Physics Daily - Physics Encyclopedia and Research Articles
      Back to Physics Daily Main Menu Go to Index of Topics/Articles

California State Route 82

(Redirected from California State Highway 82)

California State Route 82 runs from U.S. Highway 101 at Blossom Hill Road in San Jose to Interstate 280 in San Francisco following the San Francisco Peninsula. It forms part of El Camino Real.

Contents

Route Description

Route 82 begins its journey at Route 101 and Blossom Hill Road, where it heads north onto Monterey Hill Road. Upon approaching downtown San Jose and passing under Interstate 280 (with no direct interchange), the street renames itself to Market Street. In less than a mile, Route 82 turns west on San Carlos Street through the financial and cultural district of San Jose, then quickly turns north on Montgomery Street and Autumn Street where it quickly turns again west onto The Alameda at the HP Pavilion. Once it enters Santa Clara, Route 82 turns north onto El Camino Real, where it continues for the remainder of its trip up the peninsula. Route 82 runs through the dense cities of San Mateo, San Carlos, Santa Clara, California, and Colma, with a BART line running loosely parallel to it. Exiting Daly City, El Camino Real connects with San Francisco's Mission Street, though now it flows more naturally into Alemany Boulevard .

Route 82 takes an inland course paralleling the Bayshore Freeway (U.S. Highway 101). The entire route is street-running and has at least four lanes of traffic; no portions of it exist as a freeway, although the route is occassionally a divided highway. The Bayshore Freeway and the Junipero Serra Freeway (I-280) tend to provide faster alternatives than Route 82 even during traffic jams on those freeways.

From 1964-1968, Route 82 continued past its current end north on Alemany Boulevard to Bayshore Boulevard in San Francisco (see below).

Legal Definition

"Route 82 is from Route 101 near Blossom Hill Road in San Jose to Route 280 in San Francisco." [CS&HC Sec. 382]

History

Originally a segment of U.S. Highway 101 (and before that, the historic El Camino Real), rapid growth of the San Francisco Bay Area after World War II, including urbanization of the towns along its path, made it completely inadequate for the needs of traffic. The Bayshore Highway to the east was later upgraded to a freeway and was originally built as "Bypass U.S. 101".

In 1964, U.S. Highway 101 was officially moved onto the Bayshore Freeway (now Route 101), and its former alignment on El Camino Real became Route 82. It was defined as two portions: From Route 101 near Ford Road south of San Jose to Route 101 in San Francisco (which today corresponds to the Alemany Maze ), and from Route 101 near Alemany Boulevard to Route 87 (current unbuilt Route 230 ) in San Francisco. In 1968, the portions from Route 280 (at current Route 82) to Route 101 and from Route 101 to Route 87 were transferred to Route 280. Route 82 today is designated as part of El Camino Real.

Points of Interest

Junctions and Mile Posts

The California State Highway System
Route 81

[CS&HC Sec. 381]

Route 83

[CS&HC Sec. 383]

Route 82

[CS&HC Sec. 382]

JUNCTION MILE POST
101 SCL 0.00
280 SCL 6.91
87 SCL 7.74
880 SCL 9.91
85 SCL 18.84
237 SCL 19.09
84 SM 3.34
92 SM 10.55
380 SM 18.96
280 SF 0.22

See Also

External Links

07-10-2008 09:35:13
The contents of this article are licensed from Wikipedia.org under the GNU Free Documentation License. How to see transparent copy
 
PhysicsDaily.com Legal info