Interstate 55 in Illinois
Interstate 55 | ||||
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Route information | ||||
Maintained by IDOT | ||||
Length: | 294.38 mi[1] (473.76 km) | |||
Major junctions | ||||
South end: | I-55 / I-64 / US 40 at East St. Louis | |||
North end: | US 41 in Chicago | |||
Highway system | ||||
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Interstate 55 (I-55) is a major north–south Interstate Highway in the U.S. state of Illinois that connects the St. Louis, Missouri, and Chicago metropolitan areas. It enters the state from Missouri on the Poplar Street Bridge near East St. Louis and runs to U.S. Route 41 (US 41, Lake Shore Drive) near downtown Chicago where the highway ends, a distance of 294.38 miles (473.76 km).[2] The Road also runs through the cities of Springfield, Bloomington, and Joliet. The section in Cook County is officially named the Stevenson Expressway.
Route description
I-55 within Illinois carries heavy traffic, with an average of more than 20,000 vehicles per day for most of its length.[3] Significant portions of I-55 contain six lanes (three lanes in each direction) and are heavily used by commuters.[4] I-55 in Illinois begins in East St. Louis on the Poplar Street Bridge over the Mississippi River at the Missouri–Illinois state line[4] and runs southwest to northeast through the state, ending in Chicago at US 41 (Lake Shore Drive). Along the way, it goes through four metropolitan areas in the state: the Illinois portion of the St. Louis metropolitan area, the Springfield metropolitan area, the Bloomington-Normal metropolitan area, and the Chicago metropolitan area (also known as Chicagoland).[4]
I-55 enters the Chicago metro area as the Stevenson Expressway and provides easy access to downtown Chicago via both the I-90/I-94 (Dan Ryan Expressway) interchange and US 41 (Lake Shore Drive) at the northern terminus of I-55, near Cermak Road and the lakefront.
History
I-55 in Illinois is the fourth road to connect St. Louis and Chicago. The first was the Pontiac Trail in 1915. This was largely improved and paved as the new Illinois Route 4 (IL 4) by 1924.[5] In 1926, IL 4 was designated as the route of the new U.S 66, and a new section of US 66 was built to bypass slower sections of IL 4 south of Springfield by 1930. Through the 1950s US 66 was continually widened, straightened, and improved to handle its growing traffic, until its entire length was four lanes wide by 1957.[6]
The roots of I-55 could be traced back to the need of a national highway system.[7] President Dwight D. Eisenhower saw the need of a national network of highways that would help with the mobilization of the army. He had been impressed with the autobahn he saw in Germany during World War II. In 1956 he signed the Federal Aid Highway Act into existence.[7] Although the act provided for a highway replacing Route 66, it was spared destruction for a while because of it being more modern than other routes at the time.[7] Illinois would build its first new Interstate highways on other routes such as I-80, I-57, and I-70, before turning its attention once again to the St. Louis-to-Chicago route.
However, during the 1970s, Route 66 was finally replaced by I-55 as the fourth St. Louis-to-Chicago highway, serving most of the same communities along the way as the original Pontiac Trail. It was built in sections across Illinois, often on the original Route 66 roadbed. A common construction tactic where Route 66 was already four lanes wide, was to build new southbound lanes for I-55 west of the original road, then rebuild the original southbound lanes of US 66 to be the new northbound lanes for I-55, leaving the original northbound lanes of old US 66 as a two-way service road.[7] One can find many signs posted for Historic US 66, especially where it deviates from I-55.
The earliest stretch of I-55 was a portion of US 66 which had already been built as a freeway between Gardner and I-294 (Tri-State Tollway) in Indian Head Park, and which was added to the Interstate system by simply erecting new signs in 1960.[8] Later portions of the highway were built in the 1960s between East St. Louis and Hamel, as bypasses of Springfield and Bloomington-Normal.[9] The rest of the road was completed in the 1970s.
The Stevenson Expressway opened on October 24, 1964 as the Southwest Expressway. It was renamed after Adlai Stevenson,[10] the former governor of Illinois, on September 1, 1965, a month and a half after his death. The Stevenson's original termini were US 66 in DuPage County to the west, and the Dan Ryan Expressway to the east.
In 1999–2000, the expressway was completely rebuilt from Central Avenue north to Lake Shore Drive, including the ramps to the Dan Ryan. The Illinois Department of Transportation (IDOT) was criticized at the time for not adding a fourth lane in each direction to the highway.[11]
Recent upgrades and current construction
Because of the heavy traffic on I-55, IDOT must spend millions per year maintaining the roadway, adding lanes, and replacing bridges to increase the capacity of the highway.[12][13]
In northeastern Illinois near Joliet, a widening project that expanded I-55 from two to three lanes in each direction between I-80 (exit 250) and Weber Road (exit 263) was completed on October 29, 2008.[14]
In the 2000s decade, the Damen Avenue (exit 290) and Pulaski Road (exit 287) interchanges were rebuilt as a single-point urban interchange (SPUI) configuration; in 2014 reconstruction as a SPUI was completed for the Central Avenue (exit 285) interchange. The Arsenal Road (exit 245) interchange was under complete rebuilding and reconfiguration as of 2012, and the deteriorated overpass at IL 129 (exit 238) was removed in 2012 in anticipation of future construction of a full interchange, temporarily leaving the IL 129 interchange with only a northbound exit and northbound entrance.[15][16]
At St. Louis, the Stan Musial Veterans Memorial Bridge carrying I-70 across the Mississippi River, and costing $667 million, was completed in 2014 to relieve congestion on I-55's Poplar Street Bridge.[17][18]
Future
Governor Bruce Rauner, in early 2016, made a proposal to explore expanding the Stevenson Expressway portion of I-55 by adding an additional lane in each direction to ease congestion. Under his proposal, toll lanes would be constructed and operated through a potential private-public partnership.[19]
Exit list
County | Location | mi[20] | km | Exit | Destinations | Notes |
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Mississippi River | 0.00 | 0.00 | Poplar Street Bridge I-55 south / I-64 west / US 40 west continues into Missouri | |||
St. Clair | East St. Louis | IL 3 south / Great River Road south – Cahokia | Southern end of IL 3/GRR overlap | |||
13th Street, Tudor Avenue | ||||||
1 | IL 15 (Barack Obama Avenue) – East St. Louis Business District | Northbound exit and southbound entrance | ||||
2A | Third Street – Eads Bridge | Southbound exit and northbound entrance | ||||
2BC | Martin Luther King Bridge – Downtown St. Louis | Southbound exit and northbound entrance; left exit is signed as exit 2B and right exit as 2C | ||||
2 | I-64 east / I-70 west / IL 3 north (St. Clair Avenue) – Louisville, Kansas City | Northern end of I-64/IL 3 overlap; Southern end of I-70 overlap; no access to westbound I-70 eastbound | ||||
3 | Exchange Avenue | Southbound exit and northbound entrance | ||||
4 | IL 203 / Collinsville Road – Fairmont City, Granite City | Signed as exits 4A (south) and 4B (north) southbound | ||||
Madison | Fairmont City | 6 | IL 111 / Great River Road north – Wood River, Washington Park | Northern end of GRR overlap | ||
Collinsville | 9 | Black Lane | Northbound exit and southbound entrance | |||
10 | I-255 to I-270 – Memphis | |||||
11 | IL 157 – Collinsville, Edwardsville | |||||
Maryville | 15 | IL 159 – Collinsville, Maryville | Signed as exits 15A (south) and 15B (north) | |||
17 | US 40 east – St. Jacob, Highland | Northern end of US 40 overlap | ||||
Troy | 18 | IL 162 – Troy | ||||
20A | I-70 east – Indianapolis | Northern end of I-70 overlap | ||||
20B | I-270 west – Kansas City | |||||
23 | IL 143 – Edwardsville, Marine | |||||
Hamel | 30 | IL 140 – Alton, Greenville | ||||
33 | IL 4 – Staunton, Lebanon | |||||
Livingston | 37 | Livingston, New Douglas | ||||
Macoupin | 41 | Staunton | ||||
White City | 44 | IL 138 – Mount Olive, Benld | ||||
Montgomery | Litchfield | 52 | IL 16 – Gillespie, Litchfield | |||
60 | IL 108 – Carlinville | |||||
63 | IL 48 / IL 127 – Raymond, Taylorville, Hillsboro | |||||
Farmersville | 72 | Farmersville, Girard | ||||
Sangamon | Divernon | 80 | Divernon | |||
82 | IL 104 – Pawnee, Auburn | |||||
83 | Glenarm | |||||
Springfield | 88 | East Lake Drive – Chatham | ||||
90 | Toronto Road | |||||
92A | I-55 Bus. north (6th Street) | |||||
92B | I-72 west / US 36 west – Jacksonville | Southern end of I-72/US 36 overlap | ||||
94 | Stevenson Drive, East Lake Drive | |||||
96 | IL 29 (South Grand Avenue) – Taylorville | Signed as exits 96A (south) and 96B (north) | ||||
98A | I-72 east / US 36 east – Decatur | Northern end of I-72/US 36 overlap | ||||
98B | IL 97 west (Clear Lake Avenue) | |||||
100 | IL 54 east (Sangamon Avenue) – Clinton | Signed as exits 100A (east) and 100B (west) | ||||
Sherman | 105 | I-55 Bus. south – Springfield, Sherman | ||||
Williamsville | 109 | IL 123 – Williamsville, Petersburg | ||||
Logan | Elkhart | 115 | Elkhart | |||
119 | Broadwell | |||||
123 | I-55 Bus. north – Lincoln | |||||
Lincoln | 126 | IL 10 / IL 121 – Lincoln, Mason City | ||||
127 | I-155 north – Peoria | South end of I-155, exits 0A-B. | ||||
133 | I-55 Bus. south – Lincoln, Lawndale | |||||
140 | Atlanta, Lawndale | |||||
McLean | 145 | US 136 – McLean, Heyworth | ||||
154 | Shirley | |||||
157A | I-74 east / US 51 south – Indianapolis, Decatur | Southern end of I-74/US 51 overlap | ||||
Bloomington | 157B | I-55 Bus. north (Veterans Parkway) | Signed as exit 134B (north) southbound | |||
160 | US 150 / IL 9 (Market Street) – Pekin | |||||
163 | I-74 west – Peoria | Northern end of I-74 overlap | ||||
164 | I-39 north / US 51 north – Rockford | Northern end of US 51 overlap | ||||
Normal | 165 | US 51 Bus. – Bloomington-Normal | Signed as exits 165A (south) and 165B (north) northbound | |||
167 | I-55 Bus. south (Veterans Parkway) – Central Illinois Regional Airport | |||||
171 | Towanda | |||||
Lexington | 178 | Lexington | ||||
Chenoa | 187 | US 24 – El Paso, Chenoa | ||||
Livingston | 197 | IL 116 – Flanagan, Pontiac | ||||
201 | IL 23 – Pontiac, Streator | |||||
209 | Odell | |||||
Dwight | 217 | IL 17 – Streator, Kankakee | ||||
Grundy | 220 | IL 47 – Dwight, Morris | ||||
227 | IL 53 – Gardner | |||||
Grundy–Will county line | 233 | Reed Road – Braidwood | ||||
Will | 236 | IL 113 – Kankakee, Coal City | ||||
238 | IL 129 south (Will Rogers Highway) – Braidwood | Northbound exit and entrance; northern terminus of IL 129 | ||||
240 | Lorenzo Road | |||||
241 | Wilmington | |||||
244 | Arsenal Road | |||||
247 | Bluff Road | |||||
Channahon | 248 | US 6 – Joliet, Morris | ||||
250 | I-80 – Iowa, Indiana | I-80 exits 126A-B; signed as exits 250A (east) & 250B (west). | ||||
Shorewood | 251 | IL 59 north (Will Rogers Highway) / Historic US 66 alt. – Shorewood, Plainfield | Northbound exit and southbound entrance | |||
Shorewood–Joliet city line | 253 | US 52 – Joliet, Shorewood | ||||
Joliet | 257 | US 30 – Aurora, Joliet | ||||
Plainfield | 261 | IL 126 west (Will Rogers Highway, Main Street) / Historic US 66 alt. – Plainfield | Southbound exit and northbound entrance | |||
Romeoville–Bolingbrook city line | 263 | Weber Road | ||||
Bolingbrook | 267 | IL 53 – Bolingbrook, Romeoville | ||||
268 | Historic US 66 west (Will Rogers Highway, Joliet Road) | Southbound exit and northbound entrance | ||||
269 | I-355 (Veterans Memorial Tollway) – Northwest Suburbs, Southwest Suburbs | I-355 exits 12A-B. | ||||
DuPage | Darien | 271 | Lemont Road | Signed as exits 271A (south) and 271B (north) | ||
273 | Cass Avenue | Signed as exits 273A (south) and 273B (north) | ||||
Willowbrook–Burr Ridge city line | 274 | IL 83 (Kingery Hwy) | ||||
DuPage–Cook county line | Burr Ridge | 276.43 | 444.87 | 276 | County Line Road | Signed as exits 276A (south) and 276B (north) |
Cook | Indian Head Park | 277.08 | 445.92 | 276C | Historic US 66 east (Will Rogers Highway, Joliet Road) | Northbound exit and southbound entrance |
Indian Head Park–Countryside city line | 277.64 | 446.82 | 277 | I-294 (Tri-State Tollway) – Indiana, Wisconsin | Signed as exits 277A (north) and 277B (south); southbound exit to I-294 south is via exit 279A | |
Countryside–Hodgkins city line | 278.99 | 448.99 | 279 | US 12 / US 20 / US 45 (La Grange Road) | Signed as exits 279A (east/south) and 279B (west/north) | |
Summit | 282.32 | 454.35 | 282 | IL 171 (1st Avenue) | Signed as exits 282A (south) and 282B (north) northbound | |
Summit–Chicago city line | 283.19 | 455.75 | 283 | IL 43 (Harlem Avenue (7200 West)) | ||
Chicago | 285.93 | 460.16 | 285 | Central Avenue (5600 West) | ||
286.96 | 461.82 | 286 | IL 50 (Cicero Avenue (4800 West)) – Chicago Midway Airport | |||
287.98 | 463.46 | 287 | Pulaski Road (4000 West) | |||
289.00 | 465.10 | 288 | Kedzie Avenue (3200 West) | Southbound exit and northbound entrance | ||
289.52 | 465.94 | 289 | California Avenue (2800 West) | Northbound exit and southbound entrance | ||
290.05– 290.07 | 466.79– 466.82 | 290 | Damen Avenue (2000 West) | |||
290 | Ashland Avenue (1600 West) | Northbound exit and southbound entrance | ||||
292.63 | 470.94 | 292 | I-90 / I-94 (Dan Ryan Expressway) – Indiana, Wisconsin | Signed as exits 292A (west) and 292B (east) northbound, and as exits 292 (west) and 293B (east) southbound | ||
293.00 | 471.54 | 293A | Cermak Road – Chinatown (2200 South) | Northbound exit and southbound entrance | ||
293.22 | 471.89 | 293C | State Street (0 East/West) | Southbound exit and northbound entrance | ||
293.67 | 472.62 | 293D | Martin L. King Drive (400 East) | Northbound exit and southbound entrance | ||
294.38 | 473.76 | — | US 41 (Lake Shore Drive) | Northern end of freeway; northbound exit to and southbound exit from Lake Shore Drive | ||
1.000 mi = 1.609 km; 1.000 km = 0.621 mi
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Related routes
Auxiliary routes
I-55 has three auxiliary routes in Illinois:
- I-155: A spur from I-55 in Lincoln to I-74 just east of Peoria.
- I-255: The eastern third of the beltway around the St. Louis Metro Area (with I-270 forming the other two-thirds)
- I-355: The Veterans Memorial Tollway, serving the western and southwestern suburbs of Chicago, running from I-80 in New Lenox to I-290 in Addison
Springfield business loop
Interstate 55 Business | |
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Location: | Springfield |
Business Loop 55 refers to a major arterial surface street that serves downtown Springfield, Illinois. It runs north from the intersection of Interstates 55 and Interstate 72 through downtown to Illinois Route 4 (Veterans' Parkway). It then runs northeast to Sherman.[21]
All of Business Loop 55 was part of U.S. Route 66 at some point.
Major junctions
The entire route is in Sangamon County.
Location | mi[22] | km | Destinations | Notes | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Springfield | 0.0– 0.7 | 0.0– 1.1 | I-55 / I-72 / US 36 – Jacksonville, Decatur, Chicago, St. Louis | Exit 92A (I-55), Exit 97B (I-72) | |
4.9 | 7.9 | IL 97 north (Jefferson Street) | |||
5.0 | 8.0 | IL 97 south (Madison Street) | |||
7.0 | 11.3 | IL 29 (Sangamon Avenue) | Southern end of IL 29 concurrency | ||
8.0 | 12.9 | IL 4 south / IL 29 north (Veterans Parkway) – Abraham Lincoln Capital Airport | Northern end of IL 29 concurrency, northern terminus of IL 4 | ||
Sherman | 12.1 | 19.5 | IL 124 west (Andrew Road) – Andrew, Athens | Eastern terminus of IL 124 | |
12.7 | 20.4 | I-55 south – Springfield | Exit 105 (I-55), no access to I-55 northbound from this point | ||
Williams Township | 13.9 | 22.4 | I-55 north – Chicago | Only access to I-55 northbound | |
1.000 mi = 1.609 km; 1.000 km = 0.621 mi
|
Lincoln business loop
Interstate 55 Business | |
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Location: | Lincoln |
Bloomington–Normal business loop
Interstate 55 Business | |
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Location: | Bloomington–Normal |
References
- ↑ Adderly, Kevin (October 31, 2002). "Table 1: Main Routes of the Dwight D. Eisenhower National System Of Interstate and Defense Highways as of October 31, 2002". Route Log and Finder List. Federal Highway Administration. OCLC 47914009. Retrieved December 30, 2013.
- ↑ MapPoint (Map). Microsoft. 2002.
- ↑ 2011 Average Daily Total Traffic (PDF) (Map). Scale not given. Cartography by Office of Planning and Programming. Illinois Department of Transportation. 2011. Retrieved December 30, 2013.
- 1 2 3 "I-55". Illinois Highway Ends. Self-published. Retrieved January 28, 2013.
- ↑ Illinois Official Auto Trails Map (Map). c. 1:950,000 and c. 1:1,110,000. Illinois Automobile Department. 1924. Retrieved December 30, 2013.
- ↑ Illinois Official Highway Map (Map). 1:805,000. Cartography by H.M. Gousha. Illinois Division of Highways. 1957. Retrieved December 30, 2013.
- 1 2 3 4 Stork, Peter (2008). "History: Alignments and Bypasses". Digital Route 66. Archived from the original on May 11, 2008.
- ↑ Illinois Official Highway Map (Map). 1:790,000. Cartography by H.M. Gousha. Illinois Division of Highways. 1960. Retrieved December 30, 2013.
- ↑ Illinois Official Highway Map (Map). 1:772,500. Cartography by Rand McNally. Illinois Division of Highways. 1969. Retrieved December 30, 2013.
- ↑ Municipal Reference Collection (August 1997). "1964 Southwest Expressway Opened September 1, 1965—Renamed Adlai E. Stevenson Expressway". Chicago Public Library. Archived from the original on December 13, 2007.
- ↑ Hilkevitch, John (March 26, 2006). "Buckle Up, It Looks like a Long Ride". Chicago Tribune. Retrieved March 26, 2006.
- ↑ "I-55 Resurfacing Work". The Herald News (Joliet, IL). May 24, 2002.
- ↑ Cain, Cindy Wojdyla (April 22, 2005). "Interstate Overhaul 55 and 80: 'Tight Cloverleaf' to Be Redone Starting in May". The Herald News (Joliet, IL).
- ↑ "Governor Blagojevich Announces Completion of Interstate 55 Widening Project: I-55 Corridor Improvement Project Added One Lane in Each Direction from Weber Rd to I-80; Goal Is to Increase Safety and Reduce Congestion" (Press release). Office of the Governor. October 29, 2008. Retrieved December 30, 2013.
- ↑ "Southbound I-55 Ramp Closure in Wilmington" (PDF) (Press release). Illinois Department of Transportation. Retrieved February 11, 2013.
- ↑ "I-55 Wilmington Study". Illinois Department of Transportation. Retrieved February 11, 2013.
- ↑ "New Bridge May Mean Tolls on All Mississippi Bridges Here Making Motorists Pay Is a Last Resort But a Possibility, Officials Say". St. Louis Post-Dispatch. October 6, 1999.
- ↑ "New Mississippi River Bridge Opens to Traffic". St. Louis Post-Dispatch. February 9, 2014.
- ↑ "Gov. Rauner Pushes to Develop Toll Lanes on I-55". Chicago: WMAQ-TV. February 4, 2016. Retrieved February 4, 2016.
- ↑ Illinois Technology Transfer Center (2006). "T2 GIS Data". Illinois Department of Transportation. Retrieved 2007-11-08.
- ↑ General Highway Map: Sangamon County, Illinois (PDF) (Map). Illinois Department of Transportation. February 20, 2009. Retrieved January 2, 2013.
- ↑ Google (January 2, 2013). "Interstate 55 Business (Springfield)" (Map). Google Maps. Google. Retrieved January 2, 2013.
External links
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Interstate 55 in Illinois. |
- Stevenson Expressway Timeline at the Chicago Public Library
- Historic, Current & Average Travel Times For The Stevenson Expressway
Interstate 55 | ||
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