New York State Route 16

New York State Route 16

NYS Route 16 marker

NYS Route 16

Map of western New York with NY 16 highlighted in red
Route information
Maintained by NYSDOT, Erie County, and the cities of Buffalo and Olean
Length: 79.19 mi[2] (127.44 km)
Existed: 1924[1] – present
Major junctions
South end: PA 646 at Allegany
  I-86 / NY 17 in Olean
NY 39 in Yorkshire
US 20A in East Aurora
US 20 in West Seneca
US 62 in Buffalo
North end: NY 5 in Buffalo
Location
Counties: Cattaraugus, Erie
Highway system

Numbered highways in New York
Interstate • U.S. • N.Y. (former) • Reference • County

NY 15A NY 17

New York State Route 16 (NY 16) is a state highway in western New York, United States. It runs from the Pennsylvania state line, where it is one of the highest highways in the state in elevation, to downtown Buffalo. NY 16 is a major route through Erie County, despite the construction of the paralleling NY 400 expressway from East Aurora. In Cattaraugus County it also plays an important role, serving as the major connection from Olean to the Southern Tier Expressway (Interstate 86 or I-86 and NY 17). Between those two areas, and indeed for much of its length, it is a two-lane rural road.

NY 16 initially ended in Olean when it was assigned in 1924. It was extended south to the Pennsylvania state line in the early 1930s; however, it initially overlapped NY 17 east to Portville, where it connected to Pennsylvania by way of modern NY 305. NY 16's current alignment south of Olean was originally designated as New York State Route 16A around this time. NY 16 was rerouted to follow the routing of NY 16A south of Olean in the early 1960s.

Contents

Route description

Cattaraugus County

When PA 646 becomes NY 16 at the state line, it is already at a very high elevation on a ridgecrest, and at a rise two miles (3.2 km) into New York, it reaches 2,386 feet (727 m) in elevation, making it the highest state highway in western New York and among the highest in the state. It remains at a high elevation for several more miles, through what was once one of New York's major oil fields. Afterwards, NY 16 then begins to drop through a narrow valley to cross the Allegheny River and enter its first major community, the city of Olean (which, like several other communities in the region, takes its name from oil). It crosses the city as Union Street, intersecting its first state highway, NY 417, at State Street.[3] Here, ownership and maintenance of NY 16 shifts to the city for six blocks before becoming state-maintained once more at the point where North Union Street heads northwest to serve North Olean.[4]

Signage for NY 16 near Olean. A truck detour of NY 17 was in place at the time this picture was taken

A mile (1.6 km) north of NY 417, NY 16 reaches a bridge over Olean Creek, a tributary of the Allegheny. On the other side, it becomes a four-lane road with a divider as it approaches NY 17, currently concurrent with I-86 pending the entire expressway's upgrade to Interstate Highway standards. A trumpet interchange provides access to NY 17 and I-86 in both directions in the vicinity of Baldwin Heights. But NY 16 runs parallel to the freeway and remains a four-lane route, although no longer divided, following the Olean valley. At Hinsdale it finally does cross NY 17. Shortly afterwards, in the hamlet of Maplehurst, NY 446, the former route of NY 408, comes in from the east and terminates.[3]

Sign assembly at the northern end of NY 16's overlap with NY 98 just north of Franklinville

NY 16 now follows the narrow valley of Ischua Creek, one of the Olean's tributaries, north past the road to the city's airport, north to Franklinville. NY 98 joins NY 16 just south of the village and leaves north of it. NY 16 continues to Machias and the eastern end of NY 242. A straight course takes the highway from this junction to the Cattaraugus Creek bridge. This bridge heads into Erie County.[3]

Erie County

In the southwestern corner of the county, NY 16 intersects with NY 39. NY 16 then begins heading slightly northwestward through a wider, more developed valley in the towns of Holland and Wales to the first sign of an approaching major metropolitan area, the south end of NY 400, the Aurora Expressway. After joining the expressway for two miles (3 km), it again leaves to become a two-lane that enters East Aurora as Olean Street. At the intersection with Main Street, NY 16 turns left and briefly joins with U.S. Route 20A (US 20A) and NY 78. US 20A leaves the two state routes behind at a fork at the village's east end, leaving NY 16 and NY 78 to head to the northwest again as Buffalo Street.[3] At this point, NY 16 and NY 78 become county-maintained for the next 6.5 miles (10.5 km) as the unsigned County Route 572 (CR 572).[5] At Willardshire Road as the highway passes the industrial parks and other facilities associated with local company Moog Inc. North of the village, it enters the Town of Elma and becomes Seneca Street, the name it will retain all the way to the city.[3]

NY 78 takes on its best-known name as well when it leaves at Transit Road (US 20), as NY 16 assumes an east–west heading across the suburban neighborhoods of West Seneca. It crosses NY 277, a major retail strip, at Union Road in the hamlet of Ebenezer. One final trumpet exit to NY 400 (and by extension, the New York State Thruway) precedes its junction with Harlem Road (NY 240),[3] where county maintenance of NY 16, and thus the overlap with CR 572, ends.[5] Just west of NY 240, NY 16 crosses the Thruway itself as it begins to head to the northwest and enter the city of Buffalo,[3] where the route is locally maintained.[6] Running almost due northwest through the residential neighborhoods of South Buffalo, NY 16 reaches its last major junction, with US 62, at Bailey Avenue just after crossing the Buffalo River. Immediately afterwards it crosses I-190 with no exit (but with northbound access) and returns to a more east–west course through industrial areas before ending at Main Street, NY 5, in the city center.[3]

History

New York State Route 16A shield
NY 16A
(1930s–1960s)

The portion of modern NY 16 between Hinsdale and Buffalo was originally designated as Route 17, an unsigned legislative route, by the New York State Legislature in 1908. At the same time, the segment of what is now NY 16 from Olean to Hinsdale was included in Route 4, a lengthy east–west route that extended from Lake Erie in Chautauqua County to the Hudson River in Orange County.[7][8] When the first set of posted routes in New York were assigned in 1924, much of Route 4—including the Olean–Hinsdale segment—was designated as NY 17 while legislative Route 17 became part of NY 16, which began in Olean and overlapped with NY 17 along former legislative Route 4 between Olean and Hinsdale.[1][9]

In the 1930 renumbering of state highways in New York, NY 17 was realigned between Olean and Wellsville to follow modern NY 417, eliminating its overlap with NY 16.[10] By the following year, NY 16 was extended south to the Pennsylvania state line near Portville via NY 17 and what is now NY 305.[11][12] Ca. 1932, the modern routing of NY 16 between Pennsylvania and Olean was designated as NY 16A.[12][13] The alignments of both NY 16 and NY 16A remained the same until ca. 1963 when NY 16A was supplanted by a rerouted NY 16. The former routing of NY 16 between the Pennsylvania state line and NY 17 became an extension of NY 305.[14][15]

The portion of the Aurora Expressway (NY 400) between East Aurora and South Wales was completed in the early 1970s. NY 16 was rerouted to follow the new highway for two miles (3 km) before exiting the freeway and returning to its previous alignment.[16][17] The former routing of NY 16 in the area, a 2.24-mile (3.60 km) long portion of Olean Road, is now NY 951V, an unsigned reference route.[2]

Major intersections

County Location Mile[2] Destinations Notes
Cattaraugus
Town of Allegany 0.00 PA 646 Continuation into Pennsylvania
Olean 8.69 NY 417
10.13 I-86 / NY 17 Exit 27 (I-86 / NY 17)
16.20 I-86 / NY 17 Exit 28 (I-86 / NY 17)
Hinsdale 16.46 NY 446 Western terminus of NY 446
Village of Franklinville 28.30 NY 98 south Southern terminus of NY 16 / NY 98 overlap
31.46 NY 98 north Northern terminus of NY 16 / NY 98 overlap
Machias 35.07 NY 242 Eastern terminus of NY 242
Town of Yorkshire 44.06 NY 39 east Hamlet of Yorkshire; southern terminus of NY 16 / NY 39 overlap
Erie
Sardinia 44.86 NY 39 west Northern terminus of NY 16 / NY 39 overlap
Town of Aurora 58.43 NY 400 Southern terminus of NY 16 / NY 400 overlap; southern terminus of NY 400
East Aurora 60.42 NY 400 north Northern terminus of NY 16 / NY 400 overlap; interchange
62.36 US 20A east / NY 78 south Eastern terminus of US 20A / NY 16 and NY 16 / NY 78 overlaps
63.42 US 20A west Western terminus of US 20A / NY 16 overlap
Elma 66.47 CR 574 (Jamison Road) Former western terminus of NY 422
West Seneca 68.96 US 20 / NY 78 north (Transit Road) Western terminus of NY 16 / NY 78 overlap
72.35 NY 277 (Union Road)
Buffalo 73.71 NY 400 (Aurora Expressway) Interchange
74.06 NY 240
76.44 US 62 (Bailey Avenue)
76.69 I-190 north / Thruway north Exit 3 (I-190 / Thruway)
79.19 NY 5 (Ellicott Street)
1.000 mi = 1.609 km; 1.000 km = 0.621 mi

References

NY-blank (cutout).svg New York Roads portal
  1. ^ a b "New York's Main Highways Designated by Numbers". The New York Times: p. XX9. December 21, 1924. 
  2. ^ a b c "2008 Traffic Data Report for New York State" (PDF). New York State Department of Transportation. June 16, 2009. pp. 129–130. https://www.nysdot.gov/divisions/engineering/technical-services/hds-respository/NYSDOT_Traffic_Data_Report_2008.pdf. Retrieved July 18, 2009. 
  3. ^ a b c d e f g h I Love New York (2008). New York State Map (Map). Cartography by Map Works Inc.. 
  4. ^ New York State Department of Transportation (1975). Olean Digital Raster Quadrangle (Map). 1:24,000. http://www.nysgis.state.ny.us/gisdata/quads/drg24/dotpreview/index.cfm?code=x11. Retrieved December 8, 2009. 
  5. ^ a b Yahoo! Inc. Yahoo! Maps – overview map of Erie CR 572 (Map). Cartography by NAVTEQ. http://maps.yahoo.com/#mvt=m&lat=42.769604&lon=-78.630865&zoom=16&q1=42.767934%2C-78.629342&q2=42.834625%2C-78.711825. Retrieved June 8, 2009. 
  6. ^ "Erie County Inventory Listing" (CSV). New York State Department of Transportation. October 1, 2009. https://www.nysdot.gov/divisions/engineering/technical-services/hds-repository2/INV_2009-10-01_Erie.csv. Retrieved December 8, 2009. 
  7. ^ State of New York Department of Highways (1909). The Highway Law. Albany, New York: J. B. Lyon Company. pp. 54–55, 60. http://books.google.com/books?id=jZ0AAAAAMAAJ&pg=PA54. Retrieved May 3, 2010. 
  8. ^ New York State Department of Highways (1920). Report of the State Commissioner of Highways. Albany, New York: J. B. Lyon Company. pp. 502–505, 526. http://books.google.com/books?id=Sj4CAAAAYAAJ&pg=PA502. Retrieved May 3, 2010. 
  9. ^ Standard Oil Company of New York (1929). New York in Soconyland (Map). Cartography by General Drafting. 
  10. ^ Dickinson, Leon A. (January 12, 1930). "New Signs for State Highways". The New York Times: p. 136. 
  11. ^ Standard Oil Company of New York (1930). Road Map of New York (Map). Cartography by General Drafting. 
  12. ^ a b Kendall Refining Company (1931). New York (Map). Cartography by H.M. Gousha Company. 
  13. ^ Texas Oil Company (1932). Texaco Road Map – New York (Map). Cartography by Rand McNally and Company. 
  14. ^ Esso (1962). New York with Sight-Seeing Guide (Map). Cartography by General Drafting. 
  15. ^ Esso (1963). New York Happy Motoring Guide (Map). Cartography by General Drafting (1963 ed.). 
  16. ^ New York State Thruway Authority (1971). New York Thruway (Map). Cartography by Rand McNally and Company. 
  17. ^ Shell Oil Company (1973). New York (Map). Cartography by H.M. Gousha Company (1973 ed.). 

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