A2 and B2 Parclo A2 and B2 configurations contain four ramps. On each side of the freeway there is a loop ramp and a directional ramp. In parclo A2, the loop ramps serve as on-ramps and the directional ramps serve as off-ramps. In parclo B2 the roles are reversed. Both on- and off-ramps require controlled intersections at the arterial road (sometimes loop and directional ramps from the same side of the freeway will utilize the same intersection). The parclo A2 and B2 are commonly used on rural freeways such as
Highway 402 and
Highway 416, where the ramps can be added without widening the street overpass/underpass to include deceleration lanes (normally needed on the A4 in order to safely enter the loop ramps that lead to the freeway). The parclo A2 and B2 ramps are also usually longer and allow for higher speeds than their A4 counterparts because of rural land availability. It is possible to upgrade an A2 to an A4 by adding directional ramps, serving arterial-to-freeway traffic that would otherwise be forced to make a left turn to enter the loop ramps.
A4 The parclo A4 (also called "six-ramp partial cloverleaf") contains six ramps. On each side on the freeway, there is an (often multi-lane) exit ramp, followed by a loop ramp and directional ramp entering the freeway. The on-ramps are in the same configuration as a cloverleaf interchange, but there is one off-ramp for each freeway direction instead of two, typically requiring a controlled intersection where the off-ramp meets the arterial road. The
parclo A4 is one of the most popular designs, as all movements from the arterial road to the entrance ramps are made by right-hand turns, providing for a safer entrance to the freeway by eliminating left-hand turns into opposing traffic (which require queues waiting to make such turns). This also makes logical sense since freeways have a higher capacity than arterials and right-turn ramps serve effectively to absorb capacity and reduce traffic on the arterial. Some parclos have the right-turning (directional) on-ramp leave the arterial road after the exit ramp intersection. This configuration is often used when another road meets the freeway off-ramp and gives traffic from this road the option of turning right to use the directional on-ramp to enter the freeway. Traffic exiting the freeway to the arterial road is provided with a long, relatively straight exit ramp, preventing most speed-related rollovers. These exit ramps are also frequently multi-laned to accommodate traffic turning left, right, or going straight ahead in some cases. Traffic signals are commonly installed at the end of the exit ramp to regulate the freeway traffic flowing onto the arterial. The parclo A4 is particularly well-suited to suburban areas with high traffic levels. Ontario freeways throughout much of the southern portion of the province, especially freeways in the
Golden Horseshoe and
Ottawa area, use the A4 parclo. These interchanges also exist on some highways in the
Montreal area. One issue in suburban areas is the presence of three conflict points in each direction for pedestrians and non-motorised vehicles, the first of which is a moderate speed, low visibility conflict. Caltrans favors this form for some recent projects, for example the reconstruction of
I-880 and other highways in the
San Francisco Bay Area and the
Greater Los Angeles Area. They often replaced previous full cloverleafs. All exiting traffic for both directions has a relatively straight ramp and is controlled by a traffic light. Running off the road on an entering ramp is much less likely than on an exiting ramp.
Metering lights are a common feature on the entering ramps. (the
Trans Canada Highway),
Saskatchewan Highway 39 and
Saskatchewan Highway 301. The eastbound directional onramp is located further south of the overpass and is not pictured. The junction of Saskatchewan Highway 1 (east-west), Saskatchewan Highway 39 (south, part of the CanAm route) and Saskatchewan Highway 301 (north) is an A4 parclo. Highway 1 serves as the freeway, while Highway 39/301 is the arterial road.
B4 The parclo B4 interchange superficially appears to be a mirror image of the parclo A4. However, the B4 design provides freeway-to-arterial ramps without traffic lights, while traffic turning left from the arterial must cross opposing traffic. Although this design has the potential to flood the arterial with more freeway traffic than the parclo A4, one particular advantage is the ability to coordinate the traffic signals on the arterial in both directions independently. This is useful when there is more through-movement traffic on the arterial than turning traffic.
North American examples in Orange County, California. The closest one in this image, at Brookhurst Street in
Fountain Valley, was originally a full
cloverleaf interchange, remnants of which are still visible. There are B4 designs in
Alberta: • Deerfoot Trail & 17 Ave in Calgary • Macleod Trail & Anderson Road in south
Calgary: , resulting in significant delays and frequent accidents, despite the higher maximum speed limit on Anderson Road than Macleod Trail. The style of intersection was made necessary due to the presence of a small private cemetery in one quadrant of the interchange: under Alberta's
Cemeteries Act burial sites cannot be seized. Three exist in
British Columbia. In addition, the Solomon Pond Road interchange on
I-290 in
Northborough, Massachusetts, was converted from a B2 interchange to a B4 interchange in the mid-1990s with the construction of the
Solomon Pond Mall. Also, the West Road interchange on
I-75 in
Woodhaven, Michigan, was upgraded from a B2 to a B4 in the mid 1980s after suburban sprawl had made the B2 interchange obsolete. In
Indiana, the B4 design along
IN 37 at its
Bloomington interchange with
IN 45/46 was retained when the former route was converted to become
I-69's exit 120 in 2018. At least four B4 designs are known to exist in
Kentucky: •
Cumberland Parkway interchange with
US 27 north of
Somerset, currently six
ghost ramps sit on the northeast part of the interchange for anticipation for the Somerset Northern Bypass extension. • The
US 127 interchange with
Interstate 64 in
Frankfort. • US 127 has a second B4 interchange at the
Bluegrass Parkway near
Lawrenceburg, about 15 miles (24 km) south of the I-64 crossing. This particular interchange is a conversion from a four-loop design at the location of one of the toll booths on the Bluegrass Parkway before its conversion into a freeway. Toll booths were located directly below US 127; through traffic used the through lanes, while both entering and exiting traffic shared a lane directly to the right of the through lanes. The old design was standard for interchanges at toll booths in Kentucky's parkway system of controlled-access toll roads; even though tolls have been removed from all of the roads, many of the old designs still exist at former toll booth sites. • The
Taylorsville Road interchange with the
I-264 Watterson Expressway in
Louisville. The B4 design was necessary in this case because of the angle at which Taylorsville Road crosses the Watterson. The
US 83 interchange on
I-80 in
North Platte, Nebraska, has also recently been upgraded to a B4 from a
diamond. The parclo B4 is less common in
Ontario than the parclo A4, with the only examples being the following: •
Highway 406/St. David's Road interchange on the border of
St. Catharines and
Thorold •
Highway 402/
Highway 40 interchange in
Sarnia •
Highway 17/
Municipal Road 55 interchange in
Sudbury • the interchange at
Lauzon Parkway and the
E. C. Row Expressway in
Windsor There are two such interchanges in
Saskatoon, Saskatchewan, along
Circle Drive, at College Drive and Attirdge Drive/Preston Avenue N. The following B4 interchanges were changed from full cloverleafs: •
U.S. 73/
K-7 at
U.S. 24/
U.S. 40/State Avenue near
Basehor, Kansas, was changed in 2008. •
I-695 at
U.S. 40 in
Catonsville, Maryland, was changed in 2005/2006. •
U.S. 14/
U.S. 52 at Civic Center Drive in
Rochester, Minnesota, was changed from a cloverleaf in 2004/2005. •
I-5 at South 38th Street in
Tacoma, Washington, was changed in the mid 1990s. Some parclo B4 interchanges such as the intersection of
Interstate 40 and
U.S. Route 401 in
Raleigh, North Carolina, have been fitted with signals at each ramp meeting the arterial in order to allow more lanes on the offramps. This technique along with the ability to provide two-way signal progression along the arterial allows the parclo B4 to handle an extremely high flow of traffic along the arterial.
Other variations interchange in
Aachen, Germany and US 74/NC 51 interchange near Matthews, North Carolina Parclo designs with only two quadrants are commonly referred to as folded diamonds, due to their similarity with
diamond interchanges. Sometimes the ramps in a folded diamond are actually local streets; surface roads upgraded to higher standards often do this to save money on land acquisition. This type of interchange long predates the parclo; the
Merritt Parkway and
Queen Elizabeth Way, both built in the 1930s, used mainly folded diamonds and
cloverleaves. Another example of this is
Highway 401's interchange with
Highway 2 east of Tilbury (Exit 63): the ramps also have intersections fairly close to the freeway to allow traffic to continue on a rural country road (Jeannette's Creek Road / McKinlay Road) which formerly met Highway 2. One of the examples in Asia includes the
Clark South exit in
SCTEX, which is a AB2 parclo interchange. Depending on traffic and land needs, hybrid designs, such as the
parclo AB and
parclo A3, can be created. A notable example of a parclo AB interchange includes the
Highway 417 and the
Woodroffe Avenue interchange in
Ottawa. Other variants, not describable using Ontario's system, eliminate one or more outside ramps, while leaving the loop ramps in those quadrants. In the United States, folded diamonds are frequently used in interchanges with roads that have a
railroad line closely paralleling the surface street; entrance/exit ramps are not permitted to have
level crossings in modern American practice. ==Implementation==