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State Route 28 (SR 28) in the U.S. state of Virginia is a primary state highway that traverses the counties of Loudoun, Fairfax, Prince William, and Fauquier in the U.S. state of Virginia. The route serves as a major artery in the Northern Virginia region, with it being an important two-lane highway in rural Fauquier and Prince William Counties, the main thoroughfare through Manassas and Manassas Park, and a high-capacity freeway through Fairfax and Loudoun Counties.

Route description

From SR 28's southern terminus to Nokesville, it is a two-lane rural highway, called Catlett Road through Fauquier County and Nokesville Road in Prince William County where it becomes a 4-lane divided highway up to Manassas. Through downtown Manassas, the route follows one-way streets, with VA 28 westbound following Church Street and eastbound following Center Street and Zebedee Street. From thereon to Centreville in Fairfax County, the road is called Centreville Road. Between Fairfax and Loudoun Counties up to its northern terminus, VA 28 is a six-lane freeway called Sully Road.

Fauquier County

SR 28 northbound in Bealeton

Route 28 starts as Catlett Road at busy US 29/US 15 in Fauquier County just north of Culpeper County, and intersects US 17 about 3 miles (4.8 km) from its beginning. It is two lanes throughout rural Fauquier County with a speed limit of 45 miles per hour (72 km/h) and passes by farms and agricultural areas. Most of the way through Fauquier County Route 28 runs parallel to Norfolk Southern railroad tracks in order to serve the towns that are placed along them. Several historical markers can be seen along Route 28 as it passes through Fauquier including Supreme Court Justice John Marshall's birthplace and the raid on Catlett Station. For many years the old bridge for Route 28 could be seen just outside Catlett. Historically, the Catlett Fire Department Parade would close Route 28 for several hours each spring, however, this practice was discontinued as traffic became heavier in the 1990s.

Prince William County

Upon entering Prince William County at Nokesville, SR 28 changes its name to Nokesville Road. At Nokesville, it expands from two to four lanes before reaching SR 215. Further north, it reaches its first grade-separated interchange at SR 234/Prince William Parkway, south of the City of Manassas.

The next interchange is at Wellington Road in Manassas, mostly to grade-separate the crossing of SR 28 with nearby railroad tracks. This interchange was built as an $18.3 million project and certified under the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009 on October 5, 2009. The contract for construction of this interchange was awarded on July 14, 2010.[2]

SR 28 is a main thoroughfare through Manassas, and separates into a one-way pair of Church and Center Streets in front of a Confederate cemetery. The split routes run through the center of the city and rejoin several blocks later, merging into Centreville Road. The road passes briefly through Manassas Park and then passes through Yorkshire as SR 28 leaves Prince William County where crossing Bull Run into Centreville, Fairfax County.

Fairfax County

VA 28/Centreville Road enters Fairfax County at Centreville, at which point it transitions from an undivided to a divided highway. It starts as a suburban arterial with only at-grade intersections, widening to six lanes at an intersection with Machen Road on the south side of Centreville. In the middle of Centreville, VA 28 transitions into Sully Road and becomes a fully controlled-access freeway, where it crosses U.S. Route 29 at a partial cloverleaf interchange and Interstate 66 at a system interchange with flyovers. Up until 2020, the section of VA 28 between Centreville and Chantilly had signalized intersections at I 66, Braddock Road (SR 620), and Ellanor C. Lawrence Park and was only built to expressway standards. The intersections of since been replaced by overpasses and flyovers as part of the Transform 66 project, which included several improvements to the I 66 corridor through the late 2010s and early 2020s.

View south along SR 28 from Air and Space Museum Parkway on the border of Oak Hill and Chantilly

After a cloverleaf interchange with Westfields Boulevard (SR 662), Route 28 enters Chantilly. The highway travels through a single-point urban interchange with Willard Road and continues through Chantilly. Route 28 then enters Oak Hill and heads north along the eastern edge of the Washington Dulles International Airport. The next interchanges are for US 50 in Chantilly, the Steven F. Udvar-Hazy Center (an annex of the National Air and Space Museum), McLearen Road, and Frying Pan Road on the south end of Herndon. The road then exits into Loudoun County.

Loudoun County

SR 28 northbound at SR 267 exit in Dulles

The first interchange in Loudoun County is at the entrance to Dulles Airport, with access to the airport itself, to the Dulles Toll/Access Road (State Route 267) and Dulles Greenway, and to Innovation Avenue (State Route 209). Continuing north through Loudoun County, Route 28 has interchanges with Old Ox Road and Sterling Boulevard, the former also servicing Herndon. The next interchange is an elaborate interchange with Route 625, Waxpool Road and Church Road, which lead into Ashburn and Sterling, respectively. This interchange features two exits for Waxpool Road from the northbound lanes of Route 28: a left flyover and right loop ramp.

Heading north, Route 28 passes through the industrial and commercial areas of Dulles. It is still known as Sully Road through this stretch, although within Loudoun County it is co-designated as Darrell Green Boulevard, after the former Washington Commanders Hall of Famer (the team's official headquarters is in Ashburn), whose uniform number was 28.[3] A northbound-only, exit-only ramp at Warp Drive is followed by a partial cloverleaf serving Gloucester Parkway and Nokes Boulevard. This interchange leads to both Ashburn and the Dulles Town Center shopping mall. Route 28 ends at VA 7 in Sterling in a complete directional T interchange.

History

SR 28 is one of two routes to survive from the 1918 inception of Virginia's state route system without being completely decommissioned or renumbered, the other being SR 10. However, due to extensions, truncations, and partial renumberings, the current SR 28 contains no portion of the earliest routing, which ran near present-day U.S. 29 from Lovingston in Nelson County to Charlottesville.[1]

Improvement project

In 1987, Virginia authorized the creation of special tax districts. Fairfax and Loudoun Counties quickly formed the first transportation improvement district in the Commonwealth, by imposing a 20 cent per $100 real estate surcharge on commercial and industrial property located near Route 28. The surcharge financed bonds to pay for improvements to Route 28. From 1988 to 1991, 14 miles (23 km) of Route 28 were widened from two lanes to six lanes and interchanges were built at US 50, VA 7 and VA 267.[4]

SR 28 southbound at the US 50 interchange in Chantilly

The completion schedule for each funded interchange and roadway is as follows:

  • Air & Space Museum Parkway Interchange – Completed Summer 2004
  • SR 625 Interchange – Completed
  • SR 625 Interchange (Waxpool/Church Roads), Flyover Bridge & Waxpool Road widening – Completed Fall 2005
  • Church Road Widening and W&OD Trail Bridge – Completed Fall 2006
  • SR 606 Interchange (Old Ox Road) – Completed Spring 2005
  • SR 662 Interchange (Westfields Boulevard) – Completed Fall 2005
  • SR 668 Interchange (McLearen Road) – Completed Spring 2006
  • SR 846 Interchange (Sterling Boulevard) – Completed Spring 2007
  • SR 607 (Loudoun County Parkway) – Completed Summer 2006
  • SR 657 (Centreville Road) – Completed Fall 2007
  • Pacific Boulevard (between Sterling Blvd. and Cedar Green Rd.) – Completed Spring 2007
  • Willard Road Interchange – Completed Summer 2009
  • SR 608 Interchange (Frying Pan Road) – Completed Spring 2010
  • SR 209 (Innovation Avenue) – right-in, right-out – Completed Fall 2007
  • SR 1793 Interchange (Nokes Boulevard/Dulles Town Center) – Completed Summer 2009
  • Warp Drive (formerly Steeplechase Drive), converted from at-grade intersection to northbound exit ramp only – completed fall 2011
  • Pacific Boulevard (between Severn Way and Nokes Blvd.) – Fall 2009
  • Braddock/Walney Roads Intersection – Completed Spring 2007[5]
  • SR 209, full interchange – Construction began Fall 2011, completed early 2017.[6]
  • Atlantic Boulevard (extension to Church Road) – Construction began Spring 2010, completed December 2011.[7]
  • Interstate 66/Braddock Road/Walney Road interchange reconstruction and Poplar Tree Road overpass – construction began April 2018[8]

VA 28 was widened to four lanes southbound between Waxpool Road and Innovation Avenue in January 2017, and northbound between McLearen Road and VA 267 in June 2017.[9] For a decade there have also been proposals to extend Route 28 to north to connect it with Interstate 370 in Gaithersburg, Maryland over a Techway Bridge across the Potomac River.[10] The Loudoun County Board of Supervisors most recently endorsed the bridge at a summer 2017 transportation summit, although Montgomery County, Maryland remains adamantly opposed to the project.[11]

Major intersections

All exits are unnumbered.

CountyLocationmi[12]kmDestinationsNotes
FauquierRemington0.000.00 US 15 / US 29 (James Madison Highway) / SR 657 (Kings Hill Road) – Culpeper, WarrentonSouthern terminus
Bealeton2.303.70 US 17 (Marsh Road) – Warrenton, Fredericksburg
Prince WilliamBristow18.8430.32
SR 215 west (Vint Hill Road)
18.9630.51 SR 619 (Linton Hall Road) – Gainesville, Bristow, Independent Hill
City of Manassas20.3632.77
SR 234 to I-66 – Dumfries
Partial cloverleaf interchange with flyover ramps
23.2337.39
SR 234 Bus. (Grant Avenue)
City of Manassas Park24.8940.06 SR 213 (Manassas Drive)
FairfaxCentreville29.6547.72South end of freeway section


US 29 to I-66 west – Fairfax, Gainesville, Front Royal
Partial cloverleaf interchange
30.1948.59 I-66 – Front Royal, WashingtonI-66 exit 53; no direct access from SR 28 north to I-66 west or I-66 east to SR 28 south
30.5049.08Braddock Road/Walney RoadNorthbound exit and southbound entrance
Chantilly32.2651.92 SR 662 (Westfields Boulevard)
33.2653.53Willard Road (SR 6215/SR 8407)Single-point urban interchange
34.1454.94 US 50 (Lee Jackson Memorial Highway) – Fairfax, WinchesterCloverleaf interchange
35.4757.08 SR 7833 (Air and Space Museum Parkway) – Sully Historic Site, Steven F. Udvar-Hazy CenterCloverleaf interchange
Herndon36.5358.79 SR 668 (McLearen Road)Trumpet interchange
37.7560.75 SR 608 (Frying Pan Road)Trumpet interchange
LoudounSterling38.9862.73

SR 267 Toll east / Dulles Toll Road – Washington
SR 267 exit 9


SR 267 Toll west – Leesburg
SR 267 exit 9A; northbound left exit and southbound entrance
39.4863.54 SR 209 (Innovation Avenue)Trumpet interchange
39.9864.34

SR 606 (Old Ox Road) to US 50 west – Herndon
Cloverleaf interchange
40.6065.34 SR 846 (Sterling Boulevard)Partial cloverleaf interchange
41.7367.16 SR 625 (Waxpool Road / Church Road) – Ashburn, Sterling, Pacific Boulevard south
42.3168.09Warp DriveNorthbound exit only
43.9170.67 SR 1793 (Nokes Boulevard / Gloucester Parkway) – Ashburn, Dulles Town CenterCloverleaf interchange
44.8972.24 SR 1582 (Algonkian Parkway)Southbound entrance only

SR 7 west (Harry Byrd Highway) – Leesburg, Winchester, Inova Health System Loudoun Hospital
Northern terminus

SR 7 east (Harry Byrd Highway) – Tysons Corner, Falls Church
1.000 mi = 1.609 km; 1.000 km = 0.621 mi

References

  1. ^ a b "VA 28". Archived from the original on June 1, 2012. Retrieved March 31, 2012.
  2. ^ "ARRA Project Tracking Sheet" (PDF). p. 11. Archived (PDF) from the original on May 16, 2012. Retrieved March 7, 2012.
  3. ^ "SB 1004 Darrell Green Boulevard". Legislative Information System. Virginia General Assembly. March 24, 2003. Archived from the original on April 3, 2012. Retrieved March 7, 2012.
  4. ^ "Project Overview". Route 28 Public/Private Partnership. Archived from the original on March 28, 2012. Retrieved March 7, 2012.
  5. ^ "Braddock/ Walney and Route 28 Intersection". Route 28 Public/Private Partnership. Archived from the original on February 5, 2012. Retrieved March 7, 2012.
  6. ^ "Innovation Avenue Phases 2 and 3". Route 28 Public/Private Partnership. Archived from the original on January 14, 2016. Retrieved January 10, 2016.
  7. ^ "Final Section of Atlantic Boulevard Open to Traffic Dec. 14". Virginia Department of Transportation. December 14, 2011. Archived from the original on April 24, 2018. Retrieved April 24, 2018.
  8. ^ "I-66 Outside the Beltway Construction Overview". Archived from the original on 2018-04-25. Retrieved 2018-04-24.
  9. ^ "Route 28 Spot Widening". VDOT. Archived from the original on 2018-04-24. Retrieved 2018-04-24.
  10. ^ "Three Men and a Bridge". Connection Newspapers. Ellington. 10 October 2005. Archived from the original on 20 February 2023. Retrieved 20 February 2023.
  11. ^ Kashiwagi, Sydney (12 July 2017). "New bridge crossing from Loudoun to Maryland? No thanks, say Maryland leaders". LoudounTimes.com. Archived from the original on 13 May 2019. Retrieved 24 April 2018.
  12. ^ Traffic Engineering Division (2016). "2016 Traffic Data". Virginia Department of Transportation. Archived from the original on June 18, 2017. Retrieved June 21, 2017.

External links

KML is from Wikidata
SR 27 Two‑digit State Routes
1923-1933
SR 29 >