Maine State Route 26


State Route 26 is part of Maine's system of numbered state highways. It is a major regional route running for from downtown Portland to the New Hampshire border near Upton, where it continues as New Hampshire Route 26. It is a multi-state route along with NH 26 and its short extension into Vermont.
The multi-state highway was first designated in 1922 as part of the New England road marking system as NEI 26. When the system was supplanted by the United States Numbered Highways in 1926, it was redesignated as state highways retaining the original number.

Route description

SR 26 begins in Portland. State route logs show its southern terminus at the intersection of Cumberland Avenue and Washington Avenue in the western end of the city center. It heads north on Washington Avenue. In the field, the southern terminus is signed at the intersection of Congress Street, Washington Avenue, and Mountfort Street in the eastern end of the city center, one block south of the Cumberland Avenue intersection with Washington Avenue. From here, SR 26 follows Washington Avenue northward and joins with I-295 / US 1 over Tukey's Bridge, splitting off immediately on the other side of the bridge to continue northwest on Washington Avenue. SR 100 joins at Allen Avenue, and the two routes turn north onto Auburn Street and continue together as far as the town of Gray. En route, the highway passes through the town of Falmouth, paralleling Interstate 95 for the entire 13-mile stretch.
In Gray Village, SR 26 and SR 100 intersect with US 202, SR 4 and SR 115 with SR 100 splitting off. The Turnpike begins to turn northeast at Gray, as does SR 100, but SR 26 continues north and then northwest. SR 26 continues north through New Gloucester and Poland, where it intersects SR 11 before passing the Poland Spring Resort. SR 26 continues through western Mechanic Falls, Oxford, eastern Norway and Paris. SR 26 starts to turn northwest as it continues through West Paris and Woodstock en route to Bethel, where it has an interchange with US 2 and SR 5 located near the northern terminus of SR 35. At this interchange, SR 26 turns northward along US 2 and SR 5, forming a three-route concurrency spanning 6 miles. Immediately after crossing into the town of Newry, SR 26 splits off to the northwest. The highway's northern reaches are in an isolated, mountainous region of the state. After leaving Newry, the highway passes through Grafton Notch State Park, located in the unorganized territory of North Oxford. SR 26 continues through the town of Upton before crossing into Cambridge, New Hampshire, where the highway continues as NH 26 westbound.

History

Sabbathday Lake/Shaker Village bypass

In 1988, the first attempt was made to modify the existing routing of a 5.25-mile stretch of SR 26 in the towns of Gray and New Gloucester. The existing roadway ran northward from Gray, hugging the Sabbathday Lake and then passed directly through the Shaker Village en route to New Gloucester, along current Shaker Road and Sabbathday Road. This, along with a second attempt in 1989, was rejected due to disagreement among the public and town officials of how the plan ought to be executed.
Plans were resurrected in 1996 with the formation of a Public Advisory Committee of thirteen members, composed of local citizens, local/regional government officials, and residents of the Shaker Village. Together, the PAC confirmed the existing deficiencies of the road, in particular a section locally known as the "Seven Deadly Curves." This section of the road was notorious for hazardous driving conditions due to lack of shoulders and small lane widths, numerous tight corners, and greatly varied speeds among vehicles traveling along the road. Other deficiencies were also addresses, such as hazards to pedestrians, truck noise and excessive vehicular traffic passing through the Village, and storm/lake water quality concerns.
Several new alignments were proposed for the project, the eventual winner being a southern bypass of the Sabbathday Lake area combined with a northern bypass of the Shaker Village. Two new segments of roadway were to be constructed as part of this new bypass. Environmental clearance was obtained in November 1998, with construction completed by the fall of 2004.
The bypass begins north of Gray, where Shaker Road meets Sabbathday Road. Route 26 splits left along a new alignment which runs for. Truck lanes were added on uphill climbs to improve traffic flow, and connecting roads from SR 26 provide access to the Sabbathday Lake area. Upon passing west of the lake, SR 26 rejoins its old alignment along former Sabbathday Road, which now dead-ends at its north end. After, SR 26 once again splits left of Shaker Road, which dead-ends, passing just west of the Village for, with connecting roads providing access to the Village. Truck lanes are present on this section of road as well. North of the village, SR 26 returns to its old alignment south of its junction with SR 122 in Poland.
The SR 26 designation was removed from Shaker Road and Sabbathday Road, which now dead-end and do not directly connect to the bypass. The bypass is known as Maine Street and carries a speed limit of 55 MPH.

Southern terminus

There is discrepancy between the signed and administrative southern termini of SR 26 in Portland. The signed southern terminus is located at the intersection of Washington and Congress Streets. However, the administrative terminus is located at Cumberland Avenue and State Street considerably further west. This means that instead of proceeding to the end of Washington to end at Congress, southbound SR 26 actually turns right onto Cumberland Avenue and continues southwest as to end at State Street. This discrepancy is due to SR 26 having a historical southern terminus at US 1, which formerly occupied a surface alignment in downtown Portland before being re-routed along I-295 in 2007. After US 1 was removed from Congress Street, SR 26 was administratively extended to connect to SR 77 instead, but signage was not updated to reflect this change. Similar discrepancies exist for the eastern termini of SR 22 and SR 25 for the same reason.

Junction list

State Route 26A

State Route 26A is a bypass of SR 26 opened in 2006 to alleviate congestion in the center of Gray Village where US 202, SR 4, SR 26, SR 100, and SR 115 intersect. Much of the traffic congestion at this village center intersection was due to traffic on SR 26 being forced to pass through this central intersection when accessing and leaving the nearby I-95 / Maine Turnpike exit 63. The short highway is located entirely within Gray.
The southern terminus of SR 26A is at the village center where it branches from SR 26. SR 26A initially runs west along US 202, SR 4, and SR 115 past the nearby Turnpike exit before making a turn northward and running parallel to the Turnpike on completely new roadway. It rejoins SR 26 just south of the Gray-New Gloucester High School. In recognition of the heavy traffic flow of Turnpike access, it is SR 26 traffic which must yield at this junction, while traffic flow onto and from the SR 26A bypass continues smoothly and unimpeded here.
The Northbrook Business & Technology Park is located on SR 26A.
;Junction list