Massachusetts Route 225

Route 225 is a state highway in the U.S. state of Massachusetts. The highway runs 31.100 miles (50.051 km) from Route 2A in Lunenburg in northeastern Worcester County east to Route 2 in Lexington. Route 225 serves the western Middlesex County towns of Shirley, Groton, Westford, and Carlisle. The highway also passes through Bedford along its concurrency with Route 4, which terminates at the same junction with Route 2.

Route 225
Route 225 highlighted in red
Route information
Length31.10 mi[1] (50.05 km)
Existed1957 (renumbered from Route 25)–present
Major junctions
West end Route 2A in Lunenburg
 
East end Route 2 in Lexington
Location
CountiesWorcester, Middlesex
Highway system
Route 220Route 228

Route description

Eastbound Route 225 entering Groton

Route 225 begins at an intersection with Route 2A (Massachusetts Avenue) on the east side of the town of Lunenburg in Worcester County. The two-lane highway's name changes from Old Massachusetts Avenue to Groton Road when it enters the town of Shirley in Middlesex County. Route 225's name is West Main Street between its two crossings of the Nashua Riverat the ShirleyGroton town line and closer to the center of Grotonand continues from the latter crossing as Long Hill Road. The highway turns north onto Farmers Row to run concurrently with Route 111, then the two routes follow Pleasant Street, which crosses the Nashua River Rail Trail, until Route 111 diverges onto Elm Street. Route 225 continues on Pleasant Street until it joins Route 119 on Main Street. Near the south end of downtown, the routes meet the west end of Route 40 (Lowell Road).[1]

Route 225 and Route 119 continue southeast along Boston Road to their split in the southeast corner of Groton, where Route 119 continues along Boston Road while Route 225 turns east onto Forge Village Road. The highway enters the town of Westford along Prescott Street and has a grade crossing of a railroad, where the highway continues on Pleasant Street. Southeast of the town center, Route 225 continues along Concord Road. The highway crosses over Interstate 495 (I-495) with no access shortly before its western junction with Route 110 (Littleton Road). The two routes briefly run concurrently on four-lane Littleton Road before Route 225 diverges onto Concord Road, which becomes Carlisle Road midway between Route 110 and Route 27 (Acton Road). East of Route 27, Route 225 enters Carlisle, where the highway follows Westford Street and then Bedford Road east of the town center.[1]

Route 225 crosses the Concord River and enters the town of Bedford on Carlisle Road. At the west end of the town center, the highway joins Route 4 on North Road before the two highways join Route 62 (Concord Road) on The Great Road. Route 62 splits north onto Brookside Road and the remaining two routes cross the Shawsheen River and continue to Lexington, which they enter on Bedford Street. Route 225 and Route 4 temporarily expand to a four-lane divided highway through their cloverleaf interchange with I-95 and Route 128 (Yankee Division Highway). In the center of Lexington, the highways turn onto Massachusetts Avenue, which they follow southeast parallel to the Minuteman Bikeway through a brief concurrency with Route 2A between Marrett Road and Maple Street. Near the southeast end of Lexington, Route 225 and Route 4 turn from Massachusetts Avenue, which continues toward Arlington, onto Pleasant Street and then Watertown Street to their joint terminus at a four-ramp partial cloverleaf interchange with Route 2 (Concord Turnpike). The roadway continues south as Winter Street toward Belmont.[1]

History

Route 225 was formerly known as Route 25 before the construction of I-495 south of Raynham in 1957, which was given the Route 25 designation. The stretch of highway between the Bourne Bridge in Bourne and the I-495I-195 interchange in Wareham still bears the Route 25 designation, while the rest of Route 25 became an extension of I-495 in 1987.

Major intersections

CountyLocationmi[1]kmDestinationsNotes
WorcesterLunenburg0.0000.000 Route 2A (Massachusetts Avenue) Lunenburg, FitchburgWestern terminus
MiddlesexGroton4.9137.907 Route 111 south (Farmers Row) AyerSouthern terminus of Route 111 concurrency
5.4028.694 Route 111 north (Elm Street) to Route 119 west Pepperell, TownsendNorthern terminus of Route 111 concurrency
5.5328.903 Route 119 west to Route 111 north Pepperell, TownsendWest end of concurrency with Route 119
5.9879.635 Route 40 east (Lowell Road) Westford, ChelmsfordWestern terminus of Route 40
9.39715.123 Route 119 east (Boston Road) LittletonEastern terminus of Route 119 concurrency
Westford13.88122.339 Route 110 west (Littleton Road) LittletonWestern terminus of Route 110 concurrency
14.21122.870 Route 110 east (Littleton Road) Chelmsford, LowellEastern terminus of Route 110 concurrency
17.02727.402 Route 27 (Acton Road) Acton, Chelmsford
Bedford23.83938.365 Route 4 north (North Road) Billerica, ChelmsfordNorthern terminus of Route 4 concurrency
24.00038.624 Route 62 west (Concord Road) Concord, MaynardWestern terminus of Route 62 concurrency
24.87440.031 Route 62 east (Brookside Road) Burlington, WilmingtonEastern terminus of Route 62 concurrency
Lexington26.59442.799 I95 / Route 128 Canton, Providence, RI, Peabody, Portsmouth, NHExit 31 on I-95 / Route 128; future exit 49[2]
29.64147.703 Route 2A west (Marrett Road) Hanscom Field, ConcordWestern terminus of Route 2A concurrency
29.76647.904 Route 2A east (Maple Street) ArlingtonEast end of concurrency with Route 2A
31.10050.051 Route 2 / Route 4 ends / Winter Street south Concord, Fitchburg, Cambridge, Boston, BelmontEastern terminus; southern terminus of Route 4; southern end of Route 4 concurrency; exit 56 on Route 2 (Concord Turnpike)
1.000 mi = 1.609 km; 1.000 km = 0.621 mi
gollark: My server uses ext4 on its HDDs.
gollark: XFS does excellently on benchmarks with high-performance systems with fast disks, which my laptop is.
gollark: I use XFS.
gollark: Linux's? Yes, I'm sure it's quite tunable. "Momentum Cache" I have no clue.
gollark: I know Linux uses a lot of RAM on VFS caching and also block device caching.

References

KML is from Wikidata
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.