Rock Creek and Potomac Parkway (Washington, D.C.)
Enlarge text Shrink text- Work cat.: Rand McNally and Co. Texaco street map, Washington D.C., 1941(Rock Creek and Potomac Parkway, N.W.)
- Fed. Writers' Proj. Washington, city and capital, 1937(Rock Creek and Potomac Parkway)
- Rand McN. rd. atlas, c1985(Rock Creek & Potomac Pkwy.)
The Rock Creek and Potomac Parkway, informally called the Rock Creek Parkway, is a parkway maintained by the National Park Service as part of Rock Creek Park in Washington, D.C. It runs next to the Potomac River and Rock Creek in a generally north–south direction, carrying four lanes of traffic from the Lincoln Memorial and Arlington Memorial Bridge north to a junction with Beach Drive near Connecticut Avenue at Calvert Street, N.W., just south of the National Zoological Park. During rush hours, the parkway is converted to one-way traffic corresponding to the peak direction of travel: southbound in the morning and northbound in the afternoon. The Parkway was listed on the National Register of Historic Places on May 4, 2005. Built from 1923 to 1936, it is "one of the best-preserved examples of the earliest stage of motor parkway development".
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