Oregon Route 99E Business Explained

State:OR
Type:OR-Bus
Route:99E
Alternate Name:Salem Highway No. 72
Map Custom:yes
Map Notes:OR 99E highlighted in red
Maint:Oregon Department of Transportation and City of Salem (Chemawa Road portion)
Length Mi:9.77
Direction A:South
Terminus A: in Salem
Junction: in Salem
Direction B:North
Terminus B: in Salem
Spur Type:OR
Spur Of:99E

Oregon Route 99E Business (OR 99E Business) is a business route through Salem, Oregon for Oregon Route 99E, which bypasses downtown via Interstate 5 (I-5). A portion of this highway was originally planned to be a freeway, signed as Interstate 305; however the proposed freeway was cancelled after community opposition.

Route description

The northern end of OR 99E business is at an intersection with OR 99E north of the Salem area. It runs east for approximately 1miles along Salem-maintained Chemawa Road to an interchange with I-5 and Salem Parkway (officially Salem Highway #72) near Keizer. The highway then runs southwest along the parkway for approximately 3miles, then turns south along the Commercial Street/Liberty Street couplet for another 2miles. In downtown Salem, the highway skirts downtown along Front Street, where it interchanges with and shares an alignment with Oregon Route 22. OR 22/OR 99E then leave downtown via Pringle Parkway, skirting the southern edge of the Willamette University campus, then, via a pair of ramps, interchange with Mission Street. The highways then head southeast for 2.4miles until an interchange with I-5 and OR 99E. This interchange marks the end of OR 99E Business; OR 22 continues to the east along North Santiam Highway.[1]

History

Header Type:former
State:OR
Type:I
Route:305
Location:Salem, Oregon

The route which is now Dr Martin Luther King Jr. Parkway was originally planned to be a freeway (Salem Freeway #65), which was to be signed as Interstate 305. After originally being conceived only as a four-mile (6 km) spur of I-5 into downtown Salem, the I-305 project was modified and expanded by about 2.34miles to include a new bridge across the Willamette River to meet OR 22, providing increased access to Polk County.[2] It was designated as Salem Freeway Highway No. 65 by the state government in 1968.[3] Local opposition cancelled the freeway in 1976 and the state government requested its withdrawal from the Interstate System in 1977.[4] [5] Despite the cancellation of I-305, Salem Parkway was later built as an undivided expressway.

The original alignment of OR 99E through Salem came from the south off I-5 onto Commercial Street and left to the north on Portland Road to cross I-5. In May 1986, due to Salem Parkway opening north of downtown, OR 99E was rerouted onto I-5 around Salem, and its old route south of downtown, along with the Salem Parkway and Chemawa Road north of downtown, became OR 99E Business. In March 1992, OR 99E Business was moved onto OR 22 southeast from downtown.

A section of OR 219 served part of this corridor, traveling on Broadway and River Road, until it was truncated.[6]

Future

The Oregon Department of Transportation (ODOT) and the City of Salem are considering building an additional bridge across the Willamette River, north of the current Marion and Center Street bridges (which carry OR 22 across the river, and are the only river crossings for motor vehicles in the city). The exact location and alignment of this proposed new bridge and its connecting routes is presently under study, but generally, the routes being considered would connect to OR 99E Business at or near the southern end of Salem Parkway on the river's eastern shore, and provide access to both OR 22 and OR 221 on the western side. Such a route would be similar to that proposed for I-305.[7]

Notes and References

  1. Web site: . Descriptions of US and OR Routes . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20051102084300/http://www.oregon.gov/ODOT/HWY/TRAFFIC/TEOS_Publications/PDF/Descriptions_of_US_and_Oregon_Routes.pdf . November 2, 2005.
  2. [Oregon Department of Transportation]
  3. Web site: Engineering and Technical Services . March 2020 . History of State Highways in Oregon . 65-1 . Oregon Department of Transportation . September 27, 2021.
  4. News: Bennett . Chuck . November 12, 1976 . Keizer freeway plan crossed out . 1A . . . July 7, 2018.
  5. Web site: 1998 . Part V: Interstate Withdrawal-Substitution Program . Federal Highway Administration . November 27, 2021.
  6. 1977 . Official Highway Map of Oregon . Oregon Department of Transportation . Salem . Oregon State Library . September 27, 2021.
  7. Web site: Salem River Crossing. Oregon Department of Transportation. October 3, 2007.