Baltimore’s ‘Highway to Nowhere’ used to be somewhere. Displaced residents skeptical of latest effort to fix decades-old ...
BALTIMORE -- More than $85 million in federal funding has been allocated to begin redeveloping the Highway to Nowhere in West Baltimore, Senators Chris Van Hollen, Angela Alsobrooks and ...
The Baltimore City Department of Transportation will receive an $85.5 million federal grant to further its efforts to transform a blighted section of U.S. 40 in West Baltimore dubbed the “Highway to ...
The first step toward redeveloping West Baltimore’s “Highway to Nowhere” will begin with $85.5 million in federal funding aimed at improving mobility and accessibility in neighborhoods that ...
City leaders seem doomed to repeat the mistakes of the “Highway to Nowhere” and similar taxpayer-subsidized projects.
In a major announcement out of D.C., as $85 million in federal funding has been approved for the redevelopment of Baltimore's "Highway to Nowhere."U.S. Senators Chris Van Hollen and Angela ...
Now, let's get to the news. Baltimore will get a more than $85 million grant to finally deal with the "Highway to Nowhere," a strip of abandoned road on U.S. 40, Maryland leaders announced Tuesday.
Today, Senators Chris Van Hollen and Angela Alsobrooks, and Representative Kweisi Mfume, announced more than $85 million in federal funding for the first phase of redevelopment of the Highway to ...
The New York Post has called the short strip of road a “highway to nowhere.” The Sheridan Expressway cuts through largely Hispanic and African American neighborhoods, separating them from each other ...
BALTIMORE — The 'Highway to Nowhere' in West Baltimore never connected I-70 to Downtown Baltimore and beyond. Instead, it disconnected families and businesses in West Baltimore half a century ago.
IT’S not often we get to see much imagination and creative thinking at the Civic Centre. But lo, here on display for public comment were the six impressive private-sector proposals to develop the ...
In a major announcement out of D.C., as $85 million in federal funding has been approved for the redevelopment of Baltimore’s “Highway to Nowhere.” U.S. Senators Chris Van Hollen and Angela ...