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Revision as of 00:04, 22 September 2022 by Jonathan (talk | contribs) (Added two stories; changed "Road construction information" to "Road closure information"; added "Project information")
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Welcome to Beaver State Roads!

My name is Jonathan. Simply put, Beaver State Roads aims to be your one-stop shop for information on Oregon state routes, highways, and other important roads. It was borne out of an earlier project, ORoads, which was originally hosted on Angelfire starting around 2002 under my pseudonym Jason of ORoads. Unfortunately, ORoads became all but abandonned in the late 2000s-early 2010s due to life and other things, and during that time both the site design and the information within grew stale. Beaver State Roads strives to correct the outdated information plus add in the wealth of additional knowledge obtained over the past 20 years, presenting route and highway history and data as accurate as possible.

📄 Pages

While I'll be adding more pages to the site in the future, here's what's available now:

Future articles will revolve around Oregon Route 6 and Oregon's mileposting system as a whole.

❓ How to Help

At present, writing these articles is a solo effort. Once I get some good information on here in the near future, the goal is to recruit additional Oregon roadgeeks as contributors. The decision to present this site in a wiki format was made with collaboration in mind. I don't have all the answers, and want to give people who may have those answers a platform on which to reveal them. Once I figure out some basic guidelines, I will extend offers as necessary.

However, there are other ways to help:

  • What I prize above all is information. This includes (but isn't limited to) any documents, articles, meeting minutes, maps, photos, or other miscellany that may shed new light on Oregon's highways or provide a glimpse into the past. If you have anything about Oregon's highways that I can use on this site — especially historic or unique photos — please feel free to send it to beaverstateroads AT gmail DOT com. You will be given credit on the about page once I write it.
  • That said, I will eventually figure out how to set up accounts for people to donate to assist the site. This is necessary because unfortunately, a lot of good information, including high-quality photos, are locked away behind expensive fees to retrieve and scan the data. For example, the Oregon Secretary of State's office demands $20 per high-quality scan of photos, and research time in the Multnomah County archives can add up quickly. Any future financial assistance I receive would be much appreciated, and I would make an effort to document where and how the money I receive is used.
  • I may also need some assistance making this site mobile-friendly in the near future.

Creating the most complete history of Oregon state highways is a herculean effort, but with your help it doesn't have to be. Thank you in advance!

📰 Recent Oregon Highway News

🚧 I-84 closures coming this weekend; Tri-met working on a new bridge
(9/21/2022 — KATU ABC 2 — Portland)
A KATU traffic alert,in two days both directions of I-84 will shut down near the I-205 interchange. The closure will last the entire weekend, starting at 10:00 p.m. Friday, September 23. I-84 should reopen by 4:00 a.m. on Monday, September 25. This is all for work on a new light rail bridge over the freeway. Drivers will need to find an alternate route during the closure.
🔨 Highway Boondoggles, Part VII: Oregon’s Abernethy Insanity
(9/21/2022 — StreetsBlog USA)
Every day, according to the Oregon Department of Transportation, more than 100,000 vehicles travel the seven-mile stretch of Interstate 205 between Stafford Road and Oregon Route 213 in Oregon City — the often congested last remaining four-lane section of I-205. As part of its “I-205 Improvements Project,” the agency’s solution is to add a third lane in each direction on I-205 between Stafford Road and OR 99E, as well as a northbound entrance-to-exit lane (or “auxiliary lane”) between OR 99E and OR 213.
🔨 The State Highway Department Withheld Information About the Billion-Dollar Rose Quarter Project
(9/21/2022 — Willamette Week — Portland)
A long-running disagreement over public information concerning a proposed $1 billion highway project is set for trial in Marion County Circuit Court next week. At issue is a seemingly straightforward question: What does the public think of the Oregon Department of Transportation’s plan to widen Interstate 5 at the Rose Quarter?
Environmentalists Want Gov. Kate Brown to Rescind Appointment to Transportation Commission
(9/20/2022 — Willamette Week — Portland)
On Aug. 31, Gov. Kate Brown announced she’d nominated 114 people to state boards and commissions. One of those picks is receiving significant blowback: Brown’s selection of outgoing state Sen. Lee Beyer (D-Springfield) to serve on the Oregon Transportation Commission. Eleven environmental groups—including 1000 Friends of Oregon, the Street Trust and Oregon Walks—penned a Sept. 13 letter to Brown objecting to Beyer’s nomination.
🔨 ODOT enters design phase of new bridge over Willamette River near Green Acres Road
(9/20/2022 — KEZI-TV ABC 9 — Eugene)
The Oregon Department of Transportation has officially entered the design phase for a new bridge that runs over the Willamette River. Earlier this year, organizers ran into issues raising money to get the project started. Despite the fact they are still working to find the money to begin construction, they now have enough to dive deeper into the design phase.
🔨 Why alternative Interstate 5 Bridge replacement ideas won’t work
(9/18/2022 — The Columbian — Vancouver, WA)
Nearly everyone agrees the Interstate 5 Bridge is not serving the region well. It would be catastrophically damaged in a big earthquake, it lacks breakdown and auxiliary lanes, it is not safe for pedestrians or cyclists and freeway congestion is terrible — heaven forbid you’re traveling north after 3 p.m. What people can’t agree on is what should replace it.
🚧 Highway 58 paving project moved to daytime hours
(9/17/2022 — KEZI-TV ABC 9 — Eugene)
Paving work along Highway 58 is switching to daytime hours starting September 19th. This is along Oregon Highway 58 from the tunnel to milepost 70. Officials with the Oregon Department of Transportation said in order to get all paving done with the weather is good, they are switching work to daytime hours.
🔥 Cascade Lakes Highway being used as a fuel break against Cedar Creek Fire
(9/12/2022 — Central Oregon Daily — Bend)
A second incident command was established at Mt. Bachelor over the weekend to manage the east side of the Cedar Creek Fire. One of many strategies being considered is using the Cascade Lakes Highway as a fuel break to prevent the fire from running east toward La Pine. Preparing the highway to function as a fuel break means the corridor will look very different whether fire reaches it or not.
🚧 🔥 Nearly 2-week closure of U.S. Highway 20 east of Sweet Home begins amid Hwy. 58 closure due to Cedar Creek Fire
(9/8/2022 — KTVZ NewsChannel 21 — Bend)
The nearly two-week construction and landslide repair closure of U.S. Highway 20 east of Sweet Home began Sunday, delayed by two days for traveler safety due to critical fire conditions. The closure originally was scheduled to begin Friday. ODOT urges travelers to visit TripCheck.com for the most current information.
💲 ODOT to rename stretch of I-5 that honored former KKK member
(8/31/2022 — Business Tribune — Portland)
Robert Hugh "Sam" Baldock, a renowned highway engineer who shaped Oregon's freeway system, was so accomplished that Interstate 5 between Portland and Salem was officially named the Baldock Freeway. But now Baldock's name is being scrubbed from state transportation facilities because Baldock was a past Ku Klux Klan member.
Animal crossings over and under highways can save big dollars — not just lives — says new study
(8/31/2022 — Oregon Public Broadcasting — Portland)
Collisions between vehicles and large animals, like deer, are not only scary. The medical, car repair and cleanup costs really add up. That is according to a new study out of Washington State University that supports the case for building more wildlife crossings on highways. The Oregon and Washington transportation departments are adding wildlife overpasses, underpasses and related fencing bit by bit, as scarce funding allows.
🧾 🔊 How freeway builders collided with Oregon’s growth management system
(8/5/2022 — Oregon Public Broadcasting — Portland)
[Meeky] Blizzard had become the leading face of political opposition to a proposed freeway that would have run along the fringes of Washington County’s suburban fringe. Known as the Westside Bypass, the 20-mile freeway was ardently sought by the county’s business and political leaders. But their freeway-building vision clashed with Oregon’s pioneering new growth management system — those rules about where and how land could be developed.

Key: 🔨 = Project information | 🚧 = Road closure information | 🔥 = Fire information | 🧾 = Historical information | 🔊 = Audio version/podcast episode available | 💲 = Paywall | 💰 = Obnoxious paywall | 😡 = Other webpage annoyances

🌎 See Also

  • Beaver State Blog, the blog companion to this wiki. Provides news and articles about past, present and future Oregon roads.
  • ORoads, the site that started it all back in 2002. Kept around for posterity.