Joppa Road


Joppa Road is a county highway in the U.S. state of Maryland. The highway extends from Maryland Route 25 in Brooklandville east to MD 7 near White Marsh. Joppa Road has three main segments separated by very short breaks on its course through central and eastern Baltimore County. The central segment is a multi-lane highway from MD 45 and MD 146 in the county seat of Towson to U.S. Route 1 in Perry Hall. This highway is mostly a commercial strip and parallels Interstate 695 through Towson, Parkville, and Carney. The western and eastern segments of Joppa Road are two-lane roads through mainly residential areas. The western segment connects Brooklandville and Towson via Riderwood. The eastern segment serves parts of Perry Hall and White Marsh.
Joppa Road and its western complement, Old Court Road, have been a cross-county highway since the 17th century. This highway connected the western part of the county to its original county seat of Joppa, which was sited on the Gunpowder River near the modern community of Joppatowne. Like Old Court Road, Joppa Road was improved on its state and county segments in the mid-1920s to form a circumferential paved highway around Baltimore. The state-maintained segment of the highway between Towson and Perry Hall was designated Maryland Route 148. MD 148 was widened in the mid-1930s and again in the late 1930s and 1940s. The highway's role as the primary east-west highway of Baltimore's northern suburbs was superseded by the construction of I-695 in the late 1950s and early 1960s. MD 148 was removed from the state highway system and all of Joppa Road became a county highway in the early 1960s.

Route description

Joppa Road begins at a four-way intersection with MD 25 and the northern end of the Jones Falls Expressway in Brooklandville. The intersection is a short distance north of the expressway's interchange with the Baltimore Beltway that forms one junction between I-83 and I-695. Joppa Road's western terminus is also a short distance south of MD 25's intersection with MD 130 and the Green Spring Station medical complex. Joppa Road heads southeast as a two-lane road that crosses over the Beltway just east of the aforementioned junction of I-83 and I-695. The highway veers east at its intersection with Old Court Road and passes through Riderwood. Joppa Road crosses over Roland Run and MTA Maryland's Baltimore Light RailLink and intersects Bellona Avenue, which leads to MD 139 in both directions.
Joppa Road continues east along a ridge toward Towson. The two-lane highway crosses over MD 139 and meets the northern end of Charles Street Avenue. Joppa Road enters the downtown area of Towson at its intersection with MD 45 Bypass. Two blocks to the east, Joppa Road becomes one-way westbound; to continue east, traffic must turn south onto Washington Street and east on Allegheny Avenue, an east-west street between Charles Street Avenue and downtown Towson. Allegheny Avenue and Joppa Road converge just west of the Towson Roundabout, a racetrack-shaped, five-legged roundabout at the junction of MD 45, MD 146, Allegheny Avenue, and Joppa Road. Joppa Road heads east from the circle as a four-lane undivided highway on the south side of the Towson Town Center shopping mall and on a bridge directly above part of the retail building on the south side of the road.
Joppa Road leaves downtown Towson as a four-lane road with center turn lane. The highway has an oblique intersections with Providence Road and Goucher Boulevard and expands to a divided highway on the north side of the Towson Place shopping center. Joppa Road becomes undivided again as it approaches its intersection with MD 542 on the northwestern edge of Parkville. The highway passes under I-695 and expands to a divided highway again just west of its intersection with MD 41, which has an interchange with the Beltway immediately to the south. Joppa Road becomes undivided again west of Old Harford Road and meets MD 147 in Parkville.
Joppa Road continues as a four-lane road with center turn lane toward Perry Hall. There, the main segment of the highway ends at an intersection with US 1 ; the east leg of the intersection is Ebenezer Road. Joppa Road continues when it splits off from US 1 one block north of Ebenezer Road. The two-lane road passes along the southern edge of Perry Hall and the northern edge of White Marsh. Joppa Road crosses Honeygo Run and has consecutive intersections with Honeygo Boulevard and Cowenton Avenue, meeting the latter at a roundabout. The highway continues southeast and crosses I-95 before reaching its eastern terminus at MD 7. That state highway heads southwest through Rosedale to Baltimore and northeast toward Joppatowne, which lies near the site of the abandoned town of Joppa.
Joppa Road is a part of the National Highway System as a principal arterial from Goucher Boulevard in Towson east to US 1 in Perry Hall.

History

Joppa Road originated as an Indian trail that was repurposed in the late 17th century as a patrol road and defensive perimeter across Baltimore County for rangers based at Fort Garrison to defend English settlements from hostile Indians. In conjunction with the Old Court Road, in the 18th century the path became the cross-county highway to Joppa, the original county seat of Baltimore County, which was located on the Gunpowder near what is now Joppatowne. Joppa Road west of Towson was never part of the state highway system, but Allegheny Avenue was constructed as a concrete road from York Road west to Charles Street Avenue by Baltimore County with state aid by 1921. Allegheny Avenue later became MD 141 and was removed from the state highway system in 1961.
Joppa Road between US 1 and MD 147 was constructed by the state as a concrete road in 1925 and 1926. That road, which became MD 148, was the final link in the state and county construction of a hard-surface circumferential highway from Eastern Avenue to Liberty Road. Between 1930 and 1933, Joppa Road was widened, resurfaced as a concrete road, and brought into the state highway system from MD 147 west to US 111. In 1934, the portion of MD 148 between MD 147 and US 1 was proposed to be widened from. MD 148 was widened with a pair of macadam shoulders from US 1 to MD 147 in 1938 and from there to MD 542 in 1940. The highway was widened to and resurfaced from MD 542 to Providence Road in 1948. Between 1950 and 1952, the block of MD 148 immediately to the east of US 111 was shifted, widened, and reconstructed as a bridge over the ground floor of the first suburban location of the Hutzler's department store.
Construction on the Baltimore Beltway, which functionally replaced Joppa Road as the main east-west highway between Towson and Carney, began from Joppa Road near Brooklandville to the Baltimore-Harrisburg Expressway in 1954. Joppa Road served as the western terminus of the northern arc of the Beltway from 1955 until the Jones Falls Expressway and the northwest portion of the Beltway from I-83 to US 40 in Catonsville both opened in 1963. Baltimore Beltway construction from MD 146 to MD 542 began in 1956; that section opened in 1958. MD 148's western end was moved to MD 542 in 1959. The remainder of the highway was transferred from the state to county maintenance in 1963, the same year the Beltway opened from MD 542 to US 1. Joppa Road was expanded to a divided highway from Goucher Boulevard to Drumwood Road and for on both sides of the MD 41 intersection in 1978.

Junction list