Eisenhower Parkway
Route description
Eisenhower Parkway begins at an intersection with CR 510 in Livingston, Essex County, heading north as a four-lane divided expressway. The road passes Livingston Mall before becoming a four-lane undivided expressway and passing to the east of the Commonwealth Water Company Reservoir Number Three. Upon turning northeast, the roadway becomes divided again as it crosses CR 607 and passes through forests. Eisenhower Parkway intersects Route 10 at the modified Livingston Circle, at which point the road becomes a four-lane arterial road and passes businesses as CR 661 branches to the east of the road. The highway heads north-northeast through more forested areas with occasional commercial development, meeting CR 661 again prior to crossing into Roseland. Here, the road crosses the Morristown and Erie Railway's Whippany Line and passes businesses, crossing CR 611 prior to coming to a cloverleaf interchange with I-280. At this interchange, the CR 609 designation ends and Eisenhower Parkway continues northeast to a dead end a short distance later.
History
The original plan of the Parkway was to extend to Bloomfield Avenue in West Caldwell on the northern end and to Route 124 in Chatham on the southern end. There is a complete cloverleaf interchange at where the parkway would have met Route 24, which would have been Interchange 5 on 24 (and there were once blank signs erected on 24 West). The interchange was left abandoned since it does not connect to a road, and many plants have grown over the abandoned pavement. The bridge over Route 24, which would have been part of Eisenhower Parkway, as well as what would've been the entrance and exit ramps, cannot be accessed by vehicle but are easy to reach by foot or bike. Hikers and bikers must go north along the power lines from the intersection of Brooklake Road and Delbarton Drive until they reach the fence along Route 24, then follow the fence east for about half a mile. NJDOT gave the abandoned overpass a different street name, Triborough Road, suggesting that the southern extension of Eisenhower Parkway would use that name instead. To this day, there is still a sign that reads "Triborough Road" hanging from the abandoned overpass. The abandoned interchange is at mile marker 5.70 on Route 24.
Major intersections
The entire route is in Essex County.
Location | mi | km | Destinations | Notes | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Livingston | 0.00 | 0.00 | CR 510 (South Orange Avenue) – Chatham, Millburn, Morristown | Southern terminus of CR 609; at-grade intersection | |
0.96 | 1.54 | CR 607 (Walnut Street) | At-grade intersection | ||
1.71– 1.76 | 2.75– 2.83 | Northern end of limited-access section | |||
Route 10 (Mount Pleasant Avenue) / CR 508 east (West Northfield Avenue) – Whippany, Newark, The Oranges | Livingston Circle | ||||
1.96 | 3.15 | CR 661 north (Beaufort Avenue) | |||
3.18 | 5.12 | CR 661 south (Beaufort Avenue) | |||
Roseland | 3.73 | 6.00 | CR 611 (Eagle Rock Avenue) – Hanover, Roseland, The Caldwells, The Oranges | ||
4.12 | 6.63 | I-280 to N.J. Turnpike (I-95) / G.S. Parkway | Northern terminus of CR 609 | ||
1.000 mi = 1.609 km; 1.000 km = 0.621 mi |
See also
References
- ^ County Route 609 straight line diagram from New Jersey Department of Transportation
- ^ "overview of Eisenhower Parkway" (Map). Google Maps. Retrieved January 8, 2011.
- ^ Abandoned NJ 24 interchange
External links
- Media related to Eisenhower Parkway at Wikimedia Commons