Interstate 270 Descriptions
2024-11-30
Roadnow
North
Maryland:
Montgomery County Interstate 270 heads northwest from an interchange with Interstate 495 (Capital Beltway) and Maryland Route 355 (Rockville Pike) in suburban Bethesda, Montgomery County as a six-lane freeway with a 55 mph (89 km/h) speed limit. The left lane on each side is used as a high-occupancy vehicle lane (HOV lane) in the northbound direction between 3:30 and 6:30 PM weekdays and in the southbound direction between 6:00 and 9:00 AM weekdays. At the southern terminus, I-270 only has access to and from the eastbound direction of I-495. The road turns west and comes to an interchange with Maryland Route 187 (Old Georgetown Road). From here, I-270 continues west as a ten-lane freeway and merges with Interstate 270 Spur, which provides access to and from southbound I-495. Past this interchange, I-270 continues north as a twelve-lane freeway with an HOV lane and five travel lanes in each direction. The route passes through wooded suburban areas, where prior to the cloverleaf interchange with Montrose Road (MD 927), I-270 takes on a local-express lane configuration with the outer two lanes serving as local lanes and the inner three lanes and the HOV lane serving as express lanes. Past Montrose Road, I-270 continues north into the Rockville area, turning northwest before it comes to a single-point urban interchange with Maryland Route 189 (Falls Road), where the highway sees 253,620 vehicles daily. The road continues to a modified cloverleaf interchange with Maryland Route 28 (Montgomery Avenue). Past MD 28, the freeway passes numerous business parks and some wooded areas before coming to an interchange with Shady Grove Road.
Past this interchange, I-270 leaves Rockville and heads into Gaithersburg, where it intersects Interstate 370, a road that provides access to a park and ride lot at the Shady Grove Metro station.. This interchange provides access to Maryland Route 200 (the Intercounty Connector). Past I-370, the local lane configuration ends in the southbound direction, which now has an HOV lane and four travel lanes while the northbound direction still has an HOV lane, three express lanes, and two local lanes. I-270 continues past more suburban development before coming to a northbound exit and southbound entrance with Maryland Route 117 (West Diamond Avenue). Past this interchange, the southbound HOV restrictions end and I-270 continues north with four travel lanes in the southbound direction and an HOV lane, three express lanes and two local lanes in the northbound direction before reaching Maryland Route 124 (Quince Orchard Road). Past MD 124, the local lanes in the northbound direction ends, and I-270 head northwest as an eight-lane freeway with four southbound lanes and an HOV lane and three travel lanes northbound. It passes through wooded areas, leaving Gaithersburg, and comes to an interchange with Middlebrook Road. The freeway narrows to six lanes again past at this interchange, with three lanes in each direction including a northbound HOV lane. I-270 continues into the Germantown area and interchanges with Maryland Route 118 (Germantown Road). A short distance later, after passing by some business parks, I-270 comes to an interchange with Maryland Route 27 (Ridge Road) and Father Hurley Boulevard. Past MD 27, I-270 heads into more rural areas of woods with some farm fields, paralled by a set of power lines. The road interchanges with Maryland Route 121 (Clarksburg Road) in Clarksburg and the northbound HOV restriction ends past this interchange, with I-270 continuing north as a four-lane freeway with a 65 mph (105 km/h) speed limit. The power lines stop paralleling the route and it continues through more rural areas of woods and farms, running closely parallel to MD 355. The median widens, with trees in the middle, and I-270 has weigh stations on both sides. The highway reaches Hyattstown, where it has an interchange with Maryland Route 109 (Old Hundred Road).
Frederick County
A short distance past the MD 109 interchange, I-270 crosses into Frederick County, continuing northwest through rural woodland and farmland. It reaches the Urbana area, where the route has an interchange with Maryland Route 80 (Fingerboard Road). The highway briefly runs along the east side of MD 80 past this interchange before continuing through agricultural areas. It features a scenic overlook in the northbound direction as the road passes through Monocacy National Battlefield, which was the site of the Battle of Monocacy Junction. I-270 eventually leaves the battlefield area and continues into the commercial outskirts of Frederick. Here, the road interchanges with Maryland Route 85 (Buckeystown Pike) near the Francis Scott Key Mall. I-270 continues through commercial areas before coming to its northern terminus at an interchange with Interstate 70 and U.S. Route 40 (Baltimore National Pike). Past this interchange, the freeway continues north as the Frederick Freeway, a part of US 40 that interchanges with U.S. Route 15 and U.S. Route 340 a short distance north of I-270s northern terminus.
History
In 1947, plans were made to construct a freeway called the Washington National Pike parallel to U.S. Route 240 (present-day MD 355) between Bethesda and Frederick. This road was completed in 1953, and the US 240 designation was moved to it. As a result, suburban growth began along the corridor between Washington, D.C. and Frederick, with several federal agencies including the United States Atomic Energy Commission, the National Bureau of Standards, and the National Institutes of Health moving their headquarters to Montgomery County. Following the creation of the Interstate Highway System in 1956, Interstate 70S was designated along with US 240 on the Washington National Pike. It was a suffixed while the bypassed portion of the original US 240 north of the current interchange between I-495 and I-270 was designated as MD 355 by 1960. A western spur that provided access to southbound I-495 was eventually built and became I-270.
I-70S was projected to continue past the Capital Beltway into Washington, D.C. on the North Central Freeway to connect directly to Interstate 95. Plans for this freeway initially began in 1959 when a freeway was called for along the Georgia Avenue corridor. In the mid 1960s, a study was proposed for the freeway that recommended several different routings between Washington, D.C. and the Capital Beltway. By 1966, a route for the North Central Freeway was planned along a Baltimore & Ohio Railroad line running through the northeastern part of Washington and Takoma Park north to the Capital Beltway. In a 1971 study by DeLeuw, Cather Associates and Harry Wesse & Associates, LTD, I-70S was planned to run from its southern terminus at I-495 and run concurrent with that route before turning south on the North Central Freeway and ending at I-95 in Washington. The routing of the freeway through resdenital areas of Washington drew opposition from residents of the Takoma Park, Brookland, and Michigan Park neighborhoods who were successful in getting the freeway cancelled through their neighborhoods in 1970. The North Central Freeway within Maryland was cancelled by the MDSHA in 1972 due to opposition from officials in Montgomery County. In 1975, the Federal Highway Administration officially approved withdrawal of plans to construct the road south of the Capital Beltway.
On May 18, 1975, I-70S was designated I-270 and the US 240 designation was removed from the road. The western spur is now signed and publicly known simply as Interstate 270 Spur. By the 1980s, traffic congestion had grown on I-270 in Montgomery County; as a result, a $200 million project widened the road between I-495 and MD 118 to its current configuration, with some portions being widened to twelve lanes. This widening led to growth of residences and businesses along the I-270 corridor as far north as Germantown and increased traffic counts along the road. Much of I-270 in Montgomery County is now a hub for biotech firms. By 1999, congestion on the road grew to then-projected 2010 levels.
Future
The MDSHA is studying improvements for the I-270 corridor between Shady Grove Road and Frederick. Options for improvement include widening the highway to include more lanes with HOV and express toll lanes, as well as initiating rapid bus or light rail service along I-270 between Shady Grove and Clarksburg. In addition, two new interchanges are planned for I-270 in Frederick County. The first planned interchange is with Maryland Route 75 near the Montgomery County border, which would involve extending MD 75 from MD 355 to the interchange with I-270 at a projected cost of $57,300,000. The other planned interchange is with Park Mills Road in Urbana, which has a projected cost of $48,900,000. In Montgomery County, an interchange is proposed with an extension of Watkins Mill Road in Gaithersburg. This proposed interchange, which is being pushed by Montgomery County, has seen $2.4 million in design spending. Funding for this interchange disappeared in September 2008 after the state of Maryland announced it was cutting $1.1 billion that was to go to transportation projects.
Montgomery County Interstate 270 heads northwest from an interchange with Interstate 495 (Capital Beltway) and Maryland Route 355 (Rockville Pike) in suburban Bethesda, Montgomery County as a six-lane freeway with a 55 mph (89 km/h) speed limit. The left lane on each side is used as a high-occupancy vehicle lane (HOV lane) in the northbound direction between 3:30 and 6:30 PM weekdays and in the southbound direction between 6:00 and 9:00 AM weekdays. At the southern terminus, I-270 only has access to and from the eastbound direction of I-495. The road turns west and comes to an interchange with Maryland Route 187 (Old Georgetown Road). From here, I-270 continues west as a ten-lane freeway and merges with Interstate 270 Spur, which provides access to and from southbound I-495. Past this interchange, I-270 continues north as a twelve-lane freeway with an HOV lane and five travel lanes in each direction. The route passes through wooded suburban areas, where prior to the cloverleaf interchange with Montrose Road (MD 927), I-270 takes on a local-express lane configuration with the outer two lanes serving as local lanes and the inner three lanes and the HOV lane serving as express lanes. Past Montrose Road, I-270 continues north into the Rockville area, turning northwest before it comes to a single-point urban interchange with Maryland Route 189 (Falls Road), where the highway sees 253,620 vehicles daily. The road continues to a modified cloverleaf interchange with Maryland Route 28 (Montgomery Avenue). Past MD 28, the freeway passes numerous business parks and some wooded areas before coming to an interchange with Shady Grove Road.
Past this interchange, I-270 leaves Rockville and heads into Gaithersburg, where it intersects Interstate 370, a road that provides access to a park and ride lot at the Shady Grove Metro station.. This interchange provides access to Maryland Route 200 (the Intercounty Connector). Past I-370, the local lane configuration ends in the southbound direction, which now has an HOV lane and four travel lanes while the northbound direction still has an HOV lane, three express lanes, and two local lanes. I-270 continues past more suburban development before coming to a northbound exit and southbound entrance with Maryland Route 117 (West Diamond Avenue). Past this interchange, the southbound HOV restrictions end and I-270 continues north with four travel lanes in the southbound direction and an HOV lane, three express lanes and two local lanes in the northbound direction before reaching Maryland Route 124 (Quince Orchard Road). Past MD 124, the local lanes in the northbound direction ends, and I-270 head northwest as an eight-lane freeway with four southbound lanes and an HOV lane and three travel lanes northbound. It passes through wooded areas, leaving Gaithersburg, and comes to an interchange with Middlebrook Road. The freeway narrows to six lanes again past at this interchange, with three lanes in each direction including a northbound HOV lane. I-270 continues into the Germantown area and interchanges with Maryland Route 118 (Germantown Road). A short distance later, after passing by some business parks, I-270 comes to an interchange with Maryland Route 27 (Ridge Road) and Father Hurley Boulevard. Past MD 27, I-270 heads into more rural areas of woods with some farm fields, paralled by a set of power lines. The road interchanges with Maryland Route 121 (Clarksburg Road) in Clarksburg and the northbound HOV restriction ends past this interchange, with I-270 continuing north as a four-lane freeway with a 65 mph (105 km/h) speed limit. The power lines stop paralleling the route and it continues through more rural areas of woods and farms, running closely parallel to MD 355. The median widens, with trees in the middle, and I-270 has weigh stations on both sides. The highway reaches Hyattstown, where it has an interchange with Maryland Route 109 (Old Hundred Road).
Frederick County
A short distance past the MD 109 interchange, I-270 crosses into Frederick County, continuing northwest through rural woodland and farmland. It reaches the Urbana area, where the route has an interchange with Maryland Route 80 (Fingerboard Road). The highway briefly runs along the east side of MD 80 past this interchange before continuing through agricultural areas. It features a scenic overlook in the northbound direction as the road passes through Monocacy National Battlefield, which was the site of the Battle of Monocacy Junction. I-270 eventually leaves the battlefield area and continues into the commercial outskirts of Frederick. Here, the road interchanges with Maryland Route 85 (Buckeystown Pike) near the Francis Scott Key Mall. I-270 continues through commercial areas before coming to its northern terminus at an interchange with Interstate 70 and U.S. Route 40 (Baltimore National Pike). Past this interchange, the freeway continues north as the Frederick Freeway, a part of US 40 that interchanges with U.S. Route 15 and U.S. Route 340 a short distance north of I-270s northern terminus.
History
In 1947, plans were made to construct a freeway called the Washington National Pike parallel to U.S. Route 240 (present-day MD 355) between Bethesda and Frederick. This road was completed in 1953, and the US 240 designation was moved to it. As a result, suburban growth began along the corridor between Washington, D.C. and Frederick, with several federal agencies including the United States Atomic Energy Commission, the National Bureau of Standards, and the National Institutes of Health moving their headquarters to Montgomery County. Following the creation of the Interstate Highway System in 1956, Interstate 70S was designated along with US 240 on the Washington National Pike. It was a suffixed while the bypassed portion of the original US 240 north of the current interchange between I-495 and I-270 was designated as MD 355 by 1960. A western spur that provided access to southbound I-495 was eventually built and became I-270.
I-70S was projected to continue past the Capital Beltway into Washington, D.C. on the North Central Freeway to connect directly to Interstate 95. Plans for this freeway initially began in 1959 when a freeway was called for along the Georgia Avenue corridor. In the mid 1960s, a study was proposed for the freeway that recommended several different routings between Washington, D.C. and the Capital Beltway. By 1966, a route for the North Central Freeway was planned along a Baltimore & Ohio Railroad line running through the northeastern part of Washington and Takoma Park north to the Capital Beltway. In a 1971 study by DeLeuw, Cather Associates and Harry Wesse & Associates, LTD, I-70S was planned to run from its southern terminus at I-495 and run concurrent with that route before turning south on the North Central Freeway and ending at I-95 in Washington. The routing of the freeway through resdenital areas of Washington drew opposition from residents of the Takoma Park, Brookland, and Michigan Park neighborhoods who were successful in getting the freeway cancelled through their neighborhoods in 1970. The North Central Freeway within Maryland was cancelled by the MDSHA in 1972 due to opposition from officials in Montgomery County. In 1975, the Federal Highway Administration officially approved withdrawal of plans to construct the road south of the Capital Beltway.
On May 18, 1975, I-70S was designated I-270 and the US 240 designation was removed from the road. The western spur is now signed and publicly known simply as Interstate 270 Spur. By the 1980s, traffic congestion had grown on I-270 in Montgomery County; as a result, a $200 million project widened the road between I-495 and MD 118 to its current configuration, with some portions being widened to twelve lanes. This widening led to growth of residences and businesses along the I-270 corridor as far north as Germantown and increased traffic counts along the road. Much of I-270 in Montgomery County is now a hub for biotech firms. By 1999, congestion on the road grew to then-projected 2010 levels.
Future
The MDSHA is studying improvements for the I-270 corridor between Shady Grove Road and Frederick. Options for improvement include widening the highway to include more lanes with HOV and express toll lanes, as well as initiating rapid bus or light rail service along I-270 between Shady Grove and Clarksburg. In addition, two new interchanges are planned for I-270 in Frederick County. The first planned interchange is with Maryland Route 75 near the Montgomery County border, which would involve extending MD 75 from MD 355 to the interchange with I-270 at a projected cost of $57,300,000. The other planned interchange is with Park Mills Road in Urbana, which has a projected cost of $48,900,000. In Montgomery County, an interchange is proposed with an extension of Watkins Mill Road in Gaithersburg. This proposed interchange, which is being pushed by Montgomery County, has seen $2.4 million in design spending. Funding for this interchange disappeared in September 2008 after the state of Maryland announced it was cutting $1.1 billion that was to go to transportation projects.