Oregon Route 99E

From Infogalactic: the planetary knowledge core
Jump to: navigation, search

Oregon Route 99E marker

Oregon Route 99E
Template:Maplink-road
Route 99E; mainline in red, business route in blue
Route information
Maintained by ODOT
Length: 109.78 mi (176.67 km)
Existed: 1972 – present
Major junctions
South end: OR 99 / OR 99W in Junction City
 
North end: I-5 / OR 120 in Portland
Highway system
OR 99 OR 99W

Oregon Route 99E is an Oregon state highway that runs between Junction City, Oregon and an interchange with I-5 just south of the Oregon/Washington border, in Portland. It, along with OR 99W, makes up a split of OR 99 in the northern part of the state. This split existed when the route was U.S. Route 99, when the two branches were U.S. 99W and U.S. 99E. (Another such split occurred in California, but with the decommissioning of U.S. 99, that state elected to rename its U.S. 99W as Interstate 5, rather than preserve the directional suffix.)

Currently, OR 99E and OR 99W do not reconvene at a northern junction in Oregon; OR 99W has been truncated from its original route, and ends in Downtown Portland, several miles south of its original northern terminus; nor is OR 99 (without a suffix) signed anywhere in Portland.

Route description

Oregon 99E, 211 and 214 Direction Sign

OR 99E has its southern terminus in Junction City. Almost immediately after leaving the city limits the route crosses the Willamette River, and serves Willamette Valley towns such as Harrisburg and Tangent. North of Tangent, the route enters the city of Albany and serves as a main thoroughfare through town (for about a mile, OR 99E shares an alignment with US 20). At the northern end of Albany, OR 99E joins I-5.

OR 99E remains co-signed with I-5 until Salem where it again splits off from the interstate, serving many towns in northern Marion County. (A business route through Salem, OR 99E Business, consists of a section of OR 22 and the Salem Parkway; a previous alignment of OR 99E along Commercial Street, Fairgrounds Road, and Portland Road is often erroneously referred to as "99E" even though it is no longer part of the Oregon Route system). North of Salem, OR 99E serves the northern Willamette Valley, passing through cities such as Woodburn, Hubbard, and Canby, before entering the Portland metro area in Oregon City. The stretch between Canby and Oregon City is notorious for frequent and serious accidents.

Starting in Oregon City, and continuing through the suburban communities of Gladstone, Oak Grove and Milwaukie, OR 99E is known as McLoughlin Boulevard (after fur trader John McLoughlin). The road crosses the John McLoughlin Bridge just south of Gladstone. North of Milwaukie (and an interchange with OR 224), OR 99E is a high-capacity urban expressway.

In Portland, OR 99E continues as the McLoughlin Boulevard expressway until passing beneath the Ross Island Bridge (US 26), where it runs on the couplet of Martin Luther King Jr. Boulevard (formerly Union Avenue) and Grand Avenue. It is the main north–south arterial through the central east side of the city. North of NE Broadway, OR 99E continues as MLK Jr. Boulevard and passes through several Northeast Portland Neighborhoods until its terminus at an interchange with I-5 and OR 120 in Delta Park, just south of the Columbia River crossing. (The interchange also involves Interstate Avenue, which was the prior route of OR 99W before the latter route was truncated).

History

<templatestyles src="Module:Hatnote/styles.css"></templatestyles>

<templatestyles src="Module:Hatnote/styles.css"></templatestyles>

OR 99E was originally part of U.S. Route 99E (US 99E), which was created alongside US 99W in 1930 as part of a split of US 99 between Junction City and Portland.[1] The parallel highways ran through the Willamette Valley and the suffixed designations were proposed by cities on the west side.[2] In the 1950s and 1960s,[citation needed] I-5 (also signed as US 99 Bypass) was built parallel to US 99E and absorbed the Albany–Salem section of the highway to form a concurrency.[3] US 99, US 99E, and US 99W were decommissioned in December 1971 and replaced by their state counterparts the following year.[4][5]

Major intersections

Note: mileposts do not reflect actual mileage due to realignments. Not all interchanges are shown on the I-5 overlap; for a full list see the I-5 exit list.
County Location mi[6] km Destinations Notes
Lane Junction City 32.37 52.09 OR 99 south / OR 99W north – Junction City, Eugene, Monroe, Corvallis
Linn Halsey 19.36 31.16 OR 228 to I-5 – Brownsville, Sweet Home
Tangent 7.81 12.57 OR 34 to I-5 – Corvallis, Lebanon Interchange
Albany 2.42 3.89 US 20 west – Albany City Center, Corvallis Southern end of US 20 overlap; interchange
2.17 3.49 Jackson Street – Sunrise District Interchange
1.40 2.25 US 20 east to I-5 south – Lebanon, Eugene Northern end of US 20 overlap
0.00
234.69
0.00
377.70
I-5 south – Eugene Southern end of I-5 overlap
238.24 383.41 OR 164 north – Scio, Millersburg
Marion 244.68 393.77 OR 164 south – North Jefferson
Salem 249.35 401.29 Commercial Street Northbound exit and southbound entrance
253.87 408.56
OR 22 / OR 99E Bus. north – Detroit Lake, Stayton
256.28 412.44 OR 213 (Market Street) – Silverton, Lancaster Mall
258.68
46.08
416.31
74.16
I-5 north – Portland, Oregon State Fair, L. B. Day Amphitheatre, Salem City Center Northern end of I-5 overlap
44.46 71.55 To I-5 / Invalid type: road – Chemawa, Keizer, Silverton
Woodburn 32.87 52.90 OR 214 south – Woodburn City Center, Mt. Angel, Silverton Southern end of OR 214 overlap
31.70 51.02 OR 214 north / OR 211 to I-5 – Newberg, Molalla Northern end of OR 214 overlap
27.26 43.87 OR 551 to I-5 – Wilsonville Interchange; northbound exit and southbound entrance
Clackamas Oregon City 12.56 20.21 OR 43 (Main Street) – Oregon City, West Linn, Lake Oswego, Portland
11.73 18.88 I-205 – West Linn, Salem, Seattle, The Dalles Interchange
Milwaukie 5.46 8.79 OR 224 – Clackamas, Damascus, Estacada Interchange
Multnomah Portland 4.39 7.07 Tacoma Street to Johnson Creek Boulevard – Sellwood Bridge Interchange
3.70 5.95 Bybee Boulevard – Westmoreland, Sellwood, Eastmoreland, Reed College Interchange; southbound exit and entrance
2.61 4.20 Milwaukie Avenue – Westmoreland Interchange; southbound exit and northbound entrance
2.33 3.75 Holgate Boulevard – Reed College
1.49 2.40 US 26 (Powell Boulevard) – Ross Island Bridge, Gresham, Mount Hood Interchange
0.69 1.11 Hawthorne Bridge Southbound interchange and northbound at-grade intersection
0.39 0.63 I-5.svg Morrison Bridge to I-5Salem, Seattle Southbound interchange and northbound at-grade intersection
0.00 0.00 I-5.svg Burnside Bridge to I-5 Access via Couch Street
−0.18 −0.29 I-84 east / US 30 east – Portland Airport, The Dalles Southbound access is via Everett Street
−0.59 −0.95 Multnomah Street – Steel Bridge, Lloyd Center
−0.84 −1.35 To I-5 / Invalid type: road – Memorial Coliseum, Broadway Bridge
−3.75 −6.04
US 30 Byp. (Lombard Street) – St. Johns Bridge, Astoria, Portland Airport, Hood River
−4.01 −6.45 Columbia Boulevard – Portland Meadows, Portland Airport
−4.46 −7.18 To Vancouver Way / Schmeer Road / Gertz Road Interchange; southbound exit and entrance
−4.68 −7.53 Vancouver Avenue – Portland Meadows Southbound exit and entrance
−4.87 −7.84 To Gertz Road / Northeast 6th Drive Interchange; southbound exit and entrance
−4.88 −7.85 To Vancouver Way – Portland Airport Northbound exit and entrance
−5.75 −9.25 Marine Drive east – Delta Park Interchange
−5.97 −9.61 I-5 – Seattle Exit 307 on I-5
−6.09 −9.80 OR 120 west (Marine Drive) – Expo Center
1.000 mi = 1.609 km; 1.000 km = 0.621 mi

References

Script error: No such module "Attached KML".

  1. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  2. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  3. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  4. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  5. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  6. Oregon Department of Transportation, Public Road Inventory Archived 2008-02-24 at the Wayback Machine (primarily the Digital Video Log), accessed April 2008