If I-70 through the Rockies is North America’s most physically dangerous freight corridor, then I-95 through the Northeast Corridor is its most psychologically punishing. The approximately 450-mile stretch from Washington, DC to Boston passes through the densest concentration of population, traffic, toll infrastructure, and aggressive drivers anywhere on the continent. For commercial truckers, running the Northeast Corridor means navigating a continuous gauntlet of merging traffic, narrow lanes, low-clearance bridges, construction zones, and toll plazas — often in stop-and-go conditions that last for hours.
[Read More]I-90 Winter Corridor: Montana Blizzards and Cascade Passes
How America's longest interstate earns its danger stripes — from Washington's Cascades to Montana's open range to the Buffalo snow belt
At 3,020 miles, Interstate 90 is the longest US interstate highway — running from the waterfront of Seattle to the streets of Boston. Most of its length is manageable freight territory. But three segments make I-90 a serious winter corridor for commercial drivers: the Cascade passes of Washington State, the open range of Montana, and the Buffalo–Albany snow belt of upstate New York.
Understanding these segments, and knowing how to navigate them, is essential for any driver or dispatcher running the northern transcontinental freight lane.
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