List of state routes in Connecticut
The Connecticut Department of Transportation maintains a system of state highways to serve the predominant flow of traffic between towns within Connecticut, and to towns in surrounding states. State highways also include roads that provide access to federal and state facilities.
The state highway system consists of roads indicated on the official CTDOT map and highway log. As of January 1, 2007, the state highway system contains a total of of roads, corresponding to approximately 20% of all roads in the state. All state highways are state-maintained except for several segments that are locally maintained. Interstate highways and U.S. highways in the state are not Connecticut state routes, however they are maintained by the state.
All state highways are given a number designation. All state highways are assigned Route numbers. Route numbers are in the 2–999 range. State highways that are special service roads are assigned SSR numbers and are unsigned; these numbers are above 399 and are used for internal CTDOT purposes. Signposted state highways that are not U.S. highways or interstates are signed with the square Connecticut state highway shield.
State routes
Routes are signed state highways and are assigned numbers from 1 to 399. All state, U.S. and Interstate highways are part of the same numbering system. In 1926, the U.S. highway system was implemented. U.S. Routes 1, 5, 6, and 7 were used as designations on several primary state highways, replacing New England routes 1, 2, 3, and 4, respectively. The other New England routes that were not re-designated as U.S. routes became ordinary state highways but kept their number designation, which are used even today. In 1958, Connecticut received approval for the route numbers of its three primary Interstate highways: I-84, I-91, and I-95. State highways with the same number designation as the Interstate highways were renumbered to avoid duplication of route numbers.Special service roads
Roads classified by the Department of Transportation as special service roads are given an unsigned number designation between 400 and 499. Special service roads are roads that connect a federal or state facility to a signed state route. These numbers only appear in internal documentation, none of them are signed.State roads
State Roads are state-maintained roads that are usually long entrance/exit ramps to/from an expressway, or short interconnecting roads between signed routes. Roads classified by the Department of Transportation as state roads are given an unsigned number designation between 500 and 999. The first digit denotes which Maintenance District the road is mainly located in:- 500–599: District 1: Greater Hartford
- 600–699: District 2: Quiet Corner, Lower Connecticut River Valley, Southeastern Connecticut
- 700–799: District 3: Southwestern Connecticut, Greater New Haven
- 800–899: District 4: Naugatuck River Valley, Greater Danbury, Northwestern Connecticut
- 900–999: Statewide; very short routes
History
1913 trunk line system
In 1900, the State Highway Department proposed a statewide system of trunk line routes. By 1913, the system consisted of 10 north-south highways and 4 east-west highways, including the lower Boston Post Road. The system covered roughly. The 14 trunk lines were numbered on paper but were never actually signposted. The 14 trunk line routes were:- Route 1: east-west from Greenwich to Stonington, roughly modern U.S. Route 1
- Route 2: north-south from Stamford to Salisbury, roughly modern Route 106, Route 33, Route 35, U.S. Route 7, Route 341, Route 41
- Route 3: north-south from Norwalk to North Canaan, roughly modern U.S. Route 7, Route 107, Route 53, Route 37, U.S. Route 202, Route 45, U.S. Route 7
- Route 4: north-south from Bridgeport to Colebrook, roughly modern Route 8
- Route 5: north-south from New Haven to Suffield via Cheshire, roughly modern Route 10, Route 4, Route 159
- Route 6: north-south from New Haven to Suffield via Meriden, roughly modern U.S. Route 5, Route 71, Route 159
- Route 7: north-south from New Haven to Enfield via Middletown, roughly modern Route 17, Route 99, U.S. Route 5
- Route 8: north-south from Old Saybrook to Hartford, roughly modern Route 9, Route 99
- Route 9: north-south from New London to Colebrook, roughly modern Route 85, Route 2, Route 189, Route 20
- Route 10: north-south from New London to Thompson, roughly modern Route 32, Route 169, Route 12, Route 193
- Route 11: north-south from Stonington to Woodstock, roughly modern Route 2, Route 32, U.S. Route 6, Route 198
- Route 12: east-west from Salisbury to Putnam, roughly Twin Lakes Road, modern U.S. Route 44
- Route 13: east-west from Kent to Sterling, roughly modern Route 341, U.S. Route 202, Route 118, Route 4, U.S. Route 6, Route 14
- Route 14: east-west from Sherman to Killingly, roughly Route 37, Route 67, Route 317, Route 64, Route 322, Route 66, U.S. Route 6
New England road marking system