![]() The section of I-590 from Winton Road to I-390-as well as the interchange connecting the two-was completed c. The southern half of the Outer Loop was signed as planned however, I-390 and I-590 were modified to end at their junctions with I-490. Most of the plans went into effect when the NY 47 designation was eliminated on March 18, 1980. NY 47, the then-current designation for much of the Outer Loop, would be eliminated entirely. The rest of the loop south of I-490, meanwhile, would become part of an extended I-390. In one proposal submitted to the American Association of State Highway and Transportation Officials in the late 1970s, I-590 would be truncated to begin at the then-proposed junction with I-390 in Brighton but also extended northward along the Sea Breeze Expressway to NY 104 in Irondequoit. Īround the same time, the state of New York began to look into the possibility of changing the designations that were assigned to the Outer Loop. Construction on the missing section of the Outer Loop's southern half began in the late 1970s. South of Elmwood Avenue, the expressway had no signed number as the Federal Highway Administration had yet to assign the I-590 designation. 1965 and from NY 31 west to Winton Road by 1968, was part of NY 47 between Elmwood Avenue and I-490. The eastern section, which opened from Monroe Avenue ( NY 31) to the Can of Worms c. At the time, only two portions of the loop-from I-490 in Gates southeast to NY 383 in Chili and from Winton Road in Brighton to I-490 in Rochester-were complete and open to traffic. I-590 appeared on maps of the Rochester area as early as 1977 as a designation for the portion of the Outer Loop south of I-490. History I-590 southbound in Brighton during rush hour North of the ramps leading to I-490, I-590 descends northeastward into a cut and passes below both I-490 and NY 96 as it becomes NY 590, which continues onward toward Sea Breeze. Another partial interchange with Highland Avenue follows at exit 4-making the two connections that exit 3 omits-before I-590 enters the Can of Worms, a complex interchange connecting I-590 to I-490. Prior to 1980, NY 47 entered the freeway at this point and followed both I-590 and NY 590 north to Sea Breeze. Not far to the north of the intersection with NY 31 is exit 3, a partial diamond interchange for Elmwood Avenue permitting access from I-590 south and to I-590 north. The freeway travels due north along this stretch, flanked on both sides by residential neighborhoods separated from I-590 only by sound barriers. Past NY 31, I-590 runs through the former Erie Canal and Rochester subway bed. As it approaches NY 31 (Monroe Avenue) at exit 2, I-590 turns a full 90 degrees to the north. Here, the surroundings rapidly change from fields to densely populated residential areas as it passes through a more developed section of Brighton. The route heads east from the junction, passing under South Clinton Avenue (which passes through the east half of the interchange but does not connect to either freeway) and traveling east through open fields to its first interchange (a diverging diamond interchange ) at South Winton Road. I-590 begins at a semi-directional T interchange with I-390 in the town of Brighton, a southern suburb of the city of Rochester. Route description Northern terminus of I-590 at the Can of Worms I-590 was officially assigned in 1980 following the elimination of NY 47, and the last segment of the freeway between Winton Road and I-390 was completed by the following year. Ultimately, it was cut back to its current western terminus at the then-proposed I-390. ![]() In the late 1970s, I-590 was proposed as a designation for the entire southern half of the Outer Loop. The portion of I-590 between Winton Road and the Can of Worms was originally constructed in the 1960s and designated as part of NY 47 from Elmwood Avenue northward. The highway is a spur route of I-90 the connection between the two is made via both I-390 and I-490. I-590 makes up the southeast quadrant of the Rochester Outer Loop, which continues west on I-390 and north past the Can of Worms on New York State Route 590 (NY 590). It extends for 5.31 miles (8.55 km) from an interchange with I-390 in Brighton to the Can of Worms, a complex interchange connecting I-590 to I-490 ( Eastern Expressway) just inside the Rochester city line. Interstate 590 ( I-590) is a north–south auxiliary Interstate Highway that serves the immediate southeastern suburbs of the city of Rochester, New York, in the United States. ![]() Map of Rochester with I-590 highlighted in red
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