US Routes 30 and 222 join for a half-mile duplex north of Lancaster
in Lancaster County.

Douglas Kerr 12/28/03
Southbound on the US 222 Reading-Lancaster freeway approaching the
Lancaster Bypass/US 30. The bypass was reconstructed during the 1990s
and early 2000s, and new exit guide signs were put up after the reconstruction.

Douglas Kerr 12/28/03
US 222 meets US 30 at a trumpet interchange here.

Douglas Kerr 12/28/03
After the Lancaster bypass reconstruciton, lots of PA 283 signs went
up along with resigning US 30 and US 222. Here on the ramp that connects
US 222 south to the US 30/US 22 duplex, PA 283 is also signed. Technically
PA 283 is still a few miles away, and so the rightmost signs should
read TO PA 283.

Timothy Reichard 3/27/04
The same interchange as seen from US 30 west.

Douglas Kerr 12/28/03
Westbound on US 30/US 222. The duplex is brief, as US 222 exits at
the next exit.

Timothy Reichard 3/27/04
The exit puts traffic onto the new frontage road (York Road) built in the late 1990s as part of the reconstruction of the entire Lancaster bypass. The frontage road leads first to PA 272/Oregon Pike, from which US 222 north enters the bypass. The routing is different southbound on US 222. US 222 follows the frontage road to the next interchange with PA 501/Lititz Pike and follows PA 501 south back to PA 272 into Lancaster.

Timothy Reichard 3/27/04
Northbound on US 222/PA 272/Oregon Pike approaching the onramp to US 222 north/US
30 east, the Lancaster bypass. The onramp is the end of Chester Road, the frontage road built in the late 1990s to handle on-and-off traffic along US 30 between PA 283 and US 222/PA 272.

Timothy Reichard 3/27/04
Eastbound on the Lancaster bypass, US 30 east/US 222 north. Within a mile of joining US 30, US 222 exits to its own freeway to Reading.