| Interstate 80 Main route of the Interstate Highway System |
|||||||||||||
| Maintained by OTC and Ohio DOT | |||||||||||||
| Length: | 237.48 mi[1] (382.19 km) | ||||||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Formed: | 1956 | ||||||||||||
| West end: | |||||||||||||
| Major junctions: |
|||||||||||||
| East end: | |||||||||||||
|
|||||||||||||
In the U.S. state of Ohio, Interstate 80 runs across the northern part of the state. Most of the route is part of the Ohio Turnpike, with only an 18.78-mile (30.22 km) stretch not being on the toll road. That stretch of road is the feeder route to the Keystone Shortway, a shortcut through northern Pennsylvania that provides access to New York City.
History
Although I-80 presently uses the Ohio Turnpike across most of the state, it was once planned to split between Norwalk and Edinburg, with Interstate 80N passing through Cleveland and Interstate 80S passing through Akron.
| This section requires expansion. |
Exit list
| County | Location | # | Destinations | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| See Ohio Turnpike (exits 0 to 218) | ||||
| Mahoning | East end of Ohio Tpk. overlap; west end of I-76 overlap | |||
| East end of I-76 overlap | ||||
| CR 18 (Mahoning Avenue) | Exit and entrance to and from turnpike only | |||
| 223 | ||||
| 224A | West end of SR 11 overlap; signed as exit 224 westbound | |||
| 224B | Westbound exit is via exit 228A | |||
| Trumbull | 226 | Salt Springs Road | ||
| 227 | ||||
| 228A | Westbound exit and eastbound entrance | |||
| 228B | East end of SR 11 overlap; signed as exit 228 eastbound | |||
| 229 | ||||
| 234 | Signed as exits 234A (west/south) and 234B (east/north) eastbound | |||
References
| Previous state: Indiana |
Ohio | Next state: Pennsylvania |
This entry is from Wikipedia, the leading user-contributed encyclopedia. It may not have been reviewed by professional editors (see full disclaimer)




