Oak Street Connector

Oak Street Connector

Route 34 marker

Oak Street Connector
Route information
Maintained by ConnDOT
Length: 1.13 mi (1.82 km)
Major junctions
East end: I-91 / I-95 in New Haven
West end: York Street in New Haven
Highway system

Routes in Connecticut
Special Service Roads • State Roads

The Oak Street Connector, officially known as the Richard C. Lee Highway, is a 1.1-mile (1.8 km) long freeway section of Route 34 that is located in downtown New Haven, Connecticut. The freeway begins at the junction of Interstate 95 and Interstate 91 and ends at York Street/the Air Rights parking garage.

Contents

History

As originally planned in 1957, the Connector was supposed to extend as a full expressway extending ten miles (16 km) westward from New Haven to the town of Derby, where it would intersect with Route 8. The current connector section was completed in 1959. The entire project was conceived with a dual purpose: urban renewal and traffic flow. The first goal was to completely clear this area of New Haven's downtown. The highway replaced Oak Street (formerly Morocco Street) which had been a poor area since the days when leather workers congregated along West Creek. In the beginning of the twentieth century, the area became home to many Jewish immigrants.also a significant number of Irish lived in the oak st area. The freeway was also meant to bring cars into the city and facilitate the east–west flow of traffic between New Haven and its growing western suburbs. Due to its limited completion, only the first goal can be said to have been fully achieved. Other plans for the highway to be extended into a larger expressway from New Haven to Peekskill, New York were shelved in the mid-1970s, following successful challenges by highway opponents. The right-of-way between Legion Avenue and Reverend Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. Boulevard (originally North Frontage Road).[1] in New Haven to Route 10 was preserved for a future extension of the connector past Route 10 to rejoin the existing Route 34 near Route 122 in Orange. A small portion of the planned freeway extension that was built in Orange during the 1980s is now used as a commuter parking lot.

"Downgrading" the Oak Street Connector

During Connecticut's budget crisis of 2002, the State of Connecticut sold off land acquired for numerous planned expressways throughout the state, including land set aside for extending the Oak Street Connector. Pfizer Pharmaceuticals purchased a portion of the Oak Street Connector right-of-way, and built a US$35 million research facility. The Pfizer deal ensured the Oak Street Connector could not be extended beyond its current terminus at the Air Rights Parking Garage near Yale-New Haven Hospital.

Following the completion of the Pfizer research facility in 2005, New Haven Mayor John DeStefano, Jr. and several leaders of local civic groups began pushing the Connecticut Department of Transportation to study removing the existing Oak Street Connector and replace it with a four-lane landscaped boulevard with access to local streets and businesses. The boulevard would encompass the existing Oak Street Connector from the I-95/I-91 interchange to its present terminus, and continue west along a widened Legion Avenue (South Frontage Road). After the completion of the boulevard, Reverend Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. Boulevard, which carries the westbound lanes of Route 34, would be returned to the City of New Haven. While this would be a separate project from the reconstruction of the nearby I-91/I-95 interchange, it has been gaining increasing popular support among residents, business-owners and city officials in New Haven.

CONNDOT and the City of New Haven began preparing the environmental impact statement for removing the Oak Street Connector in 2011, and officials plan to start demolishing the freeway by 2016.

One factor which would argue against demolition of the expressway is that it serves as the primary access route for ambulances to reach Yale-New Haven Hospital and the Hospital of St. Raphael from the interstate highways, thus removal would degrade service available to suburban patients and victims of motor vehicle accidents.

Currently, the Connecticut Department of Transportation is engaged in a redesign of the entire Interstate 95/91/Oak Street Connector interchange. It is estimated that the Connector handles 73,900 vehicles each day.[2]

Exit list

Numbered exits are westbound exits and eastbound entrances only. The connector's exit numbering violates standard numbering conventions, with exit numbers increasing heading west.

Exit # Mile Destinations Notes
  24.37 Merge onto I-95 north – New London
  24.15 Ramp to I-91 north – Meriden
  24.11 Ramp to I-95 south – Bridgeport
1 23.68 Church Street
Downtown New Haven
To Union Station, US 1 south
2 23.46 College Street
3 23.29 Route 34 west, York Street
All traffic must exit

External links

References

  1. ^ MacMillan, Thomas (September 9, 2009). "MLK Boulevard: It’s Official". New Haven Independent. http://www.newhavenindependent.org/index.php/archives/entry/mlk_boulevard_its_official/. Retrieved 2011-07-23.  Named North Frontage Road until 2010.
  2. ^ ConnDOT Traffic Log 2005

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