New York to Hartford to Massachusetts (1961-1968) I-84 opened in stages from the New York State Line in Danbury starting in 1961, finally connecting to Hartford in 1969. In Hartford, I-84 crossed the
Bulkeley Bridge and continued towards
Sturbridge, MA, along the existing
Wilbur Cross Highway, matching I-84's present alignment. Between 1968 and 1984, I-84 was reassigned to a proposed freeway to connect Hartford to
Providence, RI. The segment northeast of Hartford was redesignated as I-86. In 1984, the freeway to Providence was cancelled, and I-84 reverted to its current ailignment. Some isolated stretches of freeway built towards Providence were reassigned to other route numbers.
Proposed 1970s route east of Hartford A highway connecting Hartford and
Providence was first brought up in 1944 as an upgrade to
US 6 from
Manchester to the
Rhode Island state line. The plan eventually adapted to a submission to the
1956 Interstate Highway Plan but was declined. It was resubmitted in the 1968 plan and was granted along with of Interstate. The highway was originally designated as
Interstate 82 (
I-82) but was changed shortly after to its well-known designation,
Interstate 84 (
I-84). The planned I-84 was going to also incorporate a cloverleaf intersection with I-295 in
Johnston, Rhode Island, and use the under-construction
Dennis J. Roberts Expressway and built
Huntington Expressway to Providence before the project was shelved. Briefly, there was an idea to use the southern/unused portion of the highway for
Interstate 184 (
I-184) but was disapproved by the FHA. An environmental study by the
Rhode Island Department of Transportation (RIDOT) was done in 1972; it was found the highway would cause heavy impact to
Scituate Reservoir, the main drinking supply for Providence. After conducting multiple other studies, including briefly considering an alternate southern alignment that would bypass the Scituate Reservoir to the south and connected I-84 to the Route 37 Expressway, Rhode Island ended up canceling their segment of the highway in 1982, which ended up causing Connecticut to cut the segment to I-395 in
Plainfield. Without Rhode Island, the highway was fully canceled in 1983, and the mileage was returned for other projects. After the highway was canceled, the only inland route to Providence from Hartford was either
US 44 or US 6. Many projects have since happened to improve the roads, mainly in Connecticut. One major one was improving the "Suicide 6" area of US 6 between
Bolton and
Columbia. Since the cancelation, other plans to have a freeway link between the two built segments have been proposed, including one in 2001, but was short lived, only lasting to 2003 before becoming dormant. In the 1992 long-range transportation plan released by RIDOT, a freeway has been added along the original route of I-84 that will connect to the
Route 695 freeway on the Rhode Island–
Connecticut border.
I-86 relation The section of I-84 between
East Hartford, Connecticut, (at the present-day junction with
I-384) and
Sturbridge, Massachusetts, (
I-90) was for a time signed as I-86 (unrelated to present-day
I-86 in
New York and
Pennsylvania). Signs stating "I-84 Ends, I-86 to
Boston" (eastbound) and "I-86 Ends, I-84 to Hartford" (westbound) were posted where the change took place; later, when I-84 was restored to its original routing, new signs went up that read "I-86 is now I-84". Exit numbering on I-86 was that of the road's predecessor,
Route 15, in a sequence beginning on New York's
Hutchinson River Parkway. Exits were renumbered to correspond with the rest of I-84 in Connecticut when the road was redesignated in 1984. The present I-384 as well as the present US 6 bypass near
Willimantic, both of which were a part of what was then I-84's planned easterly continuation, were also numbered I-84 prior to 1984 even though they lacked any direct connection to the rest of I-84 at that time. (One had to use Silver Lane in East Hartford to travel between the two stretches of the highway.) These two sections were renumbered. The western segment became I-384, and the eastern one became part of US 6 when what was then I-86 was renumbered I-84. The present 4-way interchange between I-84, I-384, and
I-291 in Manchester reflects the planned extension of I-84 towards Providence; the I-84 through lanes coming west from Hartford align with the present-day lanes heading east on I-384. Similarly, the Wilbur Cross Highway (CT Route 15) merges with I-84 on the left side in East Hartford, and aligns with the lanes of I-84 heading northeast towards Sturbridge. As designed, this would have allowed I-84 to continue east towards Rhode Island, and the Wilbur Cross Highway to follow I-86 to Massachusetts.
Upgrades Sections of I-84 in Connecticut were reconstructed and widened from the mid-1970s into the mid-1980s. Another section through Danbury was widened from four lanes to six lanes in 1985 and 1986. Widening of the highway through Danbury was funded by
Union Carbide as part of building its world headquarters in Danbury. From roughly 1976 to 1988 the former I-86 portion from East Hartford to the Massachusetts state line was completely rebuilt from a narrow four-lane parkway to a much wider profile ranging from six lanes at the Massachusetts state line, expanding to eight lanes in
Vernon, to 12 lanes with
high-occupancy vehicle lanes (HOV lanes) in East Hartford. The original route, then known as Route 15, featured pit latrines at its pull-offs or rest areas. As of 2014, planning is underway for the
I-84 Hartford Project to replace and possibly redesign a stretch of mostly elevated highway in Hartford. On April 22, 2015, construction began on widening the highway from exit 23 to exit 25A in Waterbury from four lanes to six lanes. A widening project along the congested stretch of I-84 through
Waterbury and
Cheshire has been beset by cost overruns, delays, and construction defects involving storm drains, as state and federal officials have launched criminal investigations stemming from this project. This episode has waned local enthusiasm for a proposed $2-billion reconstruction of the Mixmaster interchange in downtown Waterbury. Cost estimates for the Mixmaster replacement have increased to $3 billion. Connecticut Attorney-General
Richard Blumenthal has begun a lawsuit against the contractor and an engineering firm in response to threats from the
US Department of Transportation (USDOT) to withhold funds from the project. On May 18, 2007, the
Republican-American reported this area had defective light poles, while Governor
Jodi Rell released an audit report of the construction disaster. ==Future==