Virginia State Route 36
State Route 36 | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|
Route information | ||||
Maintained by VDOT | ||||
Length: | 16.70 mi[1] (26.88 km) | |||
Existed: | 1933 – present | |||
Major junctions | ||||
West end: | SR 602 / SR 669 near Matoaca | |||
US 1 / US 301 in Petersburg | ||||
East end: | SR 10 in Hopewell | |||
Location | ||||
Counties: | Chesterfield, City of Petersburg, Prince George, City of Hopewell | |||
Highway system | ||||
|
State Route 36 (SR 36) is a state highway in the U.S. state of Virginia. The state highway runs 16.70 miles (26.88 km) from SR 602 and SR 669 near Matoaca east to SR 10 in Hopewell. SR 36 is the main highway between Petersburg and Hopewell; within each independent city, the state highway follows a Byzantine path. The state highway connects those cities with Ettrick in southern Chesterfield County and Fort Lee and Petersburg National Battlefield in Prince George County.
Route description
SR 36 begins west of Matoaca at an intersection with a pair of secondary state highways: SR 669, which heads north as Church Road; and SR 602, which heads west as River Road toward Winterpock and Amelia Court House. SR 36 heads east as River Road, which parallels the north side of the Appomattox River at the southern edge of Chesterfield County. The state highway expands to a four-lane divided highway at Ettrick, where the highway crosses over CSX's North End Subdivision. SR 36 crosses the tracks just south of Petersburg Amtrak station. The state highway continues southeast along two-lane Chesterfield Avenue and passes the campus of Virginia State University before crossing the Appomattox River into the city of Petersburg. SR 36 enters Petersburg on Fleet Street, then immediately turns east onto Grove Avenue to head toward Old Towne Petersburg.[1][2]
At Market Street, the two directions of SR 36 split and follow many different streets through the downtown area. Eastbound SR 36 joins southbound US 1 on Market Street south to Washington Street, which is one-way eastbound and carries westbound US 460 Business. SR 36 continues south another block to Wythe Street, where the highway turns onto the four-lane eastbound street to head east with eastbound US 460 Business and northbound US 1. At Sycamore Street, the three highways are joined by northbound US 301 Alternate to Adams Street, where northbound US 1 and the northbound alternate route head north. SR 36 and US 460 Business continue east through their interchange with I-95 and I-85 (Richmond–Petersburg Turnpike); the latter Interstate has its northern terminus immediately south of the interchange and has direct ramps with Wythe Street and Washington Street. At Crater Road, SR 36 intersects US 301 and US 460 Business turns south. The two directions of SR 36 come together near Amelia Street.[1][2]
Westbound SR 36 follows Washington Street to Crater Road, onto which the state highway turns north and joins US 301. Access to I-95 and I-85 is provided by westbound US 460 Business, which takes over Washington Street. At the north end of Crater Street, SR 36 and US 301 turn west onto Bollingbrook Street and pass under I-95. At Adams Street, US 301 turns north to cross the Martin Luther King Jr. Memorial Bridge to leave Petersburg; southbound US 1 joins SR 36 west to Sycamore Street. The two highways turn north onto Sycamore Street to the City Market building, then turn west onto Old Street to Market Street, where the two directions of SR 36 come together at the western end of the split.[1][2]
SR 36 heads east from the joining of Wythe and Washington streets as four-lane divided Washington Street, which crosses over a Norfolk Southern Railway rail line and crosses Harrison Creek into Prince George County. The state highway continues northeast as Oaklawn Boulevard through a portion of Petersburg National Battlefield; the highway has a trumpet interchange with a park access road. SR 36 heads through Fort Lee, where the highway passes several entrances to the U.S. Army installation, including one opposite SR 144 (Temple Avenue). Fort Lee is home to the United States Army Women's Museum, Army Quartermaster Museum, and Kenner Army Health Clinic. East of the fort, SR 36 becomes six lanes and meets I-295 at a cloverleaf interchange on the boundary of Prince George County and the city of Hopewell.[1][2]
East of I-295, SR 36 splits into a one-way pair, Oaklawn Boulevard eastbound and Woodlawn Street westbound. The two directions rejoin at Kenwood Avenue and become Winston Churchill Drive, which reduces to four lanes at an intersection with an unnumbered section of Oaklawn Boulevard that parallels the north side of the state highway. SR 36 has a short concurrency with SR 156 between where the latter highway splits south at High Avenue and SR 36's turn north onto Arlington Road. The state highway turns again onto 15th Street, which the highway follows to cross two separate rail lines and pass through a roundabout with Lynchburg Street and Maryland Avenue. South of City Point National Cemetery, SR 36 turns east onto Broadway Avenue. On the west side of downtown Hopewell, the state highway turns north onto 6th Street, which the highway follows to its northern terminus at an oblique intersection with SR 10 (Randolph Road).[1][2]
History
The road from State Route 10 (at a point now just west of Lee Avenue in Fort Lee[3][4]) east of Petersburg northeast to Hopewell was added to the state highway system in 1924[5] as State Route 1011.[6] SR 1011 became State Route 408 in the 1928 renumbering. 6.70 miles (10.78 km) from Campbells Bridge over the Appomattox River at Petersburg past Matoaca towards Winterpock was added in 1928 as State Route 409.[7] SR 409 was extended 3.02 miles (4.86 km) in 1930.[8]
Major intersections
County | Location | mi[1] | km | Destinations | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Chesterfield | | 0.00 | 0.00 | SR 602 (River Road) / SR 669 (Church Road) – Amelia | |
Matoaca | SR 600 (Pickett Avenue) to US 1 | ||||
City of Petersburg | 7.01 | 11.28 | US 1 south / US 460 Bus. west (West Washington Street) | eastbound only; west end of US 1 north / US 460 Bus. east overlap | |
7.21 | 11.60 | US 301 Alt. south (South Sycamore Street) | eastbound only; west end of US 301 Alt. north overlap | ||
7.41 | 11.93 | US 1 north / US 301 Alt. north (South Adams Street) | eastbound only; east end of US 1 north / US 301 Alt. north overlap | ||
US 1 / US 301 / SR 36 Truck west (North Adams Street) | westbound only; west end of US 301 north overlap | ||||
7.61 | 12.25 | I‑95 / I‑85 south – Richmond | eastbound only; I-95 exits 50D (northbound) and 52 (southbound); I-85 exit 69 | ||
7.91 | 12.73 | US 301 / US 460 Bus. east (South Crater Road) to US 1 north | eastbound only; east end of US 460 Bus. east overlap | ||
US 301 south / US 460 Bus. (South Crater Road / East Washington Street) | westbound only; east end of US 301 north overlap | ||||
Prince George | | Petersburg National Battlefield | interchange | ||
| 11.80 | 18.99 | SR 144 north (Temple Avenue) to I‑95 – Colonial Heights | ||
City of Hopewell | 12.00 | 19.31 | I‑295 – Washington, Rocky Mount, NC | I-295 exit 9 | |
14.59 | 23.48 | SR 156 Bus. south (High Avenue) to US 460 / US 301 | west end of SR 156 Bus. overlap | ||
14.84 | 23.88 | SR 156 Bus. north (Winston Churchill Drive) | east end of SR 156 Bus. overlap | ||
16.70 | 26.88 | SR 10 (Randolph Road) | |||
1.000 mi = 1.609 km; 1.000 km = 0.621 mi
|
Bannered routes
Petersburg Truck Route
State Route 36 Truck | |
---|---|
Location: | Petersburg |
References
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 "2009 Traffic Data". Virginia Department of Transportation. 2009. Retrieved 2011-08-18.
- 1 2 3 4 5 Google (2011-08-18). "Virginia State Route 36" (Map). Google Maps. Google. Retrieved 2011-08-18.
- ↑ Map of Prince George County, revised July 1, 1936
- ↑ 1946 USGS Petersburg quadrangle
- ↑ State Highway Commission of Virginia (April 10–11, 1924). Minutes of Meeting (PDF) (Report). Richmond, VA: Commonwealth of Virginia., page 8
- ↑ State Highway Commission of Virginia (September 10, 1924). Minutes of Meeting (PDF) (Report). Richmond, VA: Commonwealth of Virginia., page 5
- ↑ State Highway Commission of Virginia (August 9–10, 1928). Minutes of Meeting (PDF) (Report). Richmond, VA: Commonwealth of Virginia., page 28
- ↑ State Highway Commission of Virginia (June 12, 1930). Minutes of Meeting (PDF) (Report). Richmond, VA: Commonwealth of Virginia., page 17
External links
< SR 1010 | Spurs of SR 10 1923-1928 |
SR 1012 > |
< SR 407 | District 4 State Routes 1928–1933 |
SR 410 > |