Maryland Route 185 (MD 185) is a state highway in the U.S. state of Maryland. Known as Connecticut Avenue, the state highway runs from Chevy Chase Circle at the Washington, D.C., border north to MD 97 in Aspen Hill. MD 185 serves as a major north-south commuter route in southern Montgomery County, connecting the District of Columbia with the residential suburbs of Chevy Chase, Kensington, and Wheaton.
MD 185's history can be divided into two segments. The portion south of Kensington was included in the state highway system by 1927 as an extension of Connecticut Avenue out of the District of Columbia and was the westernmost stretch of MD 193. The Chevy Chase to Kensington stretch was expanded to a divided highway in the 1950s. The segment of MD 185 between Kensington and Aspen Hill was built as a divided highway on a new alignment in the 1960s and designated MD 185. The MD 185 designation was extended south of Kensington, replacing MD 193, in the 1970s. Construction projects in the 1980s and early 1990s completed MD 185 as a six-lane highway.
Route description
left|thumb|MD 185 northbound at MD 410 in Chevy ChaseMD 185 begins at Chevy Chase Circle on the border of the District of Columbia. Connecticut Avenue continues south into the Chevy Chase neighborhood of Washington, D.C., on the south side of the circle, while Western Avenue intersects the east and west sides of the circle. MD 185 heads north as a six-lane divided highway through an affluent residential area in Chevy Chase Village.
History
The roadway that would become MD 185 was initially laid down in 1890 as an extension of Connecticut Avenue NW in Washington, D.C., by the Chevy Chase Land Company, a developer that had bought up some 1,700 acres in southern Montgomery County and Northwest D.C. with plans to create a streetcar suburb. As part of their plan to create the neighborhoods of Chevy Chase, the company bridged Rock Creek, graded the road, and laid a streetcar line from today's Woodley Park neighborhood in D.C. to Jones Bridge Road.
MD 185 itself was constructed and designated in two segments. The first section to be built was between Chevy Chase and Kensington as an extension of Connecticut Avenue into Montgomery County, which was designated MD 193. The section between Bradley Lane and Kensington was paved by 1927. The segment south of Bradley Lane was paved as a county road by 1930. By 1936, the segment of Connecticut Avenue south of Bradley Lane had come under state control. The grade crossing of the railroad tracks in Kensington was eliminated by the construction of a bypass and bridge in 1936 as well. In December 1937, State Roads Commission chairman Homer Tabler "announced" that the state highway system had added Connecticut Avenue from the District line to Chevy Chase Lake, along with Bradley Lane between Connecticut and Wisconsin Avenue.
The section of MD 193 south of MD 410 was marked as US 240 Alternate by 1946, a designation it retained until the 1960s. The segment from the D.C. line to north of MD 410 in Chevy Chase was expanded to a multi-lane divided highway in 1950. The remainder of the route to Kensington was expanded to a divided highway between 1957 and 1960.
The section of highway between Kensington and Aspen Hill was built on a new alignment as a four-lane divided highway in stages in the 1960s and given the designation of MD 185. The highway was completed from Kensington to MD 586 in 1963. The state highway was expanded to six lanes to Beach Drive in 1986 and through Kensington in 1991.
