Dictionary Definition
freeway n : a broad highway designed for
high-speed traffic [syn: expressway, motorway, pike, state
highway, superhighway, throughway, thruway]
User Contributed Dictionary
English
Pronunciation
-
- Rhymes with: -iːweɪ
Noun
- In the context of "international": A highway with full access control.
- A dual carriageway with no at-grade crossings.
Usage notes
- Not all freeways in the United Kingdom are motorways, but all motorways are freeways.
- International pertains, but is not limited to: USA, Australia, Canada and New Zealand.
Translations
(international) A highway with full access
control
- Finnish: moottoritie
- French: autoroute
- German: Autobahn
- Spanish: autopista
Related terms
External links
Extensive Definition
A freeway — also known as a highway, superhighway, autoroute,
autobahn, autopista, autovía,
autostrada, dual
carriageway, expressway, or motorway — is a type
of road designed for safer
high-speed operation of motor
vehicles through the elimination of at-grade
intersections. This is accomplished by preventing access to and
from adjacent properties and eliminating all cross
traffic through the use of grade
separations and interchanges;
railroad
crossings are also removed. Such highways are usually divided
with at least two lanes in each
direction. Because traffic never crosses at-grade, there are
generally no traffic
lights or stop
signs.
The word freeway first surfaced in the mid-1930s
in proposals for the improvement of the New York
City parkway
network. It is currently in regular use in the United
States as well as parts of Canada and Australia. Other
countries refer to a freeway as a grade-separated highway or a superhighway.
In the United
States, the term freeway is frequently used in the western part
of the country. Other terms are predominant in other regions, such
as Interstate
in the South (and particularly in Florida) and
highway, expressway, and turnpike in the Northeast and
Midwest. While some people use these terms interchangeably,
turnpikes and thruways have specific
associations with some toll roads and other limited access
highways, such as the Pennsylvania
Turnpike, West
Virginia Turnpike, New
Jersey Turnpike, Florida's
Turnpike, and New
York State Thruway; consequently, the term freeway is often
used in contrast to refer only to a toll-free road as opposed to
its original meaning – in which the component "free"
implied freedom from traffic interference rather than "at no cost"
– still used in other countries and in parts of the
U.S.
General characteristics
Freeways, by definition, have no at-grade
intersections
with other roads, railroads or multi-use
trails. Movable
bridges, such as the Interstate
Bridge on I-5 between
Oregon and
Washington, may
require drivers to yield to cross traffic on the river. Not all
roads bearing the name of freeway are in fact freeways by
definition; for example, the
William L. Wilson Freeway (U.S. Route
340) by
Harpers Ferry, West Virginia, is a two-lane undivided roadway
featuring at-grade intersections.
The crossing of freeways by other routes is
typically achieved with grade separation either in the form of
underpasses or
overpasses. In addition
to sidewalks
(footpaths) attached to roads that cross a freeway, specialized
pedestrian bridges or
tunnels may also be
provided. These structures enable pedestrians and cyclists to cross the freeway at
that point without a detour to the nearest road crossing.
Access to freeways is typically provided only at
grade-separated interchanges,
though lower-standard right-in/right-out
access can be used for direct connections to side roads. In many
cases, sophisticated interchanges allow for smooth, uninterrupted
transitions between intersecting freeways and busy arterial
roads. However, sometimes it is necessary to exit onto a
surface road to transfer from one freeway to another. An example of
this would be Interstate
70 in the town of Breezewood,
Pennsylvania.
Speed limits
are generally higher on freeways, and are occasionally nonexistent
(as on much of Germany's
Autobahn network). Because higher speeds reduce decision time,
freeways are usually equipped with a larger number of guide signs
than other roads, and the signs themselves are physically larger.
Guide signs are often mounted on overpasses or overhead gantries
so that drivers can see where each lane goes. Exit numbers are
commonly derived from the exit's distance in miles or kilometers
from the start of the freeway. In some areas, there are public
rest
areas or service
areas on freeways, as well as emergency
phones on the shoulder at
regular intervals.
In the United States, mileposts start at the southern
or westernmost point on the freeway (either its terminus or the
state line). California,
Ohio, and
Nevada uses
a postmile
system where markers indicate mileage through the state's
individual counties, however Nevada and Ohio also use the standard
milepost system
concurrently with their respective postmile systems on freeways
only. Until the 1980s, New York used
reference markers which, like California, indicated mileage
through individual counties. The
New York State Department of Transportation has since
supplemented their reference marker system with mileposts
indicating a freeway's mileage through the state.
Cross sections
Two-lane
freeways, often undivided, are sometimes built when traffic
volumes are low or right-of-way is limited; they may be designed
for easy conversion to one side of a four-lane freeway. Otherwise,
freeways typically have at least two lanes in each direction; some
busy ones can have as many as 16 or more lanes in total.
In Mississauga,
Ontario, Highway
401 uses collector-express
lanes for a total of 18 lanes through its intersection with
403/410
and 427.
In San
Diego, California, Interstate 5
has a similar system of express and local lanes for a maximum width
of 21 lanes on a two-mile segment between Interstate
805 and
California State Route 56.
These wide freeways may use separate
collector and express lanes to separate through traffic from
local traffic, or special high-occupancy
vehicle lanes, either as a special restriction on the innermost
lane or a separate roadway, to encourage carpooling. These HOV lanes, or
roadways open to all traffic, can be reversible
lanes, providing more capacity in the direction of heavy
traffic, and reversing direction before traffic switches. Sometimes
a collector/distributor
road, a shorter version of a local lane, shifts weaving between
closely-spaced interchanges to a separate roadway or altogether
eliminates it.
In some parts of the world, notably Texas,
frontage
roads form an integral part of the freeway system. These
parallel surface roads typically run the entire length of the
freeway and provide a transition between high-speed "through"
traffic and local traffic. Frequent slip ramps
provide access from the freeway to the frontage road, which in turn
provides direct access to local roads and businesses.
Except on some two-lane
freeways (and very rarely on wider freeways), a median
separates the opposite directions of traffic. This strip may be as
simple as a grassy area, or may include a crash
barrier such as a "Jersey
barrier" or a "Ontario Tall Wall"" to prevent head-on
collisions. On some freeways, the two carriageways are built on
different alignments; this may be done to make use of available
corridors in a mountainous area or to provide narrower corridors
through dense urban
areas.
Some roads in Ohio that conform to
freeway criteria use at-grade intersections in lieu of over/under-passes, with
occasional interchanges to avoid
signalized traffic interruption (i.e., traffic lights are omitted).
Examples include US-23 between
OH 15's
eastern terminus and Delaware,
Ohio, along with highway 15 between its eastern terminus and
I-75, US-30, OH-29/US-33, and US-35 in western and
central Ohio. These roads are fundamentally expressways, but expressways
tend to have lower design speeds, and signalized at-grade
intersections.
Access restrictions
To reduce the probability that high-speed freeway traffic will have to slow down for slower same-direction traffic, access to freeways is usually limited to drivers of motor vehicles which are powerful enough to maintain a certain minimum speed. Some East Asian countries partially restrict the use of motorcycles or ban them completely from freeways (or expressways in countries where that term is used) (see restrictions on motorcycle use on freeways).Travelers in a low-powered transportation class
(such as pedestrian,
bicyclist, equestrian,
and moped driver) are
banned at all times from the freeways in many areas by default. In
some jurisdictions, these classes are allowed on the shoulders of
certain freeways (usually where the freeway completely replaced an
existing road) or on sidepaths.
Legal definitions
United States
In the United States, a "freeway" is defined by the federal government’s Manual on Uniform Traffic Control Devices as a divided highway with full control of access. This means two things. Adjoining property owners do not have a legal right of access, meaning that they cannot connect their lands to the highway by constructing driveways, although frontage roads provide access to properties adjacent to a freeway in many places. When an existing road is converted into a freeway, all existing driveways must be removed and access to adjacent private lands must be blocked with fences or walls. Traffic on the highway is "free-flowing". All cross-traffic (and left-turning traffic) has been relegated to overpasses or underpasses, so that there are no traffic conflicts on the main line of the highway which must be regulated by a traffic light, stop signs, or other traffic control devices. Achieving such free flow requires the construction of many bridges, tunnels, and ramp systems. The advantage of grade-separated interchanges is that freeway drivers can almost always maintain their speed at junctions since they do not need to yield to crossing traffic.In contrast, an expressway is defined as a
divided highway with partial control of access. Expressways may
have driveways and at-grade intersections, though these are usually
less numerous than on ordinary arterial roads.
This distinction was apparently first developed
in 1949 by the Special Committee on Nomenclature of what is now the
American Association of State Highway and Transportation
Officials. In turn, the definitions were incorporated into
AASHTO's official standards book, the Manual on Uniform Traffic
Control Devices, which would become the national standards book of
the
U.S. Department of Transportation under a 1966 federal statute.
The same distinction has also been codified into the statutory law
of seven states: California,
Mississippi,
Missouri,
Nebraska,
North
Dakota, Ohio, and Wisconsin.
However, each state codified the federal distinction slightly
differently. California expressways do not necessarily have to be
divided, though they must have at least partial access control. For
both terms to apply, in Wisconsin, a divided highway must be at
least four lanes wide; and in Missouri, both terms apply only to
divided highways at least long that are not part of the Interstate
Highway System. In North Dakota and Mississippi, an expressway may
have "full or partial" access control and "generally" has grade
separations at intersections; a freeway is then defined as an
expressway with full access control. Ohio's statute is similar, but
instead of the vague word generally, it imposes a requirement that
50% of an expressway's intersections must be grade-separated for
the term to apply.
The term expressway is also used pollution, and
economic shifts they bring. Additionally, they have also been
criticized by the driving public for the inefficiency with which
they handle peak hour traffic.
Often, rural freeways open up vast areas to
economic development, generally raising property values. In
contrast to this, above ground freeways in urban areas are often a
source of lowered property values, contributing to urban decay.
Even with overpasses and underpasses, above ground freeways divide
neighborhoods — especially impoverished ones where
residents are less likely to own a car, or to have the political
and economic influence to resist construction efforts. Beginning in
the early 1970s, the U.S. Congress identified freeways and other
urban highways as responsible for most of the noise exposure of the
U.S. population. Subsequently, computer models were developed to
analyze freeway noise and aid in their siting and design to
minimize noise exposure. Some freeways have even been demolished
and reclaimed as boulevards, notably in
Portland
(Harbor
Drive), New York
City (West Side
Highway), Boston (Central
Artery), San
Francisco (Embarcadero
Freeway) and Milwaukee
(Park East
Freeway).
An alternative to surface or above ground freeway
construction has been the construction of underground urban
freeways using tunnelling technologies. This has been extremely
successful in the Australian cities of Sydney (which has
five such freeways) and Melbourne (which
has one such freeway). This has had the benefit of removing traffic
from surface roads and has led to urban renewal due to a
significant decrease in surface road traffic congestion, noise and
pollution. Public transport has been improved in these areas
through the provisioning of dedicated bus lanes where previously
traffic congestion prevented such lane allocations from being
made.
Other Australian cities face similar problems
(lack of available land, cost of home acquisition, aesthetic
problems, and community opposition). Brisbane, which also has to
contend with physical boundaries (the river) and heavy population
increases, has embraced underground tunnel freeways. There are
currently three under active development, one of which (the
North-South Bypass Tunnel) is currently under construction. All
of the planned tunnels include provisions for public transport,
whether underground or in reclaimed space on the surface.
Freeway opponents have found that freeway
expansion is often self-defeating: expansion simply generates more
traffic. That is, even if traffic congestion is initially shifted
from local streets to a new or widened freeway, people will begin
to run errands and commute to more remote locations. Over time, the
freeway and its environs become congested again as both the average
number and distance of trips increases. This idea is known as
induced
demand. Urban planning experts such as Drusilla Van Hengel,
Joseph DiMento, and Sherry Ryan, argue that although properly
designed and maintained freeways may be convenient and safe, at
least in comparison to uncontrolled roads, they may not expand
recreation, employment and education opportunities equally for
different ethnic groups, or for people located in certain
neighborhoods of a given city. Still, they may open new markets to
some small
businesses.
At present, freeway expansion has largely stalled
in the United
States, due to a multitude of factors that converged in the
1970s: higher due process
requirements prior to taking of private property, increasing land
values, increasing costs for construction materials, local
opposition to new freeways in urban cores, the passage of the
National Environmental Policy Act (which imposed the
requirement that each new federally-funded project must have an
environmental impact statement or report), and falling gas tax revenues
as a result of the nature of the flat-cent tax (it is not
automatically adjusted for inflation), the tax revolt
movement, and growing popular support for high-speed mass transit
in lieu of new freeways.
History
The concept of limited-access automobile highways dates back to the New York City area Parkway system, whose construction began in 1907–1908; but parkways are traditionally distinguished from freeways by lower design speeds and a ban on commercial traffic. Some parkways, notably the Taconic Parkway, Sprain Brook Parkway, and Saw Mill Parkway have at-grade intersections, although direct access to property adjacent to the parkways is prohibited. Designers elsewhere also researched similar ideas, especially in Germany, where the Autobahn would become the first national freeway system.However, in 1925, Italy was technically
the first country to build a freeway-like road, which linked
Milan to
Lake
Como. It is known in Italy as the Autostrada
dei Laghi.
Meanwhile, in Great
Britain, the related concept of the motorway was first proposed by
Sidney Webb in a 1910 book, The King's Highway, but was not
formally embraced by the government until the passage of the
Special Roads Act 1949. In 1926, the English intellectual Hilaire
Belloc recognized the necessity of grade-separated roads for
"rapid and heavy traffic", but thought they would be the exception
rather than the rule:
- The creation of a great network of local highways suitable for rapid and heavy traffic is impossible. Even if the wealth of the community increases, the thing would be impossible, because it would mean the destruction of such a proportion of buildings as would dislocate all social life.
While Connecticut's
Merritt
Parkway was the first fully controlled-access highway in
America when it opened on June 29, 1938, it does not
qualify as the country's first freeway, since low bridge heights,
tight curve radii, and short interchange ramps fell well below
freeway standards. The first long-distance rural freeway in the
United States is generally considered to be the Pennsylvania
Turnpike, which opened on October 1,
1940. The
Turnpike was so advanced for its time that tourists even had
picnics in the median (that is, after it was already open to
traffic) and local entrepreneurs did a brisk
business in souvenirs. It was designed so that straightaways could
handle maximum speeds of 102 miles per hour, and curves could be
taken as fast as 90.
What may be the world's first long-distance
intercity freeway is
the Queen
Elizabeth Way in Southern
Ontario in
Canada,
initially linking the large cities of Toronto and
Hamilton
together by 1939.
Shortly thereafter, on December 30,
1940, California
opened its first freeway, the Arroyo
Seco Parkway (now called the Pasadena
Freeway) which connected Pasadena
with Los
Angeles. And in 1942, Detroit,
Michigan opened the world's first urban depressed freeway, the
Davison
Freeway. Portions of the first freeway in Texas and the
Southern United States, the Gulf Freeway
in Houston,
opened in 1948. Meanwhile, traffic in Los Angeles continued to
deteriorate and local officials began planning the huge freeway
network for which the city is now famous.
Today, many freeways in the United States belong
to the extensive Interstate
highway system (most of which was completed between 1960 and
1990). Starting in the 1970s freeways began to consider
environmental factors, particularly noise and air quality in their
location and design. Nearly all Interstate highways are freeways.
The earlier United
States highway system and the highway systems of U.S. states
also have many sections that are built to controlled-access
standards (though these systems are mostly composed of uncontrolled
roads). Only a handful of sections of the Interstate system are not
freeways, such as I-81 as it
crosses the American span of the 2-lane Thousand Islands Bridge and
a segment of Interstate
93 through Franconia
Notch, New
Hampshire that is a 2-lane road with partial access
control.
Recent developments
Besides the U.S., some provinces of Canada have adopted the terms freeway and superhighway to describe comparable roads (instead of or alongside the term expressway) and they continue to extend their freeway networks. In Australia, some states such as Victoria use the term freeway, and others such as Queensland and New South Wales use both terms, usually to distinguish between toll roads such as Brisbane's Gateway Motorway and toll-free roads such as Sydney's Warringah Freeway. However, many of Victoria's rural freeways have at-grade intersections and therefore would not be considered freeways nor motorways in other states.Australia has been innovative in using the newest
tunneling technologies to bring freeways into its high-density
central
business districts (Sydney and Melbourne). In
Australia, the city of Adelaide pioneered
the concept of a dedicated reversible freeway. The M2 expressway
runs toward the city in the morning and out of the city in the
evening. Its ramps are designed so that they can double as on- or
off-ramps, depending upon the time of day. Gates and electronic
signage prevent motorists from driving in the wrong direction.
Brisbane
currently has three major freeway tunnels under development; all
are planned to incorporate traffic, congestion, incident and
accident management technology.
Major progress has been made in making existing
U.S. freeways and expressways more efficient. Innovations include
the addition of
high-occupancy vehicle lanes (HOV lanes) to discourage driving
solo, and building new roads with train tracks down the median
(or overhead). California's Caltrans has been
very innovative in squeezing HOVs into limited right-of-way (by
elevating them), and in building special HOV-only ramps so that
HOVs can switch freeways or exit the freeway without having to
merge across regular traffic. Many states have added truck-only
ramps or lanes on heavily congested routes, so that cars need not
weave around slow-moving big rigs.
Intelligent transportation systems are also increasingly used,
with cameras to monitor
and direct traffic, so that police, fire,
ambulance, tow, or other
assistance vehicles can
be dispatched as soon
as there is a problem, and to warn drivers via variable
message signs, radio, television, and the Web
to avoid problem areas. Research has been underway for many years
on how to partly automate cars by making
smart
roads with such things as buried magnets to guide sensor-equipped vehicles, with
on-board GPS
to determine location, direction, and destination. While these
systems may eventually be used on surface streets as well, they are
most practical in a
freeway setting.
Public-private partnerships in the United States
Until the late 1990s, funding of construction and maintenance of the Interstate Highway System was by the national gasoline tax. Originally, revenues generated by the national gasoline tax were intended solely for the maintenance and expansion of the country's highway system. During the Clinton Administration, federal legislation was passed allowing the use of gasoline tax revenues to fund other government programs and projects not related to highways or transportation. Since this reduced the amount of money available for the intended purpose of maintaining America's road network, many projects were either delayed, canceled, or scaled back.Additionally, the original Highway Act
of 1956 prohibited states from collecting tolls on
Interstate-funded freeways. As more miles of freeways were
completed, the cost of maintaining the infrastructure increased
dramatically. A major issue that has slowed new freeway
construction in America has been the application of highway funds
to maintaining and repairing existing infrastructure. Most of the
freeways in America are near or have exceeded their designed life
span, which necessitates replacing of bridges and overpasses and
reconstruction of the driving surfaces on many freeways
nationwide.
To address the issue of lack of funding for new
freeways and maintenance of existing roads, legislation enacted in
1998 gives states greater flexibility in funding major highway
projects. Specifically the legislation, known as TEA-21 in official
documents, authorizes states to add tolls to Interstate-funded
freeways. Additionally, it gave states the latitude to enter into
public-private partnership P3 arrangements to
facilitate expansion and maintenance of the freeway network.
Texas,
Florida,
Virginia,
and California
quickly took advantage of the TEA-21 legislation and began on
massive projects to expand their respective states' freeway
networks, complementing existing Interstate freeways with privately
funded and operated tollways. In 2004, Illinois sealed a
$1.8 billion deal with
Macquarie Infrastructure Group and Cintras to operate the
Chicago
Skyway for 99 years. In a similar P3 arrangement in Indiana, the
Cintras-Macquarie joint venture assumed responsibility for the
Indiana East-West Toll Road for 75 years on June 30, 2006 in a very
controversial $3.8 billion deal, which for political purposes was
dubbed Major Moves.
As of late 2006, Pennsylvania
is actively pursuing the P3 toll road concept, but still has to
clear challenges in the state legislature before such an
arrangement can be implemented on the Pennsylvania
Turnpike. Also in late 2006 Delaware has plans
to enter into an agreement with a private firm to design, build,
and operate a planned 17-mile (27 km) bypass of U.S. Route
301 between Delaware
Route 1 and the Maryland state line. Meanwhile in New York and
Massachusetts,
the respective state public authorities that operate the New
York State Thruway and Massachusetts
Turnpike have generated enough revenue to assume maintenance of
other freeways beyond the roads on which tolls are collected. The
Massachusetts Turnpike Authority provided more than 50 percent
of the funding to complete the
Big Dig project in Boston, and later assumed responsibility for
operating the Central Artery, the Sumner
Tunnel, and the Callahan
Tunnel following the project's completion in 2005.
As federal funding dries up for expanding and
maintaining America's freeway network, states are looking to
innovative solutions using a combination of state and federal
funding, toll collection through public authorities, and private
sector investment.
Gallery of freeways around the world
See also
References
freeway in Bosnian: Autoput
freeway in Bulgarian: Автомагистрала
freeway in Catalan: Autopista
freeway in Czech: Dálnice
freeway in Danish: Motorvej
freeway in German: Autobahn
freeway in Spanish: Autovía
freeway in Persian: آزادراه
freeway in French: Autoroute
freeway in Korean: 고속도로
freeway in Croatian: Autocesta
freeway in Italian: Autostrada
freeway in Dutch: Autosnelweg
freeway in Japanese: 高速道路
freeway in Norwegian: Motorvei
freeway in Polish: Autostrada
freeway in Portuguese: Via expressa
freeway in Romanian: Autostradă
freeway in Russian: Автомагистраль
freeway in Simple English: Freeway
freeway in Serbian: Аутопут
freeway in Finnish: Moottoritie
freeway in Swedish: Motorväg
freeway in Chinese: 高速公路
Synonyms, Antonyms and Related Words
Autobahn, US highway, alley, alleyway, arterial, arterial highway,
arterial street, artery,
autoroute, autostrada, avenue, belt highway, blind
alley, boulevard,
bypass, byway, camino real, carriageway, causeway, causey, chaussee, circumferential,
close, corduroy road,
county road, court,
crescent, cul-de-sac,
dead-end street, dike, dirt
road, drive, driveway, expressway, gravel road,
highroad, highway, highways and byways,
interstate highway, lane,
local road, main drag, main road, mews, motorway, parkway, pave, paved road, pike, place, plank road, primary
highway, private road, right-of-way, ring road, road, roadbed, roadway, route nationale,
row, royal road, secondary
road, speedway, state
highway, street, superhighway, terrace, thoroughfare, through
street, thruway, toll
road, township road, turnpike, wynd