Interstate 190 New York
Overview
Traveling northwest from Buffalo to Grand Island, Niagara Falls and Lewiston, Interstate 190 is the Niagara Section of the New York Thruway. This is one of three Interstate highway branches to end at an international boundary. The others are I-110 in El Paso, Texas, which links I-10 with the Bridge of the Americas into Ciudad Juárez, Mexico and I-69W to the World Trade Bridge at Laredo, Texas.
Interstate 190 is an urban freeway through Buffalo, passing south of Downtown along an elevated roadway. Tolls are charged along the South Grand Island Bridge northbound and the North Grand Island Bridge southbound over the Niagara River. The two spans link Tonawanda and Niagara Falls with Grand Island.
History
Maps with suggested route numbers for the statewide urban Interstate numerology sent to the American Association of State Highway Officials (AASHO) on August 22, 1958 by the State Public Works Department designated Interstate 90N for the Niagara Section of the New York Thruway. I-190 was assigned to the loop around the north side of Buffalo. AASHO recommended changing I-190 to I-290 along Youngmann Expressway on August 29, 1958 but left I-90N unchanged.
These plans were announced for the New York interstate highway system numbering plan announced by the State Public Works Department on October 21, 1958.1 Following correspondence between AASHO and New York on December 4, 1958 and February 5, 1959, a proposal arose to change the numbering of the Interstate spur from Buffalo to Niagara Falls from I-90N to I-190. The Department of Public Works concurred on February 19, 1959:
The original number for this Canadian connection was 90-N, as recommended by the AASHO route numbering committee. The suggestion to change this number to 190 is excellent, and we will change our maps to comply with this new designation.
AASHO formally approved Interstate 190 on February 24, 1959.
Two sections of I-190 were completed on July 30, 1959. The 5.7 mile long portion leading west from I-90 (NY Thruway) to Porter Avenue in Buffalo opened with the exception of two Downtown access ramps. Also completed was a 1.5 mile segment from Sheridan Drive (NY 342) to the South Grand Bridge.2 The last 5.7 miles of I-190 opened for northbound traffic on September 1, 1960. The southbound roadway remained closed until Summer 1961 due to construction of the Scajaquada Creek Expressway (NY 198).3
Known as the Niagara Section of the New York Thruway, Interstate 190 originally had toll barriers at four locations: west of Interstate 90, south of the Peace Bridge, and at the two Niagara River crossings. The bridge crossings have tolls that are levied on inbound traffic only. During the 1950s and 1960s, when the New York Thruway was established, all the exits on the “Niagara Section” were numbered with the prefix of N-xx. This practice was done to distinguish them from the Thruway mainline exit numbering system.4
Route Information
Source: December 31, 2021 Interstate Route Log and Finders List
I-190 Annual Average Daily Traffic (AADT)
Source: 2015 NYSDOT Traffic Data Viewer
The Niagara Section of the Thruway initially extended northwest from Buffalo to Grand Island and NY 384 (Buffalo Avenue) in Niagara Falls.
Erie County Clerk David J. Swarts presented a petition of about 20,000 signatures to regional transportation officials advocating the removal of the Interstate 190 toll plazas within the city of Buffalo. The contention was that Buffalo is the only upstate city in New York that had tolls levied on its commuters. He cited the differences between Buffalo and Rochester as a justification for the toll removal.
A similar concern arose in the early 2000s from Grand Island commuters concerning the tolled Niagara River spans of Interstate 190. These residents were somewhat successful in their complaints in that they were granted special commuter rates for returning to the island via the Grand Island bridges.5
Efforts to remove the two Buffalo toll plazas were also successful. Tolls along Interstate 190 in Buffalo ceased on October 30, 2006 by order of the New York Thruway Authority.6
Photo Guides
North End – Canadian International Border – Lewiston, New York
North at
Upper Mountain Road – East at
South End
– I-190 south at I-90 – Cheektowaga, New York
South at
West at
East at
Sources:
- “Kingston Arterial Route Will Bear Numbers 587.” The Kingston Daily Freeman (NY), October 21, 1958.
- “Thruway Reaches Heart of Buffalo.” Wellsville Daily Reporter (NY), July 30, 1959.
- “Thruway Niagara Section to Open.” The Kingston Daily Freeman (NY), September 1, 1960.
- Cuff, Richard. “Thruway Exit Numbering (was: Re: [northeastroads] Re: Who else out there hates I-99).” Online posting, Yahoo! Groups Northeastern U.S. Roads, November 20, 2003.
- “Petition supports case for removing toll barriers.” Buffalo News, November 11, 2003.
- Interstate 190 (New York). Wikipedia.
Page updated April 11, 2023.