Delaware Route 299 Explained

State:DE
Type:DE
Route:299
Map Custom:yes
Length Mi:9.77
Length Round:2
Length Ref:[1]
Tourist: Harriet Tubman Underground Railroad Byway
Delaware Bayshore Byway
Maint:DelDOT
Established:1957
Direction A:West
Terminus A: near Warwick, Maryland
Direction B:East
Terminus B: in Mathews Corners
Counties:New Castle
Previous Type:I
Previous Route:295
Next Type:DE
Next Route:300

Delaware Route 299 (DE 299) is a 9.77adj=midNaNadj=mid state highway in New Castle County, Delaware. It runs from Maryland Route 282 (MD 282) at the Maryland state line east of Warwick, Maryland to DE 9 in Mathews Corners, traveling through Middletown and Odessa. The route intersects the U.S. Route 301 (US 301) toll road, DE 15, and DE 71 in Middletown, the DE 1 toll road east of Middletown, and US 13 in Odessa. The highway travels through a mix of suburban development and some farmland.

DE 299 was originally designated as DE 4 in 1938, traveling as far east as US 13 in Odessa. By 1957, DE 4 became DE 299 to match MD 299 (now MD 282) and was extended east to DE 9 in 1959. Over the years, several different highways had followed the DE 299 alignment including DE 71 west of Middletown between 1959 and 1987, US 301N between Middletown and Odessa from 1959 to 1971, and US 301 west of Middletown between 1959 and 2019. In 2008, a widening of DE 299 in the western part of Middletown began; it was completed in November 2010. A portion of the route west of Middletown was realigned in 2017 as a result of the construction of the US 301 toll road.

Route description

DE 299 heads east from the Maryland state line on two-lane undivided Warwick Road, passing through farmland. At the state line, the road continues west into Maryland as MD 282. Shortly after the state line, the route curves north, with US 301 toll road parallel to the east. The road enters the town of Middletown and turns southeast, widening to a four-lane divided highway as it comes to a diamond interchange with US 301, where the name changes to Levels Road, before reaching an intersection with DE 15. At this point, DE 299 turns northeast and becomes concurrent with DE 15, heading northeast on four-lane divided Middletown Warwick Road. From here, the roadway enters the commercial western part of Middletown. At an intersection, the two routes split, with DE 15 heading northwest on Bunker Hill Road, DE 299 turning east onto West Main Street, and Middletown Warwick Road continuing north. The route narrows to a two-lane undivided road and heads east across the Delmarva Central Railroad's Delmarva Subdivision line at-grade into the downtown area of Middletown. In the center of town, DE 299 intersects DE 71 (Broad Street).

After running through the downtown area, the route becomes East Main Street and heads east through suburban commercial development in the eastern part of Middletown, passing to the north of Middletown High School and becoming Middletown Odessa Road. The roadway heads south of the Christiana Care Middletown Free-standing Emergency Department before it becomes a divided highway, passing south of a park and ride lot and intersecting the DE 1 toll road at a diamond interchange on the eastern border of Middletown. Following this interchange, DE 299 becomes undivided again and heads east through a mix of farms and homes into the town of Odessa, where it is called Main Street and curves southeast. In Odessa, the route is lined with homes and intersects US 13, which is split onto 5th Street northbound and 6th Street southbound. Following this intersection, the road runs through the Odessa Historic District. DE 299 crosses the Appoquinimink River out of Odessa and heads to the southeast on Old State Road into housing developments. The route curves south before makes a turn southeast onto Taylors Bridge Road and ends a short distance later at DE 9 in the community of Mathews Corners. At this intersection, DE 9 heads northeast on Thomas Landing Road and southeast along Taylors Bridge Road.

Portions of DE 299 are designated as part of the Delaware Byways system. The section between Silver Lake Road in Middletown and DE 9 is part of the Harriet Tubman Underground Railroad Byway while the section between US 13 in Odessa and DE 9 is a spur of the Delaware Bayshore Byway, which is also a National Scenic Byway.[2] [3] [4] DE 299 has an annual average daily traffic count ranging from a high of 18,470 vehicles along Main Street in Middletown to a low of 727 vehicles at the eastern terminus at DE 9.[1] The portion of DE 299 concurrent with DE 15 is part of the National Highway System.[5]

History

State:DE
Type:DE 1955
Route:4
Location:Near Warwick, MarylandOdessa
Formed:1938
Deleted:1957
Length Mi:8.08
Length Round:2

By 1920, what is now DE 299 existed as an unimproved county road. This county road was paved by 1924. The present-day alignment of DE 299 became a state highway by 1935.[6] The current DE 299 was originally designated as DE 4 in 1938, running between the Maryland state line and US 13 in Odessa. By 1957, DE 4 was renumbered to DE 299 to match MD 299 (now MD 282) across the state line and DE 71 was designated concurrent with most of the route west of Middletown. US 301 was designated along the DE 71/DE 299 concurrency in 1959 while US 301N was designated between DE 71 and US 13. Also at this time, DE 299 was extended east to DE 9. The US 301N designation was removed between Middletown and Odessa in 1971. DE 71 was rerouted off US 301/DE 299 by 1987. By 1994, DE 15 was designated to follow a portion of US 301/DE 299 west of Middletown.

In July 2008, a widening project began on US 301/DE 299 between United Drive and the east end of the concurrency.[7] This widening to four lanes was completed in November 2010.[8] On July 15, 2017, DE 299 was realigned near the Maryland border as a result of construction of the US 301 toll road.[9] The concurrency with US 301 west of Middletown was removed when the US 301 toll road opened on January 10, 2019.[10] There are plans to reconstruct and widen DE 299 between Catherine Street and DE 1 in Middletown, with the section between Catherine Street and Cleaver Farms Road/Dickenson Boulevard to be widened into a three-lane road with a center left-turn lane and the section between Cleaver Farms Road/Dickenson Boulevard and DE 1 to be widened into a four-lane divided highway. Construction on the widening project began on July 6, 2021 and is expected be completed in the later part of 2023.[11] [12]

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Staff . Traffic Count and Mileage Report: Interstate, Delaware, and US Routes . . 2018 . PDF . March 29, 2020.
  2. Web site: Harriet Tubman Underground Railroad Byway. Delaware Department of Transportation. December 30, 2017.
  3. Web site: Delaware Bayshore Byway. Delaware Department of Transportation. December 30, 2017.
  4. Web site: 2021 Summary of Designated Byways. National Scenic Byways Program. April 22, 2021.
  5. Federal Highway Administration. National Highway System: Delaware. PDF. 2010. February 10, 2012.
  6. Delaware State Highway Department Annual Report. 1958. 4–13. Delaware State Highway Department. Dover, Delaware. 1958. November 13, 2014. November 27, 2014. https://web.archive.org/web/20141127101122/http://www.deldot.gov/archaeology/historic_pres/annual_reports/pdf/1958/1958_history.pdf. dead.
  7. Existing Route 301 Widening to Begin. July 20, 2008. Delaware Department of Transportation. 2010-04-29.
  8. Traffic Alert – Sections of Route 301 Closed for Construction. September 30, 2009. Delaware Department of Transportation. 2010-04-29.
  9. Traffic Alert - Middletown/Warwick Road Reopened July 15, As Part of the U.S. 301 Mainline Project. Delaware Department of Transportation. July 10, 2017. November 28, 2017.
  10. News: Smith. Jerry. U.S. 301 Mainline toll road opens Thursday to cheers and jeers. The News Journal. Wilmington, DE. January 10, 2019. January 10, 2019.
  11. Traffic Alert - Route 299, Route 1 to Catherine Street Project. Delaware Department of Transportation. June 25, 2021. June 25, 2021.
  12. Web site: Projects - SR299, SR 1 to Catherine Street. Delaware Department of Transportation. October 1, 2020.