Driving from New York to Florida. How much time will this I-95 S Exit 52 detour save?
I'm driving from New York to Florida and was planning on taking I-95 S the entire way. I didn't see any point in having to pay attention to Waze or any other navigation apps. Here is a dilemma I'm facing:
Both Waze and google maps have me taking this detour off I-95 South:
Take exit 52 for MD-295 S/Balt/Wash Pkwy
0.9 mi
Merge onto MD-295 S
5.5 mi
Keep right to stay on MD-295 S
0.1 mi
Continue straight to stay on MD-295 S (signs for Route 195 W)
440 ft
Keep left to stay on MD-295 S
5.8 mi
Continue onto Baltimore-Washington Pkwy
18.2 mi
Keep left to stay on Baltimore-Washington Pkwy
0.5 mi
Continue onto MD-201
0.3 mi
Continue onto State Hwy 295
Entering District of Columbia
2.0 mi
Keep left to stay on State Hwy 295
2.1 mi
Use the right 2 lanes to take exit 1B-C for I-695 toward Downtown
0.4 mi
Continue onto I-695 W
1.9 mi
Merge onto I-395 S
1.0 mi
Keep right to stay on I-395 S
Entering Virginia
11.1 mi
Merge onto I-95 S
It’s a long trip and I'd prefer not to have to think too much, but if the detour will save a lot of time, then I'll take it. How much longer will the trip be if I just stay on I-95 S toward Washington?
Thanks
Reality and the "Heart of the Beast"
Two things need to be established from the get go. First and foremost, you should NOT plan on spending your first night in South Carolina. Even if you lived in New York City, near an entrance to the Holland Tunnel, it would still be 600 miles to the North/South Carolina state line. You might be able to cover 600 miles a day in the wide-open west where there are relatively few tolls and hundreds of miles of 'nothing', but you are simply not going to be able to safely cover that distance on I-95, which has tolls and goes right through the heart of New York, Newark, Philadelphia, Baltimore, Washington and Richmond. Indeed, depending on where you're going in Florida, you should almost certainly add a third day for driving for any place south of roughly Port St. Lucie. I can also tell you from experience that I-95 is heavily patrolled, especially in the Carolinas.
Secondly, as others have pointed out, sticking strictly to I-95 is not the best way to do this. just a few examples: In southern NJ, leaving the Turnpike and following I-95 will take you through the industrial waterfront of Philadelphia, whereas staying on the NJ Turnpike (marked as I-295 south of Trenton) will let you miss Philadelphia altogether, rejoining I-95 shortly after you cross into Delaware. In Baltimore I-95 again goes right through the center of downtown while taking I-895 and the Harbor Tunnel would again let you miss center city and directly rejoin I-95 on the other side. That is the nature of beltways and bypasses. One other note about I-895 and the Harbor Tunnel. As you approach the tunnel, there are only entrances to the highway. After you use the tunnel there are only exits from the highway. This cuts down immensely on the amount of traffic on I-895 as it is virtually useless as a local commuter road.
On the other hand, there is a place where you DO want to use I-95 even though your mapping program is telling you to use MD-295, between Baltimore and Washington. MD-295, the Baltimore Washington Parkway, is not an Interstate quality road. It is a national scenic byway similar to the Merritt Parkway in southwestern Connecticut that you might be familiar with. Use I-95 instead and then just use the DC beltway (I-495) around Washington. Note that there is no I-95 through Washington, and there is essentially no significant difference between using I-495 around Washington either going clockwise (the Inner Beltway) or counterclockwise (the Outer Beltway). Both are roughly the same number of miles and rejoin I-95 south of Washington.
There is also an Interstate bypass (I-295) that avoids the downtown areas of both Richmond and Petersburg. Personally, I would base my decision on whether to use I-95 or I-295 in that case on where the bulk of the traffic was headed when the two routes diverge north of Richmond, with a bias towards using I-295 down the east side of both cities.
And again, don't just mindlessly follow some computer printout. Get a good atlas or set of paper maps and look at where those instructions are actually sending you. Know where you are, where you're going, and what your next decision point or road change will be. It's called Situational Awareness and is your responsibility as a driver.
AZbuck