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Interstate 680 (California)

Interstate 680 marker

Interstate 680
Route information
Defined by
Maintained by Caltrans
Length: 70.536 mi (113.517 km)
History: State highway in 1933; Interstate in 1955
Major junctions
South end: I-280 / US 101 in San Jose
  SR 130 in San Jose
SR 237 in Milpitas
SR 262 in Fremont
SR 238 in Fremont
SR 84 near Sunol
I-580 on the Dublin / Pleasanton border
SR 24 in Walnut Creek
SR 242 near Concord
SR 4 in Martinez
I-780 in Benicia
North end: I-80 / SR 12 in Fairfield
Highway system
I-605 I-710
SR 20 California 21.svg SR 22

Interstate 680 marker

Interstate 680 (I-680) is a north–south Interstate Highway in Northern California. It curves around the eastern cities of the San Francisco Bay Area from San Jose to Interstate 80 at Fairfield, bypassing cities along the eastern shore of San Francisco Bay such as Oakland and Richmond while serving others more inland such as Pleasanton and Concord.

Built in the 1920s and designated in 1955, I-680 begins at a junction with I-280 and US 101 (Bayshore Freeway), and heads northeast and north-northwest through the northeast part of San Jose. After passing State Route 237 (SR 237) in Milpitas and SR 262 in Fremont, I-680 abruptly turns northeast (where a connection to a SR 238 freeway was planned) and enters the hills and valleys of the California Coast Ranges. The highway crosses over Mission Pass, also known as the Sunol Grade, and descends into the Sunol Valley, where it meets SR 84 near Sunol. From Sunol, I-680 again heads north-northwesterly through valleys, including the San Ramon Valley, along the Calaveras Fault. Junctions along this portion include I-580 in Dublin and SR 24 in Walnut Creek. Beyond the latter interchange, a three-way directional junction with the SR 24 freeway west to Oakland, I-680 heads north into Pleasant Hill, where SR 242 splits and I-680 again heads northwesterly. After the junction with SR 4 in Martinez, the highway crosses the Carquinez Strait on the Benicia-Martinez Bridge, immediately meeting the east end of I-780 on the Benicia end. The remainder of I-680, from Benicia to I-80 at Fairfield, lies between a hilly area to the west representing the southwestern tip of the Vaca Mountains, and a marshy area (along the Suisun Bay and Cordelia Slough) to the east.


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Wikipedia

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