Douglas International Airport
2.34 NC 160 (West Boulevard)
3.23 Tyvola Road - Coliseum Area
5.13 NC 49 (South Tryon Street) to I-77 north / US 21 north – Charlotte
5.30 I-77 south / US 21 south - Rock Hill
5.96 South Boulevard Former US 521
9.33 Sharon Road south
10.10 NC 16 (Providence Road)
12.70 US 74 / NC 27 (Independence Boulevard)
15.73 Eastway Drive north
16.28 The Plaza
17.18 US 29 / NC 49 (North Tryon Street)
18.61 I-85 – Concord, Gastonia

See also

  • Interstate 277, Charlotte's inner freeway loop
  • Interstate 485, Charlotte's outer freeway loop
  • W.T. Harris Boulevard, a surface road in the northeast quadrant, forming a partial loop between Route 4 and I-485
  • Pittsburgh/Allegheny County Belt System, a system of similar loops in Pennsylvania

References

  1. ^ a b c North Carolina Department of Transportation, County Maintenance Maps, accessed September 2007
  2. ^ a b North Carolina Department of Transportation, Pavement Condition History Detail Query Wizard, accessed September 2007
  3. ^ Mecklenburg-Union Metropolitan Planning Organization, Thoroughfare Planning, accessed September 2007
  4. ^ a b Dianne Whitacre, The Charlotte Observer, The Original Outerbelt is Friendly, Useful, November 21, 1999, p. 5B
  5. ^ M.S. Van Hecke, The Charlotte Observer, NBA Team Adds Zip to Already Zippy Parkway, April 23, 1987, p. 28A
  6. ^ Champion Map Company, Charlotte and Mecklenburg County, published by the Charlotte Chamber of Commerce, 1962, accessed via [1]
  7. ^ a b c Champion Map Company, Charlotte Bicentennial Street Map, published by the Charlotte Chamber of Commerce, 1975, accessed via [2]
  8. ^ a b c North Carolina Department of Transportation, Maintenance Map, 1976, accessed via [3]
  9. ^ a b Federal Highway Administration, National Bridge Inventory database, 2006
  10. ^ RoAnn Bishop, North Carolina Museum of History, Who Did That Sign Say?, Tar Heel Junior Historian 44:2, spring 2005
  11. ^ United States Geological Survey, Charlotte topographic map (1:50000 scale), July 1, 1984
  12. ^ American Association of State Highway and Transportation Officials, Report of the Special Committee on Route Numbering to the Standing Committee on Highways, Saturday, May 31, 2003, Lexington, Kentucky

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