Interstate 91 (I-91) is an Interstate Highway in the New England region of the United States. It is the primary north–south thoroughfare in the western part of the region. Its southern terminus is in New Haven, Connecticut,[2] at I-95, while the northern terminus is in Derby Line, Vermont, at the Canada–United States border. Past the Derby Line–Rock Island Border Crossing, the road continues into Canada as Quebec Autoroute 55. I-91 is the longest of three Interstate highways whose entire route is located within the New England states (the other two highways being I-89 and I-93) and is also the only primary (two-digit) Interstate Highway in New England to intersect all five of the other highways that run through the region. The largest cities along its route, from south to north, are New Haven, Connecticut; Hartford, Connecticut; Springfield, Massachusetts; Northampton, Massachusetts; Greenfield, Massachusetts; Brattleboro, Vermont; White River Junction, Vermont; St. Johnsbury, Vermont; and Newport, Vermont.

Interstate 91 marker
Interstate 91
Map
I-91 highlighted in red
Route information
Length290.37 mi[1] (467.31 km)
NHSEntire route
Major junctions
South end I-95 in New Haven, CT
Major intersections
North end A-55 at the Canada–United States border in Derby Line, VT
Location
CountryUnited States
StatesConnecticut, Massachusetts, Vermont
CountiesCT: New Haven, Middlesex, Hartford
MA: Hampden, Hampshire, Franklin
VT: Windham, Windsor, Orange, Caledonia, Orleans
Highway system
  • Connecticut State Highway System
Route 89CT Route 94
I-90MA I-93
I-89VT I-93

Route description

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Lengths
  mi[1] km
CT 58.00 93.34
MA 54.99 88.50
VT 177.38 285.47
Total 290.33 467.24

I-91 is 290 miles (470 km) long and travels north and south: 58 miles (93 km) in Connecticut, 55 miles (89 km) in Massachusetts, and 177 miles (285 km) in Vermont. I-91 parallels US Route 5 (US 5) for all of its length, and many of the exits along I-91 provide direct or indirect access to the older route. Much of the route of I-91 follows the Connecticut River, traveling from Hartford, Connecticut, northward to St. Johnsbury, Vermont.[3][4][5]

 
I-91 in Hartford, Connecticut

Connecticut

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I-91 is the major north–south transportation corridor for the center of the state. It is the main route between the larger cities of New Haven, Hartford, and Springfield, Massachusetts. As such, it is almost always heavily trafficked (especially during rush hour) and maintains at least three lanes in each direction through Connecticut except for a short portion in Hartford at the interchange with I-84, and another in Meriden at the interchange with Route 15. The three cities also serve as Connecticut's control points along its length of the Interstate.[6][7]

I-91 begins just east of Downtown New Haven at an interchange with I-95 (Connecticut Turnpike). At the bottom of the ramp for exit 5, US 5 begins at the first of its many interchanges with the freeway.[8] Leaving New Haven, I-91 follows a northeastward trek into North Haven, where it meets the southern end of the Route 40 expressway.[9] It travels through the eastern part of Wallingford before entering the eastern part of the city of Meriden. In Meriden, about halfway between Hartford and New Haven, I-91 sees a complex set of interchanges with the Wilbur Cross Parkway (Route 15), the Route 66 expressway, and its first spur route, I-691.[8] I-691 provides a westward link to I-84 and the city of Waterbury.[8] Leaving Meriden, I-91 enters Middlesex County as it briefly travels through the western part of Middletown before entering Cromwell, where it has an interchange with the Route 9 expressway.[10][11]

It then enters Hartford County in the town of Rocky Hill and then enters Wethersfield, meeting the Route 3 expressway, which leads to Glastonbury and the Route 2 expressway via the William H. Putnam Memorial Bridge over the Connecticut River. From there to St. Johnsbury, Vermont, I-91 parallels the river, never more than five miles (8.0 km) from its west bank.[12] I-91 then enters the Hartford city limits; in that city, it has a set of interchanges with US 5/Route 15 (Wilbur Cross Highway), which provides access from I-91 north to I-84 east, and from I-84 west to I-91 south via the Charter Oak Bridge.[13] I-91 then has an interchange with I-84, where all other transitions to and from I-84 take place. Before leaving the city limits, a high-occupancy vehicle lane begins that has its own set of interchanges up to exit 38.[14]

I-91 then enters Windsor and meets the western end of its other Connecticut spur route, I-291. At the Windsor–Windsor Locks town line, it meets the eastern terminus of the Route 20 expressway, which provides direct access to Bradley International Airport.[7] A couple of miles further north, I-91 crosses the Connecticut River on the Dexter Coffin Bridge into East Windsor. After traveling through East Windsor and Enfield, it crosses the state line, at milepost 58, into Longmeadow, Massachusetts.[8]

Massachusetts

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I-91 extends 55 miles (89 km) through the Pioneer Valley of western Massachusetts paralleling the Connecticut River.[15] I-91 serves as the major transportation corridor through three Massachusetts counties, linking the cities of Springfield, Northampton, and Greenfield.[15] These three cities serve as the control cities listed on guide and mileage signs, along with Brattleboro, Vermont, beginning with the first northbound conventional mileage sign (63 miles [101 km]) in Longmeadow.[16]

In Springfield, I-91 has an interchange with I-291 at exit 6 (old exit 8), a 5.44-mile-long (8.75 km) spur going eastbound to connect with the Massachusetts Turnpike, for travelers going either east toward Boston or west toward Albany, New York.[17][18] North of Springfield, I-91 briefly enters Chicopee, there is an interchange with its spur, I-391, at exit 9 (old exit 12) before turning westward to cross the Connecticut River into West Springfield. I-391 provides direct access to Holyoke, while I-91 continues on the western side of the river.[11]

Just after the river crossing, exit 11 (old exit 14) is a major interchange with the Massachusetts Turnpike (I-90). Then, I-91 enters the city of Holyoke where exit 12 (old exit 15) is located. Just after an interchange with US 202, (exit 16) I-91 goes from three lanes to two lanes in each direction to the Vermont state line.[11] After a short exit-less stretch, I-91 enters Northampton, passing the Northampton Airport and an oxbow lake. The towns of Hadley and Amherst, home to the main campus of the University of Massachusetts Amherst, are accessible from I-91 exits in Northampton via Route 9.[11]

Continuing north, I-91 enters Hatfield, where it begins a straight section—nearly six miles (9.7 km) without a bend in the road. Several exits provide access to US 5 and Route 10 in Hatfield and Whately before entering Deerfield.[19] I-91 has two exits in Greenfield. At exit 43 (old exit 26), the southern end of its overlap with Route 2, there is a rest area and visitor information center for Franklin County.[20] At exit 46 (old exit 27), also in Greenfield, is the northern end of its overlap with Route 2 where access to that road is provided via a directional T interchange and exit and entry ramps on the left side of southbound I-91. Exit 50 (old exit 28) in Bernardston is the last exit in Massachusetts. Beyond exit 50, I-91 continues for about five miles (8.0 km) more before crossing into Vermont.[16]

Massachusetts is the only state traversed by I-91 where another numbered highway is concurrent with the Interstate (in this case, US 5, for a 0.5-mile (0.80 km) spur near the Springfield–Longmeadow town line and Route 2, for approximately three miles (4.8 km) in Greenfield).[21]

Vermont

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I-91 traverses the entire length of Vermont and serves as a major transportation corridor for eastern Vermont and western New Hampshire. Due to its routing along the Connecticut River separating the two states, many exits along Vermont's length of I-91 feature New Hampshire towns on the guide signs (for example, exit 3, which lists Brattleboro and Keene, New Hampshire, as the points of access). The length of I-91 within Vermont is 177 miles (285 km) and has two lanes in each direction the entire way from the Massachusetts state line to the Canada–United States border (nearly two-thirds of I-91's length) with 29 Vermont interchanges. The highway's rural character and long distances between exits in Vermont are in stark contrast to its south, where exits are more frequent and the road carries four lanes of traffic in each direction at some points. The major control cities in Vermont are Brattleboro, White River Junction, St. Johnsbury, and Newport. When entering northbound I-91 at exit 28 in Derby, the control city sign is for Canada. Of these destinations, only Newport is a city, although the other towns are sizable. In general, the road parallels its predecessor, US 5.[22][23][24]

I-91 enters Vermont in the town of Guilford. Just before exit 1 in Brattleboro is the Vermont Welcome Center in Guilford. The first three Vermont exits (northbound) serve the town of Brattleboro. At exit 1, northbound US 5 provides access to stores and a small industrial area before reaching the south end of the town's center, where a bridge crosses the Connecticut River into Hinsdale, New Hampshire, via New Hampshire Route 119 (NH 119). Exit 2 (Vermont Route 9 [VT 9]) provides access to the western village of the town (West Brattleboro), then continues west to Marlboro, Wilmington, and Bennington. Brattleboro's main retail strip is located at and just south of the exit 3 trumpet interchange and traffic circle. Following VT 9 eastward, one can reach Keene, New Hampshire, in 15 miles (24 km).[25][26]

After exit 3, I-91 heads north to travel through the communities of Dummerston, Putney, Westminster, North Westminster, Bellows Falls, Springfield, Weathersfield, Windsor, Hartland, North Hartland and White River Junction. White River Junction, listed as a control city on mileage signs as far south as Greenfield, Massachusetts, is where I-91 and I-89 meet and provide access to many points in Vermont and New Hampshire, at exit 10.[27]

North of the interchange with I-89, I-91 continues toward St. Johnsbury and travels through Wilder and Norwich. It enters Orange County, passing through Thetford, Fairlee, Bradford, Newbury, and Wells River. It continues into the Caledonia County communities of Ryegate, Barnet and Waterford, before coming to its next major intersection in St. Johnsbury at the northern terminus of I-93, providing access to the White Mountains of New Hampshire and the Greater Boston area. Along this stretch of highway between White River Junction and St. Johnsbury, towns in Grafton County, New Hampshire, on the other side of the river can also be easily accessed. Just after exit 19, there are three exits for St. Johnsbury, including a major intersection with US 2. Along westbound US 2, the capital of Vermont, Montpelier, is eventually reached from I-91, although I-89 provides Montpelier with immediate Interstate access.[28][29]

I-91 continues northward, now following the Passumpsic River valley. It travels through Vermont's Northeast Kingdom region and the town of Lyndon. Two exits in Lyndon serve the village of Lyndonville and Lyndon State College. After exit 24, I-91 departs US 5, which it had been closely paralleling since the Massachusetts state line. I-91 follows the valley of Miller Run,[30][a] and there are no convenient services until Barton at exit 25.[31]

The Interstate proceeds through Sheffield. Here, it reaches the highest point on the road, just north of milemarker 150 on Sheffield Heights, elevation 1,856 feet (566 m).[32]

After leaving Sheffield Heights, it enters Orleans County and follows the Barton River valley north with exits in Barton, Orleans, and Derby. Exit 29 is the final US exit on I-91 just after milemarker 177 at Derby Line. Beyond the exit ramp, northbound motorists enter Canada Customs at Stanstead, Quebec, and continue into Canada on Quebec Autoroute 55 through the Eastern Townships.[33][26]

As with Connecticut and Massachusetts, US 5 closely parallels I-91 for their entire lengths in Vermont. While paralleling I-91 in Vermont, US 5 is never concurrent with the freeway but remains its own two-lane road, except for a portion in White River Junction where it is a four-lane divided surface arterial.[34][35]

Traffic and the population of each successive town tend to diminish as the road proceeds northward. The average daily traffic count for 2015 in Vermont were—St. Johnsbury (34,000), Lyndon (17,900), Barton (13,500), and Derby (Canada–United States border) (10,300).[36]

History

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A limited-access highway replacement for US 5 was planned at the federal level starting in 1944. A 1953 Massachusetts plan was funded by the Federal-Aid Highway Act of 1956, along with spur I-291 (but not I-391). The Vermont section of I-91 was built in stages from 1958 to 1965.[37] In Massachusetts from Bernardston to Northampton, I-91 follows an abandoned right-of-way of the New York, New Haven and Hartford Railroad. To support plans for urban renewal along the "low value" waterfront, the highway crossed the Connecticut River to parallel active New York, New Haven and Hartford Railroad tracks on the Springfield side of the river, bypassing West Springfield and Agawam, Massachusetts. Later, this path was perceived as cutting off the city from the river, restricting further commercial development. By 1960, a few miles in Massachusetts were completed, starting from the Connecticut and Vermont state lines. Massachusetts construction was completed from 1960s to 1970.[38]

In the 1950s–1970s, there were plans to extend I-91 to Wading River, New York, from its existing terminus in New Haven, Connecticut, via a crossing of the Long Island Sound (see "Unbuilt Long Island extension" below).[39] Vermont completed its last sections of I-91 in 1978.[40]

Starting in the 1990s, several rest areas were downgraded in Vermont, increasing distances between facilities. In 2008, Vermont closed the Springfield–Rockingham rest areas because of suspected use by drug abusers. In 2009, the northbound rest area in Hartford was closed, creating a 90-mile (140 km) gap in on-highway facilities. At the present time, there exist two intermediate rest areas with facilities in each direction, in addition to a welcome center at each end of the state. Several parking areas remain open.[41]

In the early 1990s after the I-284 project was canceled, the exit 44 interchange in East Windsor, Connecticut, was altered as it was designed to be part of the freeway. After alterations, exit 44 connected to US 5 for all traffic to get on and off. As a result, exit 43 was shut down and closed in that same time frame. Exit 43 was a northbound exit/southbound entrance on Route 510/Main Street in East Windsor, which was about 1,050 feet (320 m) away from exit 44.

After the September 11 attacks, a seldom-staffed temporary border patrol checkpoint was installed near White River Junction, Vermont, about 100 miles (160 km) from the Canada–United States border.[42]

In 2005, the Massachusetts Highway Department completed a rebuild of on- and offramps in Springfield to reduce accidents caused by weaving near the tightly spaced exits.[38]

Impact in Springfield

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I-91 in 1969, just after completion of the viaduct which would separate Springfield from the Connecticut River. St. Joseph's Church and the Campanile can be seen in the foreground, as well as an incomplete Tower Square.

During its construction in the 1960s, I-91 sliced through three Springfield neighborhoods: the North End, Metro Center, and South End, which led to urban decay in the highway's vicinity. Springfield's portion of the Interstate was widely regarded as positive progress when it was built. However, by the 2010s, it would come to be perceived as disrupting the urban fabric of riverfront neighborhoods while effectively disconnecting the Connecticut River, the Connecticut River Walk Park and the Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame from everything east of the highway—the majority of the city. I-91 was erected without tunnels, footbridges or other paths, a design choice which poses logistical problems for travel between the riverfront and the remainder of the city. This, in turn, poses problems for businesses that would like to set up along the riverfront. The placement of I-91 has left Springfield's riverfront virtually undeveloped, aside from the sliver of land surrounding the Basketball Hall of Fame.[43]

In 2010, the Urban Land Institute made recommendations for how Springfield might reconnect with its riverfront, in order to revitalize the area through urban renewal, suggesting the most cost-effective but also the most development-limiting strategy (constructing pathways beneath I-91). No decision has been reached regarding those recommendations.[44] As of 2011, academic and civic studies are still underway. Preliminary findings indicate that I-91's placement negatively impacts tourism in Springfield's Metro Center—the site of many of Springfield's historic, cultural, and entertainment venues. Springfield's most popular tourist attraction, the riverfront Basketball Hall of Fame, is separated from Metro Center by a 20-foot (6.1 m) stone wall, buttressing an elevated portion of the six-lane I-91 and greatly discouraging travel between the two areas. Academic suggestions that involve the demolition of the current highway and moving it to a less obtrusive site in the city have been proposed, including the demolition of the highway and following the original path suggested, Riverdale Road, and, least obtrusive but still requiring a great deal of work, a plan to construct numerous walkways beneath the elevated highway to better integrate the neighborhoods with the waterfront despite the highway's presence.[45]

Unbuilt Long Island extension

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A map showing the built segment of I-91 (black) and the unbuilt southern extension to Long Island (red); the never-built extension would have traversed the unbuilt New Haven–Shoreham Bridge and an upgraded William Floyd Parkway.

Between the 1950s and 1970s, officials proposed extending I-91 across the Long Island Sound from its current terminus at the I-91/I-95 interchange in New Haven, Connecticut, to Wading River, New York, by means of a bridge over the Long Island Sound, as one of the many Long Island Sound Link proposals.[39] The extension would have continued southward from Wading River to the southern shore of Long Island by the existing County Route 46 (William Floyd Parkway) in central Suffolk County—which would have been updated to Interstate Highway standards. It would also provide easier access to New York City via the Long Island Expressway (I-495), as well as to the Hamptons via New York State Route 27 (Sunrise Highway). The various proposals for this never-built extension were ultimately dropped after a 1979 study of the concept.[46] Following this, officials proposed to connect the New Haven and Shoreham–Wading River areas by means of ferry service across the Long Island Sound—however, the plans to implement these cross-sound ferry services were ultimately mothballed, as well.[47]

Despite the cancelation of the bridge, many Long Islanders are still in favor of building one.[48] In 2000, a survey was conducted by News 12 Networks and Newsday, which found that the majority (63 percent) of Long Islanders were in support of such a project.[48]

In 2016, the proposal was again renewed by New York Governor Andrew Cuomo, as either a bridge or a tunnel.[48] However, these plans were also dropped, as announced by the New York State Department of Transportation in 2018.[48]

Exit list

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All interchanges in Massachusetts were to be renumbered to milepost-based numbers under a project scheduled to start in 2016. However, this project was indefinitely postponed until November 18, 2019, when the Massachusetts Department of Transportation (MassDOT) confirmed that, beginning in the middle of 2020, the exit renumbering project will begin.[49][26] On March 1, 2021, MassDOT confirmed that the exit renumbering on I-91 will start on March 3, and it will last for two weeks. In 2020, Vermont added "milepoint exit" numbers to existing signs, essentially marking each interchange with two exit numbers.[50] Connecticut will not implement the new exit numbers on I-91 until approximately 2027.[51]


StateCountyLocation[16][52]mi[16][53][54]kmOld exit
[55]
New exit
[56]
DestinationsNotes
ConnecticutNew HavenNew Haven0.000.001A 
 
I-95 south – New York City
Southern terminus
0.090.1411B 
 
Oak Street Connector (Route 34 west) – Downtown New Haven
Southbound exit and northbound entrance; signed as MLK Boulevard, formerly Route 34. [57]
1C 
 
I-95 north – New London
Southbound exit and northbound entrance; exit 48 on I-95
0.631.0121DHamilton StreetSouthbound exit and northbound entrance
0.99–
1.02
1.59–
1.64
31ETrumbull Street
1.302.094 (SB)
5 (NB)
1F 
 
US 5 north (State Street) – Fair Haven
US 5 not signed southbound
1.44–
2.15
2.32–
3.46
62A  US 5 / Willow Street / Blatchley AvenueUS 5 not signed northbound
72Ferry Street – Fair HavenSouthbound exit and northbound entrance
2.784.4782B   Route 17 (Middletown Avenue) / Route 80 – North Branford
North Haven4.817.7494Montowese Avenue
6.6310.67106  Route 40 – Mount Carmel, Hamden, CheshireAlso serves Quinnipiac University; Cheshire not signed southbound
7.7212.42117  Route 22 – North HavenNorthbound exit and southbound entrance
8.5813.81128  US 5 (Washington Avenue)
Wallingford10.9417.611310 
 
To US 5 – Wallingford, North Haven
Access via SR 702
12.3019.791413  Route 150 (Woodhouse Avenue) – WallingfordNorthbound exit and southbound entrance
13.2521.32  Route 150 / East Center Street – WallingfordSouthbound exit and northbound entrance
16.0125.771516  Route 68 – Yalesville, Durham
Meriden19.2230.931619AEast Main StreetNorthbound exit and southbound entrance
18.8730.371719B 
 
 
 
I-691 west / Route 15 north (Wilbur Cross Parkway)
Northbound exit and southbound entrance; Wilbur Cross Parkway. signed as Berlin Turnpike.
19.7431.77 
 
Route 15 south (Wilbur Cross Parkway) / East Main Street
Southbound exit and northbound entrance
20.1132.361820 
 
Route 66 east – Middlefield, Middletown
No southbound exit
 
 
 
 
I-691 west / Route 15 north (Wilbur Cross Parkway) – Meriden, Waterbury
Southbound exit and northbound entrance; Wilbur Cross Parkway. signed as Berlin Turnpike.
21.1434.021921Baldwin Avenue / Preston AvenueSouthbound exit and northbound entrance
MiddlesexMiddletown23.1637.272023Country Club Road / Middle Street
Cromwell25.7441.422125  Route 372 – Cromwell, Berlin
27.28–
27.43
43.90–
44.14
2227  Route 9 – New Britain, Middletown, Old SaybrookSigned as exits 27A (north) and 27B (south)
HartfordRocky Hill29.3947.302329 
 
To Route 3 – Rocky Hill
Access via SSR 411
31.6750.972431  Route 99 – Wethersfield, Rocky Hill
Wethersfield33.67–
34.13
54.19–
54.93
2533  Route 3 – Glastonbury, WethersfieldSigned as exits 33A (north) and 33B (south) southbound; no northbound access to Route 3 south
2634Old WethersfieldAccess via Marsh Street
Hartford35.54–
36.55
57.20–
58.82
2735A  Brainard Road / Airport Road (SR 530 west)Northbound exit and southbound entrance
28-2935B-36   
 
 
US 5 / Route 15 to I-84 east (US 6 east / US 44 east) / Berlin Turnpike – Wethersfield, Newington, East Hartford, Boston
Signed as exits 35B (south) and 36 (north); no southbound access to Route 15 north; US 5/Berlin Turnpike not signed northbound
37.5560.4329A37Capitol AreaAccess via SR 598; former proposed I-484; northbound left exit
38.18–
38.47
61.44–
61.91
3238  I-84 (US 6 / US 44) / Trumbull Street – WaterburySigned as exits 38A (west) and 38B (east); exits 50-52 on I-84; I-84 east not signed
3038C 
 
 
 
 
I-84 east (US 6 east / US 44 east) to Route 2 east – East Hartford, New London
Southbound exit and northbound entrance; exit 51 on I-84
3138DState StreetNo northbound exit
39.5563.65Leibert RoadSouthbound exit and northbound entrance for HOV only; southern terminus of HOV lanes
39.8664.153339Jennings Road
Windsor41.1466.213441 
 
Route 159 north (Windsor Avenue) / Main Street
Signed for Route 159 northbound, Main Street southbound
42.20–
42.22
67.91–
67.95
3542 
 
  I-291 east / Route 218 – Windsor, Bloomfield, Manchester
Signed as exits 42A (I-291) and 42B (Route 218); exits 1A-C on I-291
42.2267.95  Route 218 – WindsorNorthbound exit and southbound entrance for HOV only
43.5270.043643  Route 178 (Park Avenue) – Bloomfield
44.5071.623744  Route 305 (Bloomfield Avenue) – Windsor CenterAdditional northbound exit and southbound entrance for HOV lanes
45.9974.01  Route 75 – PoquonockNorthbound exit and southbound entrance for HOV only
3845  Route 75 / Day Hill Road – Poquonock, WindsorSigned as exits 45B (Day Hill Road) and 45A (Route 75) southbound
46.69–
46.98
75.14–
75.61
Northern terminus of HOV lanes
Windsor Locks47.4476.3539-4147Kennedy Road to Center StreetNorthbound exit and southbound entrance
48.2277.604048 
 
  Route 20 west – Bradley International Airport
Eastern terminus of Route 20
48.6278.2541-3948ACenter StreetSouthbound exit only
49.5879.794249  Route 159 – Windsor Locks
Connecticut River49.58–
49.90
79.79–
80.31
Dexter Coffin Bridge
East Windsor50.3381.004450 
 
US 5 south – East Windsor
51.0982.224551  Route 140 – Warehouse Point, Ellington
Enfield52.7484.884652  US 5 (King Street)
55.5789.434755  Route 190 – Hazardville, Somers, SuffieldSigned as exits 55A (east) and 55B (west)
56.1090.284856  Route 220 (Elm Street) – Thompsonville
57.7392.914957  US 5 (Enfield Street) – Longmeadow, Mass
 58.00
0.000
93.34
0.000
Connecticut–Massachusetts line
MassachusettsHampdenSpringfield3.8366.1731 
 
US 5 south – Forest Park, Longmeadow
Southbound exit and northbound entrance; southern terminus of US 5 concurrency
3.6945.9452 
 
Route 83 south – Forest Park, East Longmeadow
No southbound exit
4.1426.6663 
 
 
 
 
US 5 north to Route 57 west / East Columbus Avenue – West Springfield, Agawam
Northern terminus of US 5 concurrency; Columbus Avenue not signed southbound
4.5687.3515
4
4Broad Street / Main StreetNorthbound exit only
4.7227.599 
 
Route 83 south (Main Street) – East Longmeadow
Southbound exit only
5.2538.45465AUnion Street / MGM Way – Downtown SpringfieldSigned as exit 5 northbound; Union Street not signed northbound
5.9899.63875BHall of Fame Avenue – Downtown SpringfieldSouthbound exit and northbound entrance
6.29510.13186 
 
 
 
 
 
 
I-291 east / US 20 east to I-90 east / Mass Pike east – Boston
I-90 / Mass Pike not signed southbound; western terminus and exits 1A-B on I-291
6.67710.74697 
 
 
 
US 20 west / Route 20A east – West Springfield, Westfield
No southbound exit; signed as exits 7A (east) and 7B (west)
7.17611.54910
11
8  Route 116 (Main Street)Northbound exit and entrance
7.48112.040 
 
 
Birnie Avenue to US 20 west – West Springfield
Southbound exit only
Chicopee8.28913.340129 
 
I-391 north – Chicopee, Holyoke
Southern terminus and exits 1A-B on I-391
West Springfield9.177–
9.184
14.769–
14.780
1310  US 5 (Riverdale Street) – West SpringfieldSigned as exits 13A (north) and 13B (south)
11.54718.5831411   I-90 / Mass Pike / US 5 – Boston, Albany NYExit 45 on I-90 / Mass Pike; US 5 not signed
Holyoke12.39619.9491512Lower Westfield Road – Ingleside
14.21822.8821614  US 202 – Holyoke, South Hadley
15.18824.4431715  Route 141 – Holyoke, EasthamptonSigned as exits 15A (east) and 15B (west) northbound[56]
HampshireNorthampton22.81636.7191823  US 5 – Northampton, EasthamptonAlso serves Smith College
24.76039.8471925  Route 9 – Hadley, AmherstNorthbound exit and southbound entrance, also serves Cooley Dickinson Hospital, Northampton VA Hospital
26.01641.8692026    US 5 / Route 10 / Route 9 – Northampton, HadleySouthbound exit and northbound entrance
27.27743.8982127   US 5 / Route 10 – Hatfield
Hatfield29.93848.1812230   US 5 / Route 10 – North Hatfield, WhatelyNorthbound exit and southbound entrance
FranklinWhately32.30951.9962332   US 5 / Route 10 – Whately, North HatfieldSouthbound exit and northbound entrance
34.70955.8592435   
 
US 5 / Route 10 to Route 116 – Deerfield, Conway
No northbound entrance
Deerfield35.89157.7612536  Route 116 – Deerfield, ConwaySouthbound exit and northbound entrance
Greenfield43.01169.2192643 
 
 
 
Route 2 west / Route 2A east – Greenfield Center, North Adams
Southern terminus of Route 2 concurrency; also serves John W. Olver Transit Center, Mass MoCA, Shelburne Falls, Bridge of Flowers
45.75273.6312746 
 
Route 2 east – Boston
Northern terminus of Route 2 concurrency, left exit and entry on southbound side
Bernardston50.36081.0472850  Route 10 – Bernardston, NorthfieldSigned as exits 50A (north) and 50B (south) northbound[56]
 54.90
0.000
88.35
0.000
Massachusetts–Vermont line
VermontWindhamBrattleboro7.48012.03817  
 
US 5 to VT 142 – Brattleboro, Guilford
Also serves Vernon and Hinsdale, NH
9.09514.63728 
 
VT 9 west – Brattleboro, Bennington
Also serves Manchester via VT 30, Marlboro College, and Wilmington
11.55018.588311  
 
US 5 / VT 9 east – Brattleboro, Keene NH
Also serves World Learning SIT Graduate Institute
Putney17.95228.891418  US 5 – PutneyAlso serves Landmark College
Town of Westminster28.61046.043528 
 
 
 
To US 5 / VT 123 – Westminster, Bellows Falls, Walpole, NH
Rockingham35.20056.649635  
 
VT 103 to US 5 – Rockingham, Rutland, Bellows Falls
Also serves Chester and Ludlow
WindsorSpringfield41.69067.094741   US 5 / VT 11 – SpringfieldAlso serves Charlestown, NH and the Fort at Number 4
Weathersfield51.37082.672851  
 
 
 
VT 131 to US 5 / VT 12 – Ascutney, Windsor
Also serves Ludlow and Claremont, NH; Romaine Tenney Memorial Park at exit
Hartland60.45097.285960   US 5 / VT 12 – Hartland, WindsorAlso serves Woodstock and Killington
Hartford69.810112.3481069  I-89 – Concord, NH, Barre, MontpelierSigned as exits 69A (south) & 69B (north); formerly exits 10S-N; exits 1A-B northbound/1 southbound on I-89.
70.200112.9761170  US 5 – White River JunctionAlso serves VA Hospital
72.010115.8891272 
 
To US 5 – Wilder, White River Junction
Norwich74.830120.4271374   US 5 / VT 10A – Norwich, Hanover, NHAlso serves Montshire Museum of Science
OrangeThetford84.210135.5231484  
 
VT 113 to US 5 – Thetford
Also serves Chelsea and Lyme, NH
Fairlee91.540147.3191591  US 5 – Fairlee, Orford, NHAlso serves Lake Morey and Lake Fairlee
Bradford97.630157.1201697  
 
VT 25 to US 5 – Bradford, Barre
Also serves Newbury and Piermont, NH
Town of Newbury110.340177.57517110  
 
US 302 to US 5 – Wells River, Woodsville, NH
Also serves South Ryegate and Groton
CaledoniaBarnet120.450193.84518120 
 
To US 5 – Barnet, Peacham
Also serves West Barnet, Monroe, NH, McIndoe Falls, and East Ryegate
St. Johnsbury128.250206.39819128 
 
I-93 south – Littleton, NH
Northern terminus of I-93, exits 11A-B on I-93; tri-stack interchange.
128.890207.42820129  US 5 – St. Johnsbury, Passumpsic
130.600210.18021130  US 2 – St. Johnsbury, MontpelierAlso serves Danville and Hardwick
132.550213.31922132 
 
To US 5 – St. Johnsbury
Lyndon137.110220.65723137  
 
US 5 to VT 114 – Lyndonville, East Burke
Also serves Lyndon State College
140.178225.59524139  
 
 
 
VT 122 to US 5 / VT 114 – Sheffield, Burke, Lyndonville
Also serves Caledonia County Airport
OrleansBarton155.950250.97725155  
 
VT 16 to US 5 – Barton, Glover
Also serves Hardwick and Crystal Lake
BartonOrleans
Irasburg tripoint
161.410259.76426161   US 5 / VT 58 – Orleans, IrasburgAlso serves Lake Willoughby and Jay
Derby170.060273.68527170  
 
 
 
VT 191 to US 5 / VT 105 – Newport
Also serves Lake Memphremagog
172.400277.45128172   US 5 / VT 105 – Newport, Derby CenterAlso serves Seymour Lake and Lake Memphremagog
177.269285.28729177 
 
To US 5 – Derby Line
Last exit in the United States
177.432285.549Derby Line–Rock Island Border Crossing
  A-55 north – Magog, Sherbrooke, MontréalContinuation into Quebec
1.000 mi = 1.609 km; 1.000 km = 0.621 mi
 
I-91 looking north in Downtown Hartford at the I-84 interchange. The Bulkeley Bridge is visible to the right.

See also

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Explanatory notes

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  1. ^ Miller Run feeds southeast into the Passumpsic River.

References

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  1. ^ a b Starks, Edward (January 27, 2022). "Table 1: Main Routes of the Dwight D. Eisenhower National System of Interstate and Defense Highways". FHWA Route Log and Finder List. Federal Highway Administration. Archived from the original on July 3, 2017. Retrieved December 10, 2022.
  2. ^ "New Haven, CT" (Map). Google Maps. Retrieved June 8, 2009.
  3. ^ "Background Information on the Interstate". Town of Berlin, Connecticut. Archived from the original on December 30, 2017. Retrieved December 29, 2017.
  4. ^ Rogers, Barbara (2003). Massachusetts Off the Beaten Path: A Guide to Unique Places. Globe Pequot Press. ISBN 9780762726059. Archived from the original on January 14, 2023. Retrieved August 19, 2019 – via Google Books.
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  9. ^ Connecticut Department of Transportation. "ConnDOT: Nighttime Installation of Rumble Strips on Route 40 in North Haven and Hamden and I-91 in Wallingford". Connecticut Department of Transportation. Archived from the original on August 10, 2018. Retrieved August 10, 2018.
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  13. ^ Connecticut Department of Transportation. "Department of Transportation Event Detail". www.ct.gov. The State of Connecticut. Archived from the original on August 11, 2018. Retrieved August 10, 2018.
  14. ^ Glaze, Mark; Perritt, Karen (June 28, 2017). "I-84 HOV Lanes-Hartford, Connecticut". Federal Highway Administration. Archived from the original on August 15, 2018. Retrieved August 15, 2018.
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  17. ^ "I-91 Springfield viaduct project ahead of schedule". Greenfield Recorder. January 2, 2018. Archived from the original on August 11, 2018. Retrieved August 10, 2018.
  18. ^ Fay, Tony (April 8, 2016). "Cone Zone Alert: Interstate 91 Exit 8". Springfield, Massachusetts: WWLP-TV. Archived from the original on October 1, 2020. Retrieved August 15, 2018.
  19. ^ "I-91 to 40 Old State Rd" (Map). Google Maps. Retrieved August 10, 2018.
  20. ^ "Service Plaza Locations". Mass.gov. Archived from the original on August 9, 2018. Retrieved August 10, 2018.
  21. ^ "Concurrent Roads" (PDF). ctps.org. Archived (PDF) from the original on December 29, 2019. Retrieved December 29, 2017.
  22. ^ "Interstate 91 in Vermont" (Map). Google Maps. Retrieved August 13, 2019.
  23. ^ Tree, Christina; Foulds, Diane E. (2009). Explorer's Guide Vermont. The Countryman Press. ISBN 9780881508482. Archived from the original on January 14, 2023. Retrieved August 17, 2019.
  24. ^ Tree, Christina; Hamm, Christine; Imbrie, Katherine (2010). Explorer's Guide New Hampshire. The Countryman Press. ISBN 9780881508413. Archived from the original on January 14, 2023. Retrieved August 17, 2019.
  25. ^ "Vermont Border to Franklin Pierce Highway" (Map). Google Maps. Retrieved August 13, 2019.
  26. ^ a b c "Vermont I-91 Exits" (PDF). vtransmaps.vermont.gov. Vermont Transportation. Archived (PDF) from the original on May 19, 2017. Retrieved August 15, 2018.
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  28. ^ Halvorsen, Lisa; O'Brien, Pat Goudey; Tree, Christina (2018). Explorer's Guide Vermont (Fifteenth ed.). The Countryman Press. ISBN 9781682681671. Archived from the original on January 14, 2023. Retrieved August 17, 2019.
  29. ^ "White River Junction to St. Johnsbury" (Map). Google Maps. Retrieved August 13, 2019.
  30. ^ "Passumpsic River Valley" (PDF). dec.vermont.gov. Vermont Department of Environmental Conservation. Archived (PDF) from the original on May 15, 2017. Retrieved August 10, 2018.
  31. ^ "Trucker's Exit Guide to Interstate 91" (PDF). truckerguide.com. Trucker Guide Inc. Archived from the original (PDF) on June 26, 2015. Retrieved August 10, 2018.
  32. ^ "Highest Elevation on I-91 - Sheffield, Vermont - Elevation Signs on Waymarking.com". www.waymarking.com. Waymarking. Archived from the original on August 16, 2018. Retrieved August 15, 2018.
  33. ^ "I-91 to 1 Autoroute 55" (Map). Google Maps. Retrieved August 15, 2018.
  34. ^ Stallings, Doug (2004). Fodor's Where to Weekend Around Boston, 1st Edition. Fodor's Travel Publications. p. 197. ISBN 9781400013012. Archived from the original on January 14, 2023. Retrieved August 15, 2018.
  35. ^ "I-91 to 1 Autoroute 55 Route 5 Parallel" (Map). Google Maps. Retrieved August 15, 2018.
  36. ^ "Interstate 91 Traffic Statistics" (PDF). vtrans.vermont.gov. Vermont Agency of Transportation. Archived (PDF) from the original on August 15, 2018. Retrieved August 12, 2018.
  37. ^ "Building of Vermont section". digital.vpr.net. November 21, 2013. Archived from the original on January 6, 2018. Retrieved January 5, 2018.
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  39. ^ a b Madden, Steve. "Spanning the Sound". Newsday. Archived from the original on July 10, 2004. Retrieved September 18, 2015.{{cite news}}: CS1 maint: unfit URL (link)
  40. ^ Division for Historic Preservation (n.d.). "Vermont History Timeline". HistoricVermont.org. Vermont Agency of Commerce and Community Development. Archived from the original on September 27, 2011. Retrieved December 17, 2011.
  41. ^ "Drugs, Sex Force Rest Stop Closure". Rutland Herald. Associated Press. December 10, 2008. Archived from the original on July 5, 2009. Retrieved May 10, 2009.
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  46. ^ Stannard, Charles (May 14, 2002). "The Bridge That Never Was: Cable Flap Brings To Mind Sound-Crossing Controversy". Hartford Courant. Archived from the original on September 23, 2015. Retrieved September 18, 2015.
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