
MDOT TRAFFIC CAMS IN GENESEE COUNTY DRIVERS

Exit 2: Miller Road and North Maple Road.Access only from eastbound 94 to eastbound 14 and from westbound 14 to westbound 94.Some M-14 alternative routes will get you around the construction delays or give you a chance to take mile roads to explore places you wouldn't otherwise see. In April 2006 there was construction on M-14 from its terminus at I-275 and I-96 in Livonia to the Washtenaw County border. Sections of M-14 along the northern edge of Ann Arbor were reconstructed in the late 1990s. In 1965, the section from I-94 to Main was completed, but the rest of the freeway wasn't built until the routing of I-96 in Detroit was decided on in 1977, and didn't open until late in 1979. Eight years later, the first part of the northern bypass was built, from Main Street (now exit 3) to Ford Road (now exit 10) M-14 then continued on Ford Road (now M-153) to Plymouth Road, and then into Detroit.

HistoryĪfter the US-12 bypass (now I-94) was built south of town in 1956, M-14 was created on its former route through town: Jackson Road (now BL-94), Main Street (now BR-23), and Plymouth Road to Detroit. MDOT plans to introduce traffic cameras on parts of M-14 in 2012. Major towns to the east are Plymouth, Livonia, and Detroit towns of interest to the west via I-94 include Chelsea, Jackson, Battle Creek, Kalamazoo, Benton Harbor& St. M-14 is the divided, limited-access highway running west to east past the northern edge of Ann Arbor.
