- Source: County Route 104 (Suffolk County, New York)
County Route 104 (CR 104) is a 7.45-mile-long (11.99 km) county road in Suffolk County, New York, in the United States. It runs north from CR 80 in Quogue to New York State Route 24 (NY 24), CR 63 and CR 94 just outside Riverhead. Much of CR 104 runs through the David Allen Sarnoff Pine Barrens Preserve, a major New York State Conservation Area that was once owned by Radio Corporation of America. There is an access point into the preserve along CR 104 south of Riverhead.
From 1930 to 1972, the road was signed as New York State Route 113.
Route description
CR 104 begins at an intersection with CR 80 (Montauk Highway) in the village of Quogue. The route heads to the northwest as Quogue–Riverhead Road, a two-lane residential road with a 40-mile-per-hour (64 km/h) speed limit. After the junction with Scrub Oak Road, CR 104 passes the dead end of Station Road and crosses under the Long Island Rail Road's Montauk Branch, passing a large industrial area north of the tracks. Intersecting with Old Country Road, CR 104 bends northward and returns to a more residential area. Exiting the village of Quogue, the speed limit increases to 45 miles per hour (72 km/h) and the road enters East Quogue, passing some farms and a junction with Lewis Road. The route curves to the northwest and the speed limit increases once again to 50 miles per hour (80 km/h) before entering interchanges 64N-S of the Sunrise Highway (NY 27). CR 104 expands to four lanes for a short distance, merging back to two after the interchange.
After NY 27, CR 104 enters dense woods and the speed limit increases to 55 miles per hour (89 km/h). The road intersects with the northern terminus of CR 31 (Old Riverhead Road), which services Westhampton and Gabreski Airport, at a traffic circle. After another northbound stretch, CR 104 enters a large junction with the southern terminus of CR 105 (Cross River Drive). After CR 105, CR 104 enters the more residential community of Riverside. It intersects Old Quogue Road, a former routing of the road that branches slightly to the east of. The road also changes names to Riverleigh Avenue and the speed limit is reduced to 40 miles per hour (64 km/h). Soon after, CR 104 reaches its northern terminus, the Riverside roundabout just across the Peconic River from the community of Riverhead. The roundabout, which was widened to two lanes in October 2018, provides access to CR 63 (Lake Avenue / Peconic Avenue), CR 94 and NY 24 (Flanders Road / Nugent Drive).
History
In the 1930 renumbering of state highways in New York, the NY 113 designation was assigned to a previously unnumbered north–south connector between Montauk Highway (then-NY 27) in the village of Quogue and NY 25 in the hamlet of Riverhead. This also included Peconic Avenue in Riverhead, which was co-signed as part of NY 24 at the time. The concurrency was eliminated by 1970 as NY 113 was truncated to end at NY 24. The NY 113 designation was eliminated on March 29, 1972, when ownership and maintenance of NY 113 was transferred from the state of New York to Suffolk County. NY 113 was subsequently redesignated as CR 104.
The Riverside roundabout at the road's northern terminus was expanded to two lanes in October 2018 at a cost of $5.3 million, funded by Suffolk County. The original circle, largely unchanged since the 1930s, was a common source of congestion.
Major intersections
The entire route is in Suffolk County.
References
External links
County Route 104 at Alps' Roads
David Allen Sarnoff Pine Barrens Preserve
NYCRoads.com - Suffolk CRs 101–117
Kata Kunci Pencarian:
- Jaringan Nasional
- County Route 104 (Suffolk County, New York)
- List of highways numbered 104
- List of county routes in Suffolk County, New York (51–75)
- List of county routes in Suffolk County, New York (26–50C)
- List of county routes in Suffolk County, New York (76–100)
- List of county routes in Suffolk County, New York (101–117)
- County Route 94 (Suffolk County, New York)
- Southampton, New York
- Greenport, Suffolk County, New York
- County Route 105 (Suffolk County, New York)