New Jersey
Trillion Dollar Highway Plans = Multiple Bypass Surgery a state by state list |
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High Priority Corridors specified by Congress in 1991, 1995, 1998, 2005, 2012 |
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NAFTA Superhighways | |
Corridors of the Future | |
J. Edgar Hoover Parkway: transportation surveillance, mileage taxes, RFID & video tolling |
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Paving Appalachia:
Corridor A to X in AL, GA, MD, MS, NC, NY, OH, PA, SC, TN, VA, WV |
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Alabama | Nebraska |
Alaska | Nevada |
Arizona | New Hampshire |
Arkansas | New Jersey |
California | New Mexico |
Colorado | New York |
Connecticut | North Carolina |
Delaware | North Dakota |
Florida | Ohio |
Georgia | Oklahoma |
Hawai'i | Oregon |
Idaho | Pennsylvania |
Illinois | Rhode Island |
Indiana | South Carolina |
Iowa | South Dakota |
Kansas | Tennessee |
Kentucky | Texas |
Louisiana | Utah |
Maine | Vermont |
Maryland | Virginia |
Massachusetts | Washington |
Michigan | Washington, D.C. |
Minnesota | West Virginia |
Mississippi | Wisconsin |
Missouri | Wyoming |
Montana |
High Priority Corridor 63: Liberty Corridor
The Liberty Corridor, a corridor in an area encompassing very critical and significant transportation infrastructure providing regional, national, and international access through the State of New Jersey, including Interstate Routes 95, 80, 287, and 78, United States Routes 1, 9, and 46, and State Routes 3 and 17, and port ways and connecting infrastructure.
High Priority Corridor 64: Camden Corridors
The corridor in an area of passage in the State of New Jersey serving significant interstate and regional traffic, located near the cities of Camden, New Jersey, and Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, and including Interstate Route 295, State Route 42, United States Route 130, and Interstate Routes 76 and 676.
Princeton
I-95 (stopped)
It's easier for a wealthy community to stop a highway planned through it than a poorer place.
I-695 (stopped)