Ah yes. Thought it might have to do with these ones.
the situation was "solved" by pretending that the one point per interchange rule does not exist
Less pretending the rule didn't exist, and more that it hadn't yet come into being -- the Interstates were done in the
very early days
(2006? 2005?) before 1PPI had really started to solidify as a rule. Tim's early drafts thus went a bit more by "exit number" than by 'interchange".
(IMO, the canonical example was in the
original version of NY I-278, which had separate points for exits 8 & 9.
The 18/20 example, if it were being drafted today, would get a single point, numbered 18.
("Exits 4 & 5 in one interchange. For a single interchange with ramps given different exit numbers, use the lower number.")14/15 (although the ramp distance and odd interchange makes me think that this might actually be warranted)
Yeah, it's an odd one. Points "14" and "15" are placed 0.61 mi apart, which meets the "double half interchange" threshold.
You could even consider it one big spread-out interchange too -- I considered the idea of collapsing it into a single point, with the actual connections to/from I-90 being made farther west, near 14, but then noticed that 15 approximates the gores of the ramps to/from Park Rd. It can stay; why not. Plus, we get a graph connection & Intersecting/Concurrent Routes.
As for 14, it has
Historical Neato Factor. Just on the off-chance we have any users who haven't been on the Mass Pike since 1957.