- Arlington County, Virginia, street-naming system
This article details the street-naming system of Arlington County,
Virginia in theUnited States .Although the streets of Arlington County are not laid out on a
grid plan , its local streets follow sequential numbered or alphabetic patterns that are both rational and provide address numbering information.History of the system
A numbered and alphabetical street-naming scheme suggests that Arlington is or once was laid out on a continuous rectilinear grid plan, which in many parts of the County it is not (although very few parts of the County are laid out using the
cul-de-sac type development which is more common in the outerWashington, DC suburbs). Originally, the various communities in the county had independent street-naming conventions. However, when county officials asked theUnited States Postal Service to place the entire county in a single "Arlington, Virginia" postal area, the USPS refused to do so until the county had a unified addressing system, which the county developed in 1932. For that reason, and also because Arlington contains a number of locations that interrupt the road grid network (including military facilities, parks, golf courses, and limited-access highways), it is common for streets to terminate and continue later on in another location. Arlington now has a policy of adding to the street grid when feasible as part of new development -- for example, connections for Quinn Street and Troy Street were recently added to the Master Transportation Plan between Wilson and Clarendon Boulevards.pecifics of the system
Arlington Boulevard (U.S. Route 50) bisects Arlington County into northern and southern sections, except for a few streets between Fort Myer Military Reservation and Arlington Boulevard, which are designated north even though they are south of Arlington Boulevard.East-west streets are designated by an ordinal number followed by a north or south designation. The numbers begin on either side of Arlington Boulevard and increase moving away from it. Therefore, 1st Street North is immediately north of Arlington Boulevard and 1st Street South is immediately south of it.
North-south streets are named and alphabetized (through first letter only) starting at the
Potomac River in the east. Progressing westward, the alphabetizing sequence is:# One-syllable names (Ball Street to Wayne Street)
# Two-syllable names (Adams to Woodrow)
# Three-syllable names (Abingdon to Yucatan)
# Four-syllable names (Arizona is the only street in this sequence)North and south designations precede named streets and also denote their position relative to Arlington Boulevard. For example, North Stuart Street.
Arlington's local numbered and named streets are not through streets and thus each number or name can appear multiple times at multiple locations in the county but always according to the grid. For example, there are several 12th Streets South or North Kensington Streets in various areas of the county. In cases where more names are needed to avoid confusion in areas of denser street construction, numbered (east-west) streets are first designated "street", then "road," then "place." For example, 37th Street North, 37th Road North, and 37th Place North are all in the same general area. Named (north-south) local streets follow rules regarding initial letter and syllable number but there can be multiple street names with the same initial letter number of syllables, almost all ending with "street.". For example, North Kenilworth Street, North Kensington Street, and North Kentucky Street are all in the same area.
Exceptions to the system
Major arteries or historical roads are exempt from the naming and numbering system. Named streets with the designation "road," "pike," or "highway" instead of "street" usually predate the system and follow early winding routes. "Boulevards" and "drives" are generally are major diagonal thoroughfares with historic names. Boulevards usually run east-west and drives run north-south but are designated as north and south only when they appear on both sides of Arlington Boulevard.
Address numbers in the system
Address numbers can be determined from the numbers or names of intersecting streets. Addresses on north-south routes, including exceptions from the numbering and naming system, follow the numbers of intersecting (or implied intersections of) numbered streets. For example, 2005 South Glebe Road would lie just beyond the intersection of South Glebe Road and 20th Street South. Addresses on east-west, including exceptions from the numbering and naming system, are based on the intersecting (or implied intersections of) named streets with each letter/syllable combination representing 100 address numbers. The chart below shows the block numbers on east-west streets.
Block numbers on east-west streets
Addresses on the south and west (left) sides of the streets are even-numbered. Below is a complete list of named (north-south) streets within the system.
List of named (north-south) streets within the system
References
* [http://www.arlingtonva.us/Departments/EnvironmentalServices/dot/traffic/EnvironmentalServicesGet.aspx Arlington County Street Naming System]
External links
* [http://www.arlingtonva.us/Departments/EnvironmentalServices/cpe/maps/MapsByTopic.aspx Arlington County's GIS Mapping Center maps of Arlington]
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