State Route 84 Route information Maintained by ODOT Length| 63.34 mi[1] (101.94 km) Existed| 1924–present Major junctions West end| US 6 / US 20 in Euclid Major intersections| I-90 in Wickliffe I-90 / SR 193 near North Kingsville East end| PA 226 near Conneaut Location Country| United States State| Ohio Counties| Cuyahoga, Lake, Ashtabula Highway system * Ohio State Highway System * Interstate * US * State * Scenic | ← SR 83| | → SR 85 | | State Route 84 (SR 84) is an east-west state highway in the northeastern portion of the U.S. state of Ohio. Its western terminus is along US 6 at US 20 in Euclid, and its eastern terminus is at the Pennsylvania state line about 10 miles (16 km) south-southeast of Conneaut; Pennsylvania Route 226 continues eastward. A portion of SR 84 runs along the historic Johnnycake Ridge Road.[2][3] ## History[edit] This article is in list format but may read better as prose. You can help by converting this article, if appropriate. Editing help is available. (February 2014) | * 1923 – Original route established;[4] originally routed from 1-mile (1.6 km) south of Madison to 2 miles (3.2 km) west of Andover along the current alignment of State Route 307 from 1-mile (1.6 km) south of Madison to Dorset, and a currently unnumbered road from Dorset to West Andover.[5] * 1926 – Extended to Willoughby Hills along a previously unnumbered road.[5] * 1931 – Truncated at Dorset; Dorset to West Andover decertified.[5] * 1935 – Rerouted from Madison to Ashtabula along the previous State Route 307 alignment (which was unnumbered before 1933); former alignment from south of Madison to Dorset certified as State Route 307.[5] * 1938 – Extended to Pennsylvania state line along the former alignment of State Route 83 from Ashtabula to Kelloggsville (which was unnumbered before 1926), and along a previously unnumbered road from Kelloggsville to the state line.[5] ## Major junctions[edit] County| Location| mi[1]| km| Destinations| Notes | | | | | Cuyahoga| Euclid| 0.00| 0.00| US 6 west / US 20 (Euclid Avenue)| Western end of US 6 concurrency Richmond Heights| 2.20| 3.54| SR 175 (Richmond Road)| Lake| Willoughby Hills| 3.28| 5.28| US 6 east (Chardon Road) / Bishop Road| Eastern end of US 6 concurrency Wickliffe| 3.67| 5.91| I-90 to I-271 south / SR 2 – Erie, PA, Columbus, Cleveland, Painesville| Exit 187 (I-90) Willoughby| 6.46| 10.40| SR 91 (S.O.M. Center Road)| 8.35| 13.44| SR 174 south (River Road) / Willoughcroft Road| Western end of SR 174 concurrency 8.69| 13.99| SR 174 north (Ridge Road) / Oakdale Avenue| Eastern end of SR 174 concurrency Mentor| 10.99| 17.69| SR 306 (Broadmoor Road) to I-90| 13.19| 21.23| SR 615 (Center Street) to I-90| Concord Township| 18.98| 30.55| SR 44 to I-90 / SR 2 – Chardon, Painesville| Interchange Painesville| 20.53| 33.04| SR 86 east (Painesville Warren Road)| Western end of SR 86 concurrency 21.33| 34.33| SR 86 west (South State Street) / East Walnut Avenue| Eastern end of SR 86 concurrency Madison| 32.31| 52.00| SR 528 south (River Street) to I-90| Western end of SR 528 concurrency 32.26| 51.92| SR 528 north (Lake Street)| Eastern end of SR 528 concurrency Ashtabula| Geneva| 37.79| 60.82| SR 534| Saybrook Township| 43.44| 69.91| SR 45 – Rock Creek| Ashtabula Township| 49.53| 79.71| SR 11 to I-90 – Youngstown| Interchange Kingsville Township| 54.53| 87.76| SR 193 north / East Main Street – North Kingsville| Western end of SR 193 concurrency 55.17– 55.45| 88.79– 89.24| I-90 – Cleveland, Erie, PA| Exit 235 (I-90) 55.38| 89.13| SR 193 south| Eastern end of SR 193 concurrency Monroe Township| 60.60| 97.53| SR 7 – Andover, Conneaut| 63.34| 101.94| PA 226 east – Albion| Pennsylvania state line 1.000 mi = 1.609 km; 1.000 km = 0.621 mi * Concurrency terminus ## References[edit] Route map: KML file (edit • help) Template:Attached KML/Ohio State Route 84 KML is from Wikidata 1. ^ a b "Division of Planning - Office of Technical Services - Destape files". ODOT. July 16, 2013. Retrieved February 15, 2014 — Cuyahoga County, Lake County, Ashtabula County `{{cite web}}`: External link in ``|postscript=`` (help)CS1 maint: postscript (link) 2. ^ Ohio Department of Transportation. "Technical Services Straight Line Diagrams". Retrieved April 30, 2010. 3. ^ Sartin, V. David (2007-08-31). "Johnnycake Ridge Road -- 3 different versions of its origin". PD Extra. Retrieved 2008-03-31. 4. ^ Explanation of the Ohio State Highway System (The Unofficial Ohio State Highways Web Site) by John Simpson[self-published source] Archived May 23, 2006, at the Wayback Machine 5. ^ a b c d e Route 84 (The Unofficial Ohio State Highways Web Site) by John Simpson[self-published source] Archived December 25, 2004, at the Wayback Machine