I came across this stretch of road while doing some research on uneven development and urban sprawl in west & northwest Montgomery County and was intrigued…

It just keeps on going….where could it possibly go !?

Nowhere. The road dead ends in a wooded area just south of Free Pike.




One has to wonder about lining a beltway with houses, but one can speculate that the county required the ROW to be set-aside when the surrounding subdivisions were platted, and the wide median would have been cut back for additional lanes when the beltway was complete and started drawing traffic. Requiring frontage roads would have taken up too much developable land

The northern part of Brumbaugh must have been reconfigured when Turner Road was extended to the Trotwood Connector, and one wonders if a row of houses was taken out to make this connection

Will They Ever Finish Brumbaugh Boulevard?
The original beltway plan was an example of how the early postwar planning was even handed, by proposing a true circumferential highway that would open up (and connect) all the parts of the county to suburbanization, especially by creating easier movement between the southern & eastern and northern & western parts of the county.
That Brumbaugh Boulevard was abandoned (and literally so, with road construction apparently stopped in its tracks), and only the eastern & northern part of a beltway built (today’s “Wright Brothers Parkway”) demonstrates how resources were shifted to “favored sectors”, which reaped the development benefits of better highway access.
It is an example of uneven development in Montgomery County.
West/Northwest Montgomery County would have to wait until the Trotwood Connector/Turner Road extension of the 1990s, 40 years after Brumbaugh Boulevard, before being connected to the regional highway system.
Yes quite a few of those brick homes built by Huber were consumed when Turner Road cut off the end of Brumbaugh as noted in this Dayton Daily news story.
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And Jeffery is absolutely correct that it was visioned as part of the westward loop around Dayton that was never completed. Difficulties acquiring the right of way and a slowdown in development south of Brumbaugh put the concept on hold for so long that attention gradually waned and planners assumed the future Trotwood Connector would negate the need for the original inner loop.
Jeffery I just noticed that the 'Today' map in your Nuns and Subdivisions post shows all the lots that were absorbed when Turner road cut off Brumbaugh. Homes were lost on both sides of the street.
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