Massachusetts Route 24

Route 24 is a 40.91-mile-long (65.84 km) freeway south of Interstate 93 (I-93) in southeastern Massachusetts, linking Fall River with the Boston metropolitan area. It begins in the south in Fall River at the border with Tiverton, Rhode Island where it connects with Rhode Island Route 24, and runs north to an interchange with I-93/U.S. Route 1 (US 1) in Randolph. Route 24 is also known as the Fall River Expressway, and officially as the Amvets Highway. Route 24 has a total of 21 interchanges (including the split at its northern terminus with I-93.)

Route 24
AMVETS Memorial Highway
Fall River Expressway
Route 24 highlighted in red
Route information
Length40.91 mi[1] (65.84 km)
Existed1951–present
Major junctions
South end Route 24 in Tiverton, RI
  Route 123 in Brockton
North end I93 / US 1 in Randolph
Location
CountiesBristol, Plymouth, Norfolk
Highway system
Route 23Route 25
View of Route 24 from Stafford Road overpass, Fall River, Massachusetts

Route 24 connects many of the major cities of Southeastern Massachusetts with Boston: Brockton, Taunton, Fall River, and New Bedford (via the junction with Route 140).

Route description

The highway continues at the Rhode Island border at Rhode Island Route 24 and meets Interstate 195 in Fall River. It briefly runs concurrently with I-195 east (for less than a mile), then exits the interstate and travels north, merging with Route 79 at Exit 7 in northern Fall River. Routes 24 and 79 run concurrently northward until Exit 9 (Assonet). At this point, Route 79 exits the freeway and heads northeast. Route 24 continues north, intersecting the northern end of the Taunton-New Bedford Expressway (Route 140) in Taunton, and Interstate 495 in Raynham. The highway continues north through the city of Brockton and into Randolph, where Route 24 ends at a split junction with Interstate 93. This section of I-93 from Braintree to its junction with I-95 is frequently, yet erroneously, referred to by its former designation of Route 128. This designation was removed from I-93 in 1989, when the roadway obtained the additional designation of U.S. Route 1, although this is not shown on exit signs from Route 24. The route is officially 40.9 miles in length, however, mileposts continue up to 41.2 on the Exit 21B ramp to I-93 south.

The speed limit on Route 24 is 55 mph (89 km/h) from the Rhode Island border to the exit from Interstate 195. North of I-195, the speed limit is 65 mph (105 km/h).

Service plazas are located on either side of Route 24 in Bridgewater.

History

Route 24, along with Route 138, are both built parallel to an old Indian trail that went along the same north/south route from south of the Boston area into Boston. Route 124 on Cape Cod was originally designated Route 24 before 1951, and its number was changed to 124 upon the completion of the initial stretch of the Route 24 freeway.

The original portion of Route 24 opened in 1951, and brought commuters from Exit 10 in Assonet to Raynham. Route 24 is currently 40 miles (65 km) in length and has 21 interchanges from Fall River to Randolph.

Efforts to upgrade to Interstate standards

There have been calls over the years for Route 24 to be upgraded to an interstate highway. In 1997, a study was initiated by the Massachusetts Highway Department (MHD) and the SRPEDD on what improvements were necessary in order to convert the route to an Interstate highway. The project would require major upgrades to 11 interchanges and minor work on 6 others, and the plan was halted due to high costs. In April 2007 the Old Colony Regional Planning Council included this proposal in its 25-year regional transportation plan draft. The Southeastern Regional Planning and Economic Development District (SRPEDD) endorsed a similar proposal the month before which if built, according to a MassHighway official, would have been signed as an extension of I-93. The portion south of I-195 would have remained MA-24 and then RI-24.[2] This proposal too was eventually tabled due to high costs, especially those projected for reconstruction of part of the highway south of Interstate 495. Here were the early cost estimates for the Interstate upgrade project: Phase I: Randolph I-93 Interchange Reconstruction ($30 million), Phase II: Randolph to Stoughton ($56 million), Phase III: Canton to Bridgewater ($224 million), Phase IV: Bridgewater to I-495 ($175 million), Phase V: I-495 to US 44 ($35 million), and Phase VI: US 44 to Fall River ($357 million). The total cost was expected to be $877 million. There are currently no proposals in the MassDOT highway listings to upgrade MA 24 to an interstate. The only projects that may relate to this happening in the future are reconstruction of three bridges starting in 2015, which include the one for US 44 in Raynham.[3]

Exit list

All interchanges were to be renumbered to mileage-based numbers under a project scheduled to start in 2016. However, this project was indefinitely postponed by MassDOT until on November 18, 2019, the MassDot confirmed that beginning in late summer 2020, the exit renumbering project will begin.[4][5][6]

CountyLocation[7]mi[7]kmOld exit[8]New exit[6]DestinationsNotes
BristolFall River0.0000.000 Route 24 south Tiverton, Newport[9]Continuation from Rhode Island
0.2130.3431A-B Route 81 Adamsville, RI, Fall RiverSigned as exits 1A (south) and 1B (north)
1.7112.7542Brayton Avenue / Eastern Avenue
1.8923.0453 I195 west Providence, RISouth end of I-195 concurrency; exit 14A (old exit 8A) on I-195
3.2285.1954 I195 east Cape CodNorth end of I-195 concurrency; exit 14B (old exit 8B) on I-195
5.4348.7455 US 6 (President Avenue / Eastern Avenue)
7.72612.4346Highland AvenueSouthbound exit and northbound entrance
7.94312.7837 Route 79 south – North Fall River, SomersetSouth end of Route 79 concurrency; southbound exit and northbound entrance
8.33113.4078A8Airport Road / North Main StreetFormerly signed as exit 8 until 2012, then exit 8A until 2020's mileage-based renumbering
Freetown9.615.48B10Innovation Way  Fall River, FreetownFormerly Executive Park Drive; opened in 2012
11.26518.129911 Route 79 north Freetown, MiddleboroNorth end of Route 79 concurrency
12.59420.2681013North Main Street – Assonet, Dighton
Berkley15.72925.3131116Padelford Street – Berkley, Dighton
Taunton17.39527.99512A-B17A-B Route 140 Lakeville, TauntonSigned as exits 12A (south) and 12B (north) northbound[6]
Raynham19.87131.97913A-B20A-B US 44 – Middleboro, TauntonSigned as exits 13A (east) and 13B (west) northbound[6][10]
PlymouthBridgewater22.864–
22.917
36.796–
36.881
14A-B22A-B I495 – Cape Cod, WorcesterSigned as exits 14A (south) and 14B (north);[6] exits 19A-B (old exits 7A-B) on I-495
23.638.0Service Area
24.28239.0781524 Route 104 Bridgewater, Raynham
West Bridgewater27.84944.81916A-B28A-B Route 106 West Bridgewater, MansfieldSigned as exits 16A (east) and 16B (west)[6]
Brockton31.24950.29017A-B31A-B Route 123 Brockton, EastonSigned as exits 17A (east) and 17B (west)[6]
33.47753.87618A-B33A-B Route 27 Brockton, StoughtonSigned as exits 18A (south) and 18B (north)[6]
NorfolkAvon35.66857.40219A-B35A-BHarrison Boulevard / Central StreetSigned as exits 19A (Harrison) and 19B (Central)[6]
Stoughton37.89560.98620A-B38A-B Route 139 Randolph, StoughtonSigned as exits 20A (east) and 20B (west)[6]
Randolph40.80365.66621A-B41A-B I93 / US 1 to I95 – BostonNorthern terminus; signed as exits 21A (north) and 21B (south);[6] exit 4 on I-93 / US 1
1.000 mi = 1.609 km; 1.000 km = 0.621 mi

References

KML is from Wikidata
  1. "Office of Transportation Planning - 2005 Road Inventory". Executive Office of Transportation. 2005. Archived from the original on 2006-09-27.
  2. Timmins, Steve. "personal correspondence" (Microsoft Word DOC). Mass Highway.
  3. "MassDOT Highway Division, Project Information". MassDOT. Retrieved January 6, 2016.
  4. Commonwealth of Massachusetts (2015). "COMMBUYS - Bid Solicitation FAP# HSIP-002S(874) Exit Signage Conversion to Milepost-Based Numbering System along Various Interstates, Routes and the Lowell Connector". Retrieved January 6, 2016.
  5. "Milepost-based Exit Renumbering" (PDF). Massachusetts Department of Transportation. December 5, 2019. Retrieved December 5, 2019.
  6. "Route 24 Renumbering" (PDF). Massachusetts Department of Transportation. December 5, 2019. Retrieved December 5, 2019.
  7. "MassDOT Route Log Application". Massachusetts Department of Transportation. Retrieved November 21, 2019.
  8. "Major highway routes and exits". Massachusetts Department of Transportation. Archived from the original on October 15, 2019. Retrieved November 21, 2019.
  9. Google Maps (October 2012). "Street View". Google. Retrieved January 27, 2015.
  10. "Exit Ramp 13 Re-configuration" (PDF). MassDOT. Retrieved January 24, 2019.

Further reading

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