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Interstate 64 in Virginia

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Interstate 64 marker
Interstate 64
Purple Heart Trail
Map
I-64 highlighted in red
Route information
Maintained by VDOT
Length299.45 mi[1][2] (481.92 km)
Existed1957–present
NHSEntire route
Major junctions
West end I-64 / US 60 at West Virginia state line
Major intersections
East end I-264 / I-664 in Chesapeake
Location
CountryUnited States
StateVirginia
CountiesAlleghany, City of Covington, Rockbridge, Augusta, City of Waynesboro, Nelson, Albemarle, City of Charlottesville, Fluvanna, Louisa, Goochland, Henrico, City of Richmond, New Kent, James City, York, City of Newport News, City of Hampton, City of Norfolk, City of Virginia Beach, City of Chesapeake
Highway system
SR 63 SR 65

Interstate 64 (I-64) in the US state of Virginia runs east–west through the middle of the state from West Virginia to the Hampton Roads region, for a total of 299 miles (481 km). From the West Virginia state line to Chesapeake, it passes through the major cities of Lexington, Staunton, Charlottesville, the state capital of Richmond, Newport News, Hampton, and Norfolk. It is notable for crossing the mouth of the harbor of Hampton Roads on the Hampton Roads Bridge–Tunnel (HRBT), the first bridge–tunnel to incorporate artificial islands, concurrent with U.S. Route 60 (US 60). Also noteworthy is a section through Rockfish Gap, a wind gap in the Blue Ridge Mountains, which was equipped with an innovative system of airport-style runway lighting embedded into the pavement to aid motorists during periods of poor visibility due to fog or other conditions.

Route description

[edit]

Alleghany County to Charlottesville

[edit]
I-64 and I-81 run together in Augusta County.
View west along I-64 near Waynesboro

I-64 enters Virginia as a four-lane divided highway, continuing its concurrency with US 60 through Covington into Lexington where the two routes split. From Lexington, I-64 then turns northward to Staunton, overlapping I-81 in the Shenandoah Valley. From Staunton, I-64 leaves I-81, passes through Waynesboro, crosses Rockfish Gap, and continues eastward, passing just to the south of Charlottesville, closely following the path of the historic colonial-era Three Notch'd Road, which had been established in the Colony of Virginia by the 1730s and was largely replaced in the 1930s by US 250.[3] Just outside of Charlottesville in Zion Crossroads, I-64 received the state's first diverging diamond interchange at its interchange with US 15, which opened to traffic on February 21, 2014, and was completed on April 15, 2014.[4][5][6]

Greater Richmond and the Virginia Peninsula

[edit]

After Charlottesville, I-64 then turns more east-southeasterly and heads toward Richmond, passing through Fluvanna, Goochland, and Louisa counties. After entering Henrico County and the Greater Richmond Region, I-64 interchanges and overlaps with I-95 on a stretch of highway which was a part of the former Richmond–Petersburg Turnpike, passing near Downtown Richmond and through the historic Black neighborhood of Jackson Ward. Once on the south side of Downtown Richmond, I-64 diverges from its concurrency with I-95 and continues southeasterly down the Virginia Peninsula through New Kent County and the Historic Triangle, into Newport News.

This portion of I-64 was set up by the Virginia Department of Transportation (VDOT) with a contraflow lane reversal system in place in the event of a mass evacuation of the Hampton Roads area region due to a hurricane or other catastrophic event. Gates are installed at the eastbound I-64 entrance and exit ramps from exit 200 (I-295) to exit 273 (US 60 east of the HRBT), and crossover roads are in place near the aforementioned exits.[7]

Hampton Roads Beltway

[edit]
Map of the Hampton Roads Beltway
The Hampton Roads Bridge–Tunnel

About a mile (1.6 km) before the southern interchange with State Route 199 (SR 199), I-64 becomes a six-lane divided highway as it continues toward Hampton Roads. Shortly after entering its interchange with SR 173 (Denbigh Boulevard), I-64 enters the Hampton Roads metropolitan area and widens out to an eight-lane divided highway, continuing generally south-southeasterly into Hampton where it meets the northern terminus of I-664 beginning the Inner Loop of the Hampton Roads Beltway. I-64 curves north-northeast to pass north of Downtown Hampton and cross the Hampton River, turning back southward to reach the Hampton Roads Bridge–Tunnel, which it utilizes to cross the main shipping channel at the entrance to the harbor of Hampton Roads from the Chesapeake Bay. Once on the Southside, I-64 turns south through Norfolk, passing the eastern boundary of Naval Station Norfolk and Chambers Field and the spur route supplying it, I-564. It then becomes a six-lane divided highway with a two-lane reversible roadway in the middle, which is used for HOV traffic during morning and afternoon rush hours. It continues through Norfolk, curving multiple times and eventually ending up heading due south as it passes the interchange with another of its spur routes, I-264 on the northwest side of Virginia Beach.

After I-264, there are no more directional markers on I-64 from here to its "eastern" terminus because I-64 "east" will actually head west after its current southward course, and vice-versa. From I-264 to its "eastern" terminus, it is simply only signed as I-64 and either the Inner and Outer loop of the Hampton Roads Beltway.

Shortly after the I-264 interchange, I-64 leaves Virginia Beach for the city of Chesapeake. It soon comes to a complex interchange between another of its spur routes, I-464, along with US 17 and SR 168. I-64, now running westward, crosses the Southern Branch Elizabeth River using the High Rise Bridge. The road then curves northwesterly and ends at Bower's Hill, where it meets both the western terminus of I-264 and the southern terminus of I-664 near the northeastern corner of the Great Dismal Swamp. I-64's lanes continue northbound as I-664 to Newport News across the Monitor–Merrimac Memorial Bridge–Tunnel (MMMBT), ending at I-64 in Hampton, completing the beltway.

History

[edit]

In early studies and proposals of the Interregional Highway System (the predecessor title of the Eisenhower Interstate System), I-64 was to use the US 250 alignment west of Richmond.[8][9][10][11] However, in the late 1950s, a number of interested citizens, including Virginia Senator Mosby Perrow Jr., proposed that I-64 be realigned to run along US 220, US 460, SR 307, and US 360 from Clifton Forge via Cloverdale (near Roanoke), Lynchburg, and Farmville to Richmond. This southern route was favored by Governor J. Lindsay Almond and most members of the State Highway Commission.

The decision was on hold for three years while the state continued planning for the piece of the US 250 alignment from Richmond to Short Pump, which would be needed anyway to handle traffic.[12] In 1961, US Secretary of Commerce Luther H. Hodges rejected that plan and chose the present route, leaving Lynchburg as the largest city in Virginia not served by an Interstate. Officially, the chosen route was considered more efficient. However, there is speculation that the decision involved "back-room" politics of the Kennedy administration.[13]

Map from a 1958 study showing the two routes between Clifton Forge and Richmond

Auxiliary routes

[edit]

I-64 has four auxiliary routes, all of which are in the Hampton Roads Area:

  • I-264—A bypass route serving the Virginia Beach Oceanfront, Downtown Norfolk, and most of Portsmouth.
  • I-464—A connector route serving the western side of Chesapeake, Portsmouth, and Downtown Norfolk. It connects I-64 in Chesapeake to I-264 in Norfolk.
  • I-564—A spur route serving Naval Station Norfolk.
  • I-664—A bypass route serving Chesapeake, Suffolk, Newport News, and Hampton.

Both of the bypass routes are shorter than the main leg for through traffic—I-664 is about 15 miles (24 km) shorter than the bypassed main leg while I-264 is about a mile (1.6 km) shorter than the main leg it bypasses.

Accidents

[edit]

On December 22, 2019, around 69 cars were involved in a pileup on I-64 westbound at the Queen's Creek Bridge near exit 238 (SR 143 east). 51 injuries were reported, including two life-threatening. Per reports, ice and fog were seen at that time.[14][15]

Current and future projects

[edit]
I-64 westbound near Charlottesville

I-64 widening projects

[edit]

Two segments on I-64 have been identified as candidates for widening: I-64 on the Virginia Peninsula from New Kent County to Newport News and I-64 in South Hampton Roads from the I-464/US 17/SR 168 interchange in Chesapeake to the Bowers Hill Interchange in Suffolk.

Peninsula

On the Peninsula, most of the I-64 corridor is a four-lane roadway and is one of the most-traveled segments in the region, connecting the Hampton Roads metropolitan area to the Greater Richmond Region. In recent years, the corridor has become a major bottleneck for traffic, with over half of the entire 75-mile (121 km) stretch having failing or near failing levels of service and continued increased safety concerns.[16] In 2011, VDOT initiated a study that would consider widening the highway with either additional general purpose lanes in the median and/or on the outside shoulder, adding two-lane, fully reversible managed lanes (either as a tolled express lane or an HOT-lane facility) or the addition of full tolling on the entire span.[17] The approved plan selected by VDOT and partners included the plan that added an additional general purpose lane in each direction by either expanding into the median or on the outside shoulder.[18] In June 2013, the Commonwealth Transportation Board (CTB) included $100 million (equivalent to $129 million in 2023[19]) in funding for the project in its Six-Year Improvement Program, allowing the project to move forward into the design and build phases. The Hampton Roads Transportation Planning Organization (HRTPO) allocated an additional $44 million (equivalent to $54.8 million in 2023[19]) to Segment I of the project to extend the boundaries beyond the Fort Eustis interchange.[20] The project is broken down into three operationally independent segments, which are independently funded, designed and built by a different company.

  • Segment I encompassed the portion of I-64 beginning west of SR 143 (Jefferson Avenue; exit 255) to just east of SR 238 (Yorktown Road; exit 247). Construction on this segment began in September 2015 and was completed December 1, 2017.[20] It was managed by Shirley Contracting Company LLC at a total cost of $122 million (equivalent to $149 million in 2023[19]).
  • Segment II began 1.05 miles (1.69 km) west of SR 199 (Humelsine Parkway/Marquis Center Parkway) near exit 242 and ended 0.54 miles (0.87 km) east of SR 238 (Yorktown Road) near exit 247, where Segment I ends. Construction on this segment was managed by Alan Myers VA LLC and costed $138 million (equivalent to $162 million in 2023[19]). Construction began in the autumn of 2016 and was completed in spring 2019.[21]
  • Segment III begins approximately one mile (1.6 km) west of SR 199 (Newman Road; exit 234) to 1.05 miles (1.69 km) west of SR 199 (Humelsine Parkway/Marquis Center Parkway; exit 242), where Segment II ended. Construction on this segment is managed by Shirley Contracting Company LLC with an estimated cost of $178 million. Construction began in August 2018 and is estimated to be complete in autumn 2021.[22]
  • In the Richmond area, a project to widen I-64 to six lanes from exit 200 (I-295) in Henrico County to exit 205 (Bottoms Bridge) in New Kent County. The project was managed by Corman-Branch, a joint venture at an estimated cost of $43 million (equivalent to $50.5 million in 2023[19]). Construction began in August 2017 and was completed in summer 2019.[23]

Southside

Similar to I-64 west of Newport News on the Peninsula, VDOT and the HRTPO undertook environmental and preliminary engineering studies for the improvement of the eight-mile (13 km), 48-year-old corridor of the I-64 from I-464 in Chesapeake to the Bower's Hill Interchange. This included replacing the functionally obsolete High Rise Bridge, which was completed one year after the study corridor opened, in 1969.

This study, completed in 2013, showed that the corridor frequently performed at near-failing levels of service (level of service grades D and E), with the High Rise Bridge itself outright failing, resulting in higher crash rates when compared to other areas in the region.[24] This is because most of the interchange ramps were built to previous Interstate standards and were based on then-rural development in the Western Chesapeake and Eastern Suffolk.[25] In addition, since the start of tolling at the Elizabeth River Tunnels, the High Rise Bridge and the corridor has received a nearly seven-percent increase in traffic during peak hours, further exacerbating the problem.[26]

In March 2015, the CTB identified and approved of the addition of two lanes of capacity in each direction,[27] with the possibility of them being either two HOT lanes, one HOV and one general-purpose lane, or all four lanes being tolled. Widening would be accomplished by adding the lanes in the median east of US 17 and to the outside shoulder west of US 17.[28] The approved plan also calls for the construction of a new, four-lane 135-foot (41 m) fixed-span bridge to the south of the current High Rise Bridge. Construction will be conducted in multiple phases, similar to the widening project on the Peninsula:

  • The first phase of the project would widen I-64 to three lanes in each direction by adding the new lane to the median in both directions as a managed lane, begin the construction of the new High Rise Bridge, and replace and rehabilitate other existing bridges in the area. This segment is estimated to cost around $600 million.[29]
  • The second phase would see all six lanes of I-64 shifted to the newly constructed bridge while the old bridge is demolished and replaced with a new four-lane bridge that would eventually carry Inner Loop (I-64 west) traffic.
  • The final phase would see the addition of the fourth lanes of traffic added to both directions and the shift of Inner Loop/I-64 west to the newly reconstructed bridge.

Once completed, the entire corridor would be an eight-lane stretch of highway, with two 135-foot (41 m) fixed-span bridges. Estimated costs for the entire project are currently estimated at $2.3 billion.[28] Currently, only part of first phase of the plan has been funded, which includes preliminary engineering and right-of-way service. A final design for the project is expected in December 2016, and a final contract award date is tentatively scheduled for August 2017.[30]

I-64 Express Lanes

[edit]

State and regional leaders have come up to convert the region's 32 miles (51 km) of existing high occupancy vehicle (HOV-2) lanes into high occupancy toll (HOT-2) lanes called the I-64 Express Lanes. According to a 2016 study by VDOT, only 1,600 vehicles travel through the Norfolk HOV lanes during the morning HOV restriction (6:00–8:00 am) and only 1,300 vehicles through the lanes through Virginia Beach and Chesapeake.[31] The plans for the I-64 Express Lanes have been divided into individual segments, all of which have been endorsed by the regions transportation planning organization.

Segment 1 converted the two-lane reversible roadway in Norfolk between the I-64/I-564 interchange and the I-64/I-264 interchange to HOT-2 lanes. Inner Loop traffic (eastbound from Hampton through Norfolk) enters through the ramp just prior to the I-564 interchange and exits through either the left exit directly to I-264 east, the slip ramp back to the Inner Loop for the interchange to I-264 west, or continue straight into mainline Inner Loop on the other side of the interchange. Outer Loop (westbound from Chesapeake to Norfolk) traffic enters the lanes at the ramp just after the I-64 Twin Bridges at the Elizabeth River, I-264 west traffic (from Virginia Beach to Downtown Norfolk) uses the flyover ramp from mainline I-264 to the Express Lanes, and I-264 east traffic (from Downtown Norfolk to Virginia Beach) merges onto the Outer Loop and utilizes the slip ramp entry. Tolling is only operational from Monday–Friday from 5:00–9:00 am and from 2:00–6:00 pm. Minimum toll during these periods is $0.50 and increases proportionally to traffic. Toll gantry installation and conversion was completed January 10, 2018, slightly behind schedule.[32]

Segment 2 would convert the single HOV-2 diamond lanes in each direction to HOT-2 lanes and would also include the newly expanded High Rise Bridge and associated lanes of I-64 from the I-464/I-64 interchange. Both directions would have a primary entrance/exit near the Bowers Hill interchange, with a midpoint entrance/exit near the Greenbrier Parkway/Battlefield Boulevard interchanges and a terminal entrance/exit that ties in at the Twin Bridges. The current HOV lanes would be reduced from 16 to 12 feet (4.9 to 3.7 m) (allowing the installation of the tubular road markers separating the general purpose lanes from the tolled express lanes), and new 12-foot (3.7 m) lanes would be built extend across the I-64/I-464 interchange and be built into the new High Rise Bridge and all the way to the Bower's Hill interchange. These lanes would be continuously operational once activated and would be variably priced depending on the traffic in the general-purpose lanes. This segment is scheduled to be completed as part of the High Rise Bridge project, which is scheduled for completion in 2021.[31]

Segment 3 would be built as part of the HRBT Expansion Project and would build from the existing reversible HOV northern terminus at I-564/I-64 through, across the expanded bridge–tunnel, and through the existing HOV-2 diamond lanes in Hampton. Planning for this segment (such as operational times and tolling pricing) will continue as the HRBT Expansion Project continues and would open at the same time as the new HRBT opens in 2024.[31]

Segment 4 would convert the remaining diamond lanes on I-64 in Hampton & Newport News to HOT-2 lanes as an extension of the HRBT Expansion Project. Detailed studies for this project, including operational hours, planning, and design, will occur in 2018 and would open along with the completion of the HRBT Expansion Project.

Hampton Roads Bridge–Tunnel Expansion Project

[edit]

According to VDOT, in 1958, an average of 6,000 vehicles a day used the facility whereas an average of 88,000 vehicles a day were using the crossing in 2008, with volumes exceeding 100,000 during the tourist season, well exceeding the original design capacity of 77,000 vehicles per day, which sparked decades of debate on how to improve traffic flow at the region's most important water crossing. Studies into the growing traffic at the HRBT have roots back to the early 1990s. In 1992, the Virginia General Assembly had requested that VDOT study growing traffic at the HRBT. The conclusion of that study determined that a longterm large-scale solution to the problem would be required to alleviate backups. For the next 14 years, VDOT would undertake numerous studies in 1999, 2008, 2012, and 2016 to help choose a candidate build that was financially and physically feasible to build. On October 29, 2020, a groundbreaking ceremony was held in Hampton for the HRBT Expansion Project.[33]

After nearly two decades of studies and planning, the CTB and the two regional boards responsible for the project (HRTPO/Hampton Roads Transportation Accountability Commission (HRTAC)) voted unanimously in 2016 to a $3.3-billion expansion of the current bridge–tunnel and its approaches from two to four lanes in both directions from the I-664 interchange to the I-564 interchange, with two new, two-lane bridge–tunnels built to carry traffic eastbound (Hampton to Norfolk). A final environmental impact statement (EIS) was published in May 2017, and the Record of Decision (ROD) from the Federal Highway Administration (FHWA) was granted in June. The project is expected to be completed by November 2025 [33]

Exit list

[edit]
CountyLocationmi[1]kmOld exit[34][35]New exitDestinationsNotes
Alleghany0.000.00

I-64 west / US 60 west – White Sulphur Springs
Continuation into West Virginia
1.832.951Jerry's Run Trail
2.473.98Virginia Welcome Center (eastbound only)
7.1611.5227 SR 661 (Ogle Creek Road)Eastbound exit and westbound entrance
Callaghan10.0116.11310


US 60 east (Midland Trail) / SR 159 south (Dunlap Creek Road) to SR 311 – Callaghan
East end of concurrency with US 60
City of Covington14.8423.88414
SR 154 north (Durant Road) – Covington, Hot Springs
AlleghanyMallow16.6826.84516

US 60 west / US 220 north – Covington, Hot Springs, WESTVACO Trailer Lot
West end of concurrencies with US 60 and US 220; signed as exits 16A (US 60 / US 220) and 16B (WESTVACO Trailer Lot) westbound
21.4934.58621 SR 696 (Selma Low Moore Road) – Low Moor
Selma23.8638.40724




US 60 Bus. east / US 220 Bus. south (Ridgeway Street) / SR 384 west (Dabney S. Lancaster Community College Road) – Clifton Forge
Cliftondale Park27.4944.24827



US 220 south / US 60 Bus. west (Grafton Street) / SR 629 north (Douthat State Park Road) – Clifton Forge
East end of concurrency with US 220
29.2747.11929

SR 42 north / SR 269 east (Forty Two Road)
Longdale Furnace35.6557.371035

SR 269 west (Longdale Furnace Road) / SR 850 east (North Mountain Road) – Longdale Furnace
Rockbridge42.9169.061143 SR 780 (Scenic Drive) – Goshen
50.2980.931250
US 60 east / SR 623 (Fredericksburg Road)
East end of concurrency with US 60
East Lexington55.6889.611355
US 11 (Lee Highway) to SR 39 – Lexington, Goshen
56.6691.191456
I-81 south – Roanoke
I-81 exit 191; west end of concurrency with I-81
60.5397.4153195 US 11 (Lee Highway) – LexingtonExit numbers follow I-81
Fairfield66.10106.3853A200 SR 710 (Sterrett Road) – Fairfield
Raphine70.59113.6054205 SR 606 (Raphine Road) – Raphine, Steeles Tavern
AugustaGreenville78.62126.5355213
US 11 (Lee Highway) to US 340 – Greenville
Split into exits 213A (south) and 213B (north) westbound
Mint Spring83.36134.1555A217 SR 654 (White Hill Road) – Mint Spring, Stuarts Draft
Jolivue85.83138.1355B220
SR 262 (Woodrow Wilson Parkway) to US 11 – Staunton
87.14140.241587
I-81 north – Staunton, Winchester
I-81 exit 221; east end of concurrency with I-81; exit numbers follow I-64
Fishersville91.28146.901691
SR 285 (Tinkling Spring Road) to SR 608 – Fishersville, Stuarts Draft
City of Waynesboro94.62152.281794 US 340 (Rosser Avenue) – Waynesboro, Stuarts Draft
96.57155.411896 SR 624 (Delphine Avenue) – Waynesboro, Lyndhurst
Augusta99.58160.261999 US 250 (Three Notch'd Mountain Highway) – Afton, WaynesboroAccess to the Blue Ridge Parkway and Skyline Drive
NelsonRockfish GapScenic View (eastbound only)
AlbemarleYancey Mills107.22172.5520107 US 250 (Rockfish Gap Turnpike) – Crozet, Yancey Mills
114.13183.6721114 SR 637 (Dick Woods Road) – Ivy
118.38190.5122118 US 29 (Monacan Trail Road) – Charlottesville, Culpeper, LynchburgSigned as exits 118A (south) and 118B (north)
119.87192.9123120 SR 631 (5th Street) – Charlottesville
121.60195.7024121 SR 20 (Scottsville Road) – Charlottesville, ScottsvilleSigned as exits 121A (south) and 121B (north) eastbound
City of Charlottesville
Albemarle124.32200.0725124 US 250 (Richmond Road) – Charlottesville, ShadwellDiverging Diamond Interchange
129.74208.8026129 SR 616 (Black Cat Road) – Keswick, Boyd Tavern
Fluvanna
No major junctions
LouisaZion Crossroads136.73220.0527136 US 15 (James Madison Highway) – Gordonsville, PalmyraDiverging diamond interchange
Ferncliff143.05230.2228143 SR 208 (Courthouse Road) – Louisa, Ferncliff
GoochlandShannon Hill148.82239.5029148 SR 605 (Shannon Hill Road) – Shannon Hill
152.74245.8130152 SR 629 (Old Fredericksburg Road) – Hadensville
LouisaGum Spring159.43256.5831159 US 522 (Cross County Road) – Gum Spring, Goochland, Mineral
GoochlandOilville167.31269.2632167 SR 617 (Oilville Road) – Oilville, Goochland
173.87279.8233173 SR 623 (Ashland Road) – Rockville, Manakin
175.06281.73175
SR 288 south (World War II Veterans Memorial Highway) – Chesterfield
Opened in 2003
HenricoShort Pump177.98286.4334177
I-295 to I-95 – Washington, Norfolk, Airport
I-295 exit 53; left exit eastbound; trumpet interchange
178.85287.8335178 US 250 (Broad Street) – Short PumpSigned as exits 178A (west) and 178B (east)
180.28290.1336180Gaskins RoadSigned as exits 180A (south) and 180B (north)
181.67292.3737181Parham RoadSigned as exits 181A (south) and 181B (north) westbound
183.70295.6438183 US 250 (Broad Street) / Glenside DriveSigned as exits 183A (Glenside Drive south), 183B (US 250 east), and 183C (US 250 west / Glenside Drive north) westbound
Dumbarton185.73298.9039185 US 33 (Staples Mill Road) / Staples Mill ParkwaySigned as exits 185A (Staples Mill Parkway to US 33 west) and 185B (east) eastbound
City of Richmond187.07301.0640186
I-195 south / SR 197 (Laburnum Avenue) / to Powhite Parkway – Downtown Richmond
Eastbound exit to and westbound entrance from Laburnum Avenue
187.31301.4541187
I-95 north (Richmond–Petersburg Turnpike) – Washington
I-95 exit 79; west end of concurrency with I-95
188.14302.781478 SR 161 (Boulevard)Exit numbers follow I-95
190.33306.3113B76B US 1 / US 301 (Belvidere Street)No westbound exit
190.56306.6813A76A US 1 / US 301 (Chamberlayne Avenue)Westbound exit and eastbound entrance
190.86307.1643190
I-95 south (Richmond–Petersburg Turnpike) / 3rd Street / 5th Street – Petersburg, Downtown Richmond, Coliseum, Convention Center
I-95 exit 75; east end of concurrency with I-95; eastbound exit is for 3rd Street; westbound exit is for 5th Street; eastbound and westbound entrances are from 7th Street; exit numbers follow I-64
192.53309.8544192 US 360 (Mechanicsville Turnpike) – Mechanicsville
Henrico193.89312.0445193 SR 33 (Nine Mile Road)Signed as exits 193A (west) and 193B (east)
Montrose196.03315.4846195 SR 197 (Laburnum Avenue)
Sandston197.91318.5147197 SR 156 (Airport Drive) – Highland Springs, Sandston, Richmond International AirportFormerly signed as exits 197A (south) and 197B (north). Loops B & D were removed in 2019.
201.98325.0648200 I-295 / US 60 – Rocky Mount, NC, WashingtonI-295 exit 28
New KentBottoms Bridge206.01331.5449205


SR 33 west / SR 249 east (New Kent Highway) to US 60 – Bottoms Bridge, Quinton
West end of concurrency with SR 33
211.44340.2850211 SR 106 (Emmaus Church Road) – Talleysville, Roxbury
214.91345.8651214 SR 155 (Courthouse Road) – New Kent Courthouse, Providence Forge
220.60355.0252220
SR 33 east (Eltham Road) – West Point
East end of concurrency with SR 33
James City227.34365.8753227
SR 30 (Old Stage Road) to US 60 – West Point, Toano, Williamsburg
231.62372.7654231
SR 607 (Croaker Road) to SR 30 – Croaker, Norge, Toano
Signed as exits 231A (Norge) and 231B (Croaker)
York234.46377.3355234

SR 199 east (Humelsine Parkway) / SR 646 west (Newman Road) – Lightfoot
Signed as exits 234A (SR 199) and 234B (SR 646) westbound
239.17384.9156238

SR 143 east (Merrimac Trail) to US 60 – Camp Peary, Colonial Williamsburg
242.61390.4457242 SR 199 (Marquis Center Parkway / Humelsine Parkway)Signed as exits 242A (west) and 242B (east)
244.23393.0558243


To US 60 (Pocahontas Trail) / SR 143 west (Merrimac Trail) – Busch Gardens, Williamsburg
Split into exits 243A (US 60) and 243B (SR 143); no access to eastbound SR 143 or from SR 143
James City246.86397.2859247
SR 143 (Merrimac Trail) to SR 238 – Yorktown, Lee Hall
Exit ramp from eastbound I-64 to SR 143 and entrance ramps from eastbound SR 143 to eastbound I-64 and from westbound SR 143 to westbound I-64
City of Newport News248.48399.89 SR 238 (Yorktown Road) – Yorktown, Lee HallWestbound exit and eastbound entrance
250.52403.1760250 SR 105 (Fort Eustis Boulevard) – Yorktown, Fort EustisSigned as exits 250A (west) and 250B (east)
255.55411.2761255 SR 143 (Jefferson Avenue)Signed as exits 255A (east) and 255B (west)
256.96413.5461A256 SR 171 (Victory Boulevard / Oyster Point Road) – PoquosonSigned as exits 256A (west) and 256B (east)
258.77416.4562258 US 17 (J. Clyde Morris Boulevard) – YorktownSigned as exits 258A (south) and 258B (north)
City of Hampton261.80421.3362A-B261Hampton Roads Center ParkwayNo access from westbound I-64 to eastbound Hampton Roads Center Parkway or from westbound Hampton Roads Center Parkway to eastbound I-64; signed as exits 261A (west) and 261B (east) eastbound
263.13423.4763262
SR 134 north (Neil Armstrong Parkway) / Hampton Roads Center Parkway east – NASA, Poquoson
Westbound exit, eastbound entrance; west end of concurrency with SR 134; signed as exit 262B
263.65424.3064263
US 258 / SR 134 south (Mercury Boulevard) – Coliseum, James River Bridge
East end of concurrency with SR 134; signed as exits 263A (US 258 south) and 263B (US 258 north / SR 134 south) westbound
264.84426.2265264
I-664 south (Hampton Roads Beltway south) – Downtown Newport News, Suffolk, Chesapeake
I-664 exit 1; I-64 joins Hampton Roads Beltway
265.61427.4666265A
265A-B
La Salle Avenue
SR 134 (Armistead Avenue) / La Salle Avenue
Eastbound signage
Westbound signage
67265CArmistead Avenue (SR 134) – Langley Air Force BaseNo westbound exit; formerly signed for Rip Rap Road
268.12431.5068267
US 60 west / SR 143 (Settlers Landing Road) / Woodland Road – Hampton University
West end of concurrency with US 60
268.45432.0369268
SR 169 east (Mallory Street) – Fort Monroe
Hampton Roads271.93437.63Hampton Roads Bridge–Tunnel
City of Norfolk272.54438.6170272W. Ocean View Avenue – Willoughby Spit
274.28441.4171273
US 60 east (4th View Street) – Ocean View
East end of US 60 overlap
275.58443.5072274Bay Avenue – Naval StationWestbound exit and eastbound entrance
276.98445.7673276A
276B

I-564 to SR 406 (Terminal Boulevard) – Naval Base

US 460 (Granby Street)
Consolidated into exit 276 eastbound; exit 276B is a left exit; no access from eastbound I-64 to eastbound US 460; access from westbound I-64 to westbound US 460 via exit 276C


I-64 Express east (HOT Lanes)
Western terminus of HOT lanes; eastbound exit and westbound entrance

I-564 west – Naval Base
Westbound exit and eastbound right entrance for reversible HOT lanes
74276C

SR 165 (Little Creek Road) to US 460 west
Westbound exit and eastbound entrance; eastbound access via exit 276 and US 460
278.36447.9875277 SR 168 (Tidewater Drive)Signed as exits 277A (south) and 277B (north)
279.40449.6576278 SR 194 (Chesapeake Boulevard)Westbound exit and entrance only to and from northbound, eastbound exit and entrance only to and from southbound
280.40451.2677279 SR 247 (Norview Avenue) – Norfolk International AirportSigned as exits 279A (west) and 279B (east) westbound
281.66453.2978281 SR 165 (Military Highway) / Robin Hood RoadSigned as exits 281A (Robin Hood Road) and 281B (SR 165 south) eastbound; no eastbound entrance
282.85455.2079282 US 13 (Northampton Boulevard) – Chesapeake Bay Bridge-TunnelNo access from northbound US 13 to westbound I-64
284.59458.0080284
I-264 (Virginia Beach Expressway) to SR 403 (Newtown Road) – Virginia Beach, Downtown Norfolk, Portsmouth
I-264 exit 14; signed as exits 284A (west) and 284B (east); eastbound exit 284A includes a flyover to I-264 east, so exit 284B is signed only for Newtown Road in that direction; east end of directional (east–west) signage; I-64 east is signed as inner loop (clockwise) and I-64 west is signed as outer loop (counterclockwise).

I-264 east – Virginia Beach
Inner loop exit and outer loop right entrance for reversible HOT lanes


I-64 Express west (HOT Lanes)
Clockwise terminus of HOT lanes; outer loop exit and inner loop entrance
Eastern Branch Elizabeth River285.41459.32C. Roger Malbon, Sr. Memorial Bridges
City of Virginia Beach287.28462.3381286Indian River RoadSigned as exits 286A (west) and 286B (east)
City of Chesapeake289.83466.4482289Greenbrier ParkwaySigned as exits 289A (north) and 289B (south)
291.96469.8683290


SR 168 north / SR 168 Bus. south (Battlefield Boulevard) – Great Bridge
Signed as exits 290A (north) and 290B (South Business). Outer loop end of concurrency with SR 168
292.52470.7784291


I-464 north (Martin Luther King Jr. Expressway) / US 17 south (Dominion Boulevard) / SR 168 south (Oak Grove Connector) – Norfolk, Elizabeth City, Outer Banks
I-464 exit 1; SR 168 exit 15A; no access from outer loop I-64 to southbound US 17; signed as exits 291A (I-464) and 291B (US 17 / SR 168); inner loop end of concurrency with SR 168; outer loop end of concurrency with US 17; signed as exits 291B (SR 168) and 292 (US 17) counterclockwise (outer)
293.25471.9485292
SR 190 (Great Bridge Boulevard) to US 17 – Elizabeth City
Outer loop exit only
High Rise Bridge over Southern Branch Elizabeth River
296.85477.7386296


US 17 north / US 17 Bus. south (George Washington Highway) – Deep Creek, Portsmouth
Inner loop end of US 17 overlap; signed as exits 296A (north) and 296B (south) on inner loop
298.31480.0887297 US 13 / US 460 (Military Highway)
300.62483.8088A299A
I-264 east – Portsmouth, Norfolk
Inner loop exit and outer loop entrance; western terminus of I-264
88B299B



I-664 north (Hampton Roads Beltway north) to US 13 / US 58 / US 460 – Bowers Hill, Suffolk, Newport News
Continuation north
1.000 mi = 1.609 km; 1.000 km = 0.621 mi

References

[edit]
  1. ^ a b "2014 Traffic Data". Virginia Department of Transportation. 2014. Retrieved September 14, 2015.
  2. ^ "Table 1 - Main Routes - FHWA Route Log and Finder List - Interstate Highway System - National Highway System - Planning". Federal Highway Administration (FHWA). Federal Highway Administration. October 31, 2002. Retrieved March 17, 2022.
  3. ^ "The Route of the Three Notch'd Road: A Preliminary Report" (PDF). Virginia Highway & Transportation Research Council. September 2003. Retrieved January 28, 2013.
  4. ^ "Under Construction: I-64 Interchange at Route 15, Zion Crossroads". www.virginiadot.org. Virginia Department of Transportation. Archived from the original on November 27, 2013. Retrieved November 5, 2013.
  5. ^ "VDOT Opens new DDI" (PDF). Virginia Department of Transportation. Archived from the original (PDF) on March 4, 2016. Retrieved March 17, 2022.
  6. ^ "VDOT: Diverging Diamond Interchange at Zion Crossroads". YouTube. Virginia Department of Transportation. Archived from the original on December 19, 2021. Retrieved March 11, 2014.
  7. ^ "Va. prepares for hurricanes". www.timesdispatch.com. Richmond Times-Dispatch. Archived from the original on November 21, 2005. Retrieved April 30, 2006.
  8. ^ State Highway Commission of Virginia (September 11, 1945). "Minutes of Meeting" (PDF) (Report). Richmond: Commonwealth of Virginia. p. 12.
  9. ^ Routes of the Recommended Interregional Highway System, ca. 1943
  10. ^ National System of Interstate Highways, August 2, 1947
  11. ^ National System of Interstate and Defense Highways, September 1955
  12. ^ State Highway Commission of Virginia (April 24, 1958). "Minutes of Meeting" (PDF) (Report). Richmond: Commonwealth of Virginia. p. 23.
  13. ^ "Charlottesville won, and Lynchburg lost / Routing of I-64 was major tussle". Richmond Times-Dispatch. 1999.
  14. ^ Lazo, Luz (December 22, 2019). "69-vehicle pileup involving chain-reaction crashes shuts down I-64 in the Hampton Roads area of Virginia". Washington Post. Archived from the original on December 22, 2019. Retrieved December 23, 2019.
  15. ^ WWBT new staff (December 23, 2019). "Investigation continues after chain-reaction crash involving 69 vehicles on I-64". www.whsv.com. Retrieved December 23, 2019.
  16. ^ "WHY ARE IMPROVEMENTS TO I-64 NEEDED?" (PDF). Virginia Department of Transportation. April 2012.
  17. ^ "Interstate 64 Peninsula Study (I-64 Corridor from I-95 in Richmond to I-664 in Hampton)". www.virginiadot.org. Retrieved May 29, 2016.
  18. ^ "I-64 Final EIS Executive Summary" (PDF). Virginia Department of Transportation and Federal Highway Administration. December 2013.
  19. ^ a b c d e Johnston, Louis; Williamson, Samuel H. (2023). "What Was the U.S. GDP Then?". MeasuringWorth. Retrieved November 30, 2023. United States Gross Domestic Product deflator figures follow the MeasuringWorth series.
  20. ^ a b "Interstate 64 Widening - Segment 1". www.i64widening.org. Retrieved May 29, 2016.[permanent dead link]
  21. ^ "Interstate 64 Widening - Segment 2". www.i64widening.org. Archived from the original on November 14, 2015. Retrieved May 29, 2016.
  22. ^ "Interstate 64 Widening - Segment 3". www.i64widening.org. Archived from the original on June 8, 2016. Retrieved June 9, 2019.
  23. ^ "Interstate 64 Widening - Richmond". Virginia Department of Transportation. Retrieved June 9, 2019.
  24. ^ "Interstate 64 / High Rise Bridge Corridor Study | Traffic & Transportation Technical Report" (PDF). www.virginiadot.gov. October 2014. Retrieved March 17, 2022.
  25. ^ "Interstate 64 / High Rise Bridge Corridor Study | Environmental Assessment" (PDF). www.virginiadot.gov. October 2014. Retrieved March 17, 2022.
  26. ^ Nichols, Keith M.; Belfield, Samuel S. (July 31, 2015). "Hampton Roads Transportation Planning Organization - the Heartbeat of Hampton Roads" (PDF). hrtpo.org. Chesapeake, Virginia. Retrieved March 17, 2022.
  27. ^ "Location Approval for the Interstate 64/High Rise Bridge Corridor Study" (PDF). www.virginiadot.org. Chesapeake, Virginia: Commonwealth Transportation Board. March 18, 2015. Retrieved March 17, 2022.
  28. ^ a b "Eight Lane Build - Managed Alternative" (PDF). www.virginiadot.org. Virginia Department of Transportation. Retrieved March 17, 2022.
  29. ^ Hafner, Katherine (April 7, 2016). "Dozens question VDOT officials about High-Rise Bridge". digital.olivesoftware.com. The Virginian-Pilot. Retrieved March 17, 2022.
  30. ^ "I-64 Southside & High Rise Bridge Phased Construction". www.virginiadot.org. Archived from the original on May 10, 2016. Retrieved July 16, 2016.
  31. ^ a b c Gibson, Anthony (June 1, 2016). "I-64 HOV to HOT Conversion Feasibility Study" (PDF). hrtpo.org. Virginia Department of Transportation.
  32. ^ "64 Express Lanes: FAQs". www.64expresslanes.org. Archived from the original on October 4, 2017. Retrieved July 21, 2017.
  33. ^ a b "Home | Hampton Roads Bridge Tunnel Expansion". www.hrbtexpansion.org. Retrieved March 17, 2022.
  34. ^ Dave Strong (September 21, 2019). "I-64". The Virginia Highways Project. Adam Froehlig and Mike Roberson. Retrieved February 7, 2021.
  35. ^ "NEW I-64 EXIT NUMBERS". Daily Press. Newport News, VA: Tribune Publishing. January 7, 1992. Retrieved February 7, 2021.
[edit]
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Interstate 64
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