Interstate 69 in Texas

This article is about the section of Interstate 69 in Texas. For the entire route, see Interstate 69.

Interstate 69 marker

Interstate 69
Route information
Maintained by TxDOT
Length: 74.9 mi (120.5 km)
Existed: December 5, 2011 (2011-12-05) – present
Major junctions
South end: US 59 in Rosenberg
  I-45 in Houston
I-10 in Houston
North end: US 59 near Cleveland
Highway system
SH 68US 69

Interstate 69 (I-69) in the U.S. state of Texas is an extension of that existing Interstate Highway that will pass through the eastern part of the state and along the Gulf Coast to Victoria, where it will split into multiple segments with I-69E terminating in Brownsville, I-69C terminating in Pharr, and I-69W terminating in Laredo.

The first segment of I-69 in Texas was opened in 2011 near Corpus Christi. The American Association of State Highway and Transportation Officials (AASHTO) approved an additional 53 miles (85 km) of US 77 from Brownsville to Raymondville for designation as I-69, which was to be signed as I-69E upon concurrence from the Federal Highway Administration (FHWA). FHWA approval for this segment was announced on May 29, 2013.[1] By March of 2015, a 74.9 mile section of US-59 had been completed and designated as I-69 through the Houston Metropolitan Area.

Route description

The congressionally designated I-69 corridor begins at the Mexican border with 3 auxiliary routes:

I-69/US 59 in Houston looking east
What is now I-69/US 59 (Southwest Freeway) in 1972

I-69W and I-69E will merge just south of Victoria, Texas, where mainline I-69 will follow US 59 northeast to Fort Bend County. In the Houston area, I-69 follows US 59 (Southwest Freeway) from Fort Bend County to the west loop of Interstate 610 (I-610). I-69 then follows US 59 (Eastex Freeway) from the north loop of I-610 to the Liberty-Montgomery county line. The segment of US 59 inside Loop I-610, through downtown Houston, was approved for designation as I-69 by the FHWA on March 9, 2015 and approved for signage as I-69 by the Texas Transportation Commission on March 25, 2015.[2]

I-69 will follow US 59 to the north, serving Cleveland, Shepherd, Livingston, Lufkin, Nacogdoches, and Tenaha. At Tenaha, I-69 will head into Louisiana along the US 84 corridor. The segment of US 59 from Tenaha to Texarkana will be signed as Interstate 369 (I-369).

Since the first section of US 77 between Corpus Christi and Robstown has been signed as I-69, it implies that the I-69 mainline will follow the coastal (US-77) route from Victoria to Brownsville. This also implies that the branch along US 59 from Victoria to Laredo and the branch along US 281 from George West to Pharr are to be signed as either 3-digit spurs of I-69 (I-x69) or as separate 2-digit interstate routes. While federal legislation designating the south Texas branches as I-69 suggests that these routes may be designated as "I-69E" (east, following US-77), "I-69C" (central, following US-281), and "I-69W" (west, following US-59), the American Association of State Highway and Transportation Officials Special Committee on Route Numbering rejected the Texas Department of Transportation's request for these three designations along the proposed I-69 branches, citing that AASHTO policy no longer allows Interstate highways to be signed as suffixed routes. Stating that the I-69E, I-69C, and I-69W designations for the three I-69 branches south of Victoria, Texas were written into federal law, the initial denial of TxDOT's applications were subsequently overturned by the AASHTO Standing Committee on Highways, and the approval for the I-69E, I-69C, and I-69W branch designations were confirmed by the AASHTO Board of Directors, pending concurrence from the Federal Highway Administration during the AASHTO Spring Meeting on May 7, 2013. During this same meeting, the section of US-83 between Harlingen and Palmview was conditionally approved to be designated as Interstate 2 (I-2), with FHWA concurrence. The US-83 freeway in south Texas was widely anticipated to receive an I-x69 designation instead of I-2. In any case, Texas is proceeding in the same fashion as Indiana, conducting environmental studies for its portion of I-69 in a two-tier process. The mainline route through Texas will be approximately 500 miles (800 km). On June 11, 2008, TxDOT announced they planned to limit further study of I-69 to existing highway corridors (US 59, US 77, US 84, US 281, and SH 44) outside transition zones in the lower Rio Grande Valley, Laredo, Houston, and Texarkana.[3]

Texas originally sought a public-private partnership to construct much of the route through Texas as a privately operated toll road under the failed Trans-Texas Corridor project. However, on June 26, 2008, TxDOT announced that they had approved a proposal by Zachry American and ACS Infrastructure to develop the I-69 corridor in Texas, beginning with upgrades to the US 77 corridor between Brownsville and I-37; the Zachry/ACS plan calls for the majority of the freeway to be toll-free; the only two tolled sections would be bypasses of Riviera and Driscoll.[4]

Original plans for the route included a potential overlap with the "TTC-35" corridor component as well, but the preferred alternative for that component follows I-35 south of San Antonio instead of entering the lower Rio Grande Valley.

Status

As of July 2011, Texas has been proceeding with upgrading rural sections of US 59, US 77, and US 281 to interstate standards by replacing intersections with interchanges, and converting 2-lane stretches to 4 lanes by adding a second carriageway to the existing roadway.

A stated goal of TxDOT's I-69 initiative is that "existing suitable freeway sections of the proposed system be designated as I-69 as soon as possible."[5] A bill was introduced and passed by the House of Representatives that allows interstate quality sections of US 59, US 77, and US 281 to be signed as I-69 regardless of whether or not they connected to other interstate highways.

Meanwhile, TxDOT has submitted an application to the Federal Highway Administration (FHWA) and the American Association of State Highway and Transportation Officials (AASHTO) to designate 75 miles of US 59 in the Houston area and 8 miles of US 77 near Corpus Christi as I-69, as these sections are already built to interstate standards and connect to other interstate highways. In August 2011, TxDOT received approval from FHWA for a six-mile segment of US 77 between I-37 and SH 44 near Corpus Christi, and was approved by the AASHTO in October 2011.[6] Officials held a ceremony on December 5, 2011 to unveil I-69 signs on the Robstown-Corpus Christi section.[7] On May 29, 2013, the Robstown-Corpus Christi section of I-69 was re-signed as I-69E.

At the May 18, 2012 meeting of AASHTO, 35 miles of US-59 (Eastex Freeway) from I-610 in Houston (on the loop's northern segment) to Fostoria Road in Liberty County were also approved as ready for I-69 signage, pending concurrence from the Federal Highway Administration.[8] FHWA later granted concurrence and with the final approval of the Texas Transportation Commission, the 35-mile stretch was officially designated as I-69.[9] It was announced on February 6, 2013 that FHWA had approved a 28.4 mile segment of US-59 (Southwest Freeway) from I-610 in Houston (on the loop's western segment) to just southwest of Rosenberg,[10][11] The Texas Transportation Commission gave final approval later that month and signage was erected on April 3, 2013.[12][13] The remaining segment of the original 75-mile submission (the section within Houston between the northern and western sections of I-610) was approved for designation as I-69 by the FHWA on March 9, 2015 and approved for signage as I-69 by the Texas Transportation Commission on March 25, 2015.

On May 29, 2013, the Texas Transportation Commission gave approval to naming completed Interstate-standard segments of US 77 and US 281 as I-69. On July 15, 2013, the interstate shields were unveiled.[14] US 77 through Cameron and Willacy counties are signed as I-69E. That includes 53 miles (85 km) of existing freeway starting at the international boundary in the middle of the Rio Grande in Brownsville and running north past Raymondville. The 13 miles (21 km) of US 281 freeway in Pharr and Edinburg are signed as I-69C.[15]

On November 20, 2014, The Texas Transportation Commission voted to add two new sections totaling 6.1 miles to Interstate 69 in South Texas.[16] The first section is 1.6 miles of newly finished freeway near Robstown in Nueces County and was co-designated as I-69E/US 77 [16] and the second section is a 4.5 mile section of new freeway on the north side of Edinburg in Hidalgo County which was co-designated as I-69C/US 281.[16] The designations were recently approved by the Federal Highway Administration and by the American Association of State Highway and Transportation Officials, the organization which determines highway designation numbering in Texas.[16] As a result, there is now a total of 192 miles of the I-69 System route in Texas, including Interstate 2).

Exit list

All exits are unnumbered.

CountyLocationmikmDestinationsNotes
Victoria  I-69E south / US 77 south / I-69W south / US 59 south (via Spur 91) Refugio, Corpus Christi, Goliad, LaredoSouthbound exit and northbound entrance; northern end of future I-69E and northern end of future I-69W; future southern end of US 59 overlap
Victoria SH 185 Victoria, Bloomington
US 87 Victoria, Port Lavaca
Loop 463 / Burroughsville Road
Telferner
Bus. US 59 south / FM 1686 Victoria, Telferner
Inez FM 444 InezSouthern end of freeway
Jackson  FM 234 north
El Toro FM 234 – El Toro, Vanderbilt
Edna Loop 521 Edna
SH 111 / FM 822 Edna, Yoakum
Loop 521 Edna
  FM 530 CordeleNorthern end of freeway
  Loop 522 Ganado
Ganado SH 172 / FM 710 Ganado
Loop 522 Ganado
WhartonLouise Loop 523 / FM 647 LouiseNo northbound entrance
County Road 319
Loop 523 / FM 1160 Louise
Hillje Loop 524 / FM 441 Hillje
 
Bus. US 59 north El Campo
El Campo FM 1163
SH 71 El Campo, Palacios
FM 1162

Bus. US 59 south / FM 960 El Campo
Pierce Loop 526 Pierce
Wharton
Bus. US 59 north / FM 961 to SH 60 Wharton, Bay City
FM 102 Wharton, Eagle Lake
 
Bus. US 59 / SH 60 Hungerford, Wharton, Bay City
Hungerford FM 1161 Spanish Camp
 
Bus. US 59 south Hungerford
southbound access only
Fort BendKendleton FM 2919 Kendleton
  Loop 541 KendletonSouthbound exit only
  FM 360 / Loop 540 Needville
BeasleyIsleib Road
Rosenberg Loop 540 BeasleySouthbound access only
Spur 10 (Slade Road) / Hartledge Road
US 59 south / Spur 529 north Victoria
I-69 begins/ends
Current southern end of US 59 overlap; at-grade intersection; southern end of freeway; no northbound entrance; current southern end of I-69
Bamore Road
SH 36 Rosenberg, Needville
FM 2218 Richmond
Reading RoadSouthbound exit closed until early 2018
  FM 762 Richmond, RosenbergNo southbound exit
  Williams Way BoulevardAccess to Oak Bend Medical Center
Sugar Land SH 99 (Frontage Road) / FM 2759 (Crabb River Road)Access to Memorial Hermann Sugar Land Hospital
Brazos River Turnaround
University Boulevard
First Colony Boulevard / Sweetwater BoulevardAccess to Methodist Sugar Land Hospital
SH 6 Sugarland Airport
Sugar Lakes Drive / Williams Trace BoulevardAccess to St. Luke's Sugar Land Hospital
Dairy Ashford Road / Sugar Creek Boulevard

Alt. US 90 Sugar Land, Stafford
StaffordKirkwood Road / West Airport Boulevard
HarrisHoustonWilcrest Drive / Murphy Road (FM 1092 south) / West Bellfort Avenue
Sam Houston Tollway
Beltway 8 (Frontage Road)No direct southbound exit (signed at Wilcrest Drive)
Bissonnet Street
South Gessner Road / Beechnut StreetAccess to Memorial Hermann Southwest Hospital
Fondren Road / Bellaire Boulevard
Hillcroft Avenue
Westpark Tollway eastNorthbound exit only
Westpark Tollway westSouthbound exit and northbound entrance
Westpark DriveNo direct northbound exit (signed at Hillcroft Avenue)
Fountainview DriveSouthbound exit and northbound entrance
Chimney Rock Road
I-610 IAH Airport, Hobby AirportI-610 exit 8A
Newcastle DriveNo direct northbound exit (signed at Weslayan Road)
Weslayan Road
Edloe Street, Buffalo Speedway
Kirby Drive
Greenbriar Drive / Shepherd Drive
Richmond Avenue / Downtown Houston via Louisiana Street (Spur 527)Northbound exit and southbound entrance
Main StreetNorthbound exit and southbound entrance; access to Texas Medical Center
Fannin StreetSouthbound exit and northbound entrance; access to Texas Medical Center
SH 288 south Lake Jackson, Freeport
McGowen Avenue / Tuam AvenueSouthbound exit and northbound entrance; access to St. Joseph Medical Center
Gray Avenue / Pierce Avenue Downtown DestinationsNorthbound exit and southbound entrance; access to St. Joseph Medical Center
I-45 Dallas, GalvestonI-45 exit 46; access to George Bush Intercontinental Airport and William P. Hobby Airport
Polk Street Downtown DestinationsNorthbound exit only
Jackson Street Downtown DestinationsSouthbound exit and northbound entrance
I-10 (US 90) San Antonio, BeaumontI-10 exit 770
Lyons Avenue / Quitman Street
Collingsworth Street / Kelley Street
Cavalcade StreetNo direct northbound exit (signed at Collingsworth Street)
I-610I-610 exit 20
Crosstimbers Road / Kelley Street
Laura Koppe RoadNo direct southbound exit (signed at Tidwell Road)
Tidwell Road
Parker Road / Jensen Drive / Saunders Road
 Little York Road
 Hopper RoadNo direct northbound exit (signed at Little York Road)
 East Mount Houston Road
 Aldine Mail Route
 Lauder RoadNo direct northbound exit (signed at Aldine Mail Route)
 Old Humble Road / Lee Road (FM 525 Spur)Northbound exit and southbound entrance
Houston FM 525 (Aldine Bender Road)
Beltway 8 (Sam Houston Parkway)
Beltway 8 (Frontage Road)No direct northbound exit (signed at FM 525)
Greens Road
HumbleRankin Road
Will Clayton Parkway Bush Intercontinental Airport
FM 1960 / Bus. FM 1960 HumbleAccess to Memorial Hermann Northeast Hospital
Townsen BoulevardNo direct southbound exit (signed at Hamblen Road / Sorters-McClellan Road)
MontgomeryKingwood Loop 494 / Hamblen Road / Sorters-McClellan Road
Kingwood Drive
Northpark Drive
  FM 1314 Porter, Conroe
 Community DriveFuture SH 99
  SH 99 Toll (Grand Parkway) SpringI-69 Northbound flyover to Westbound SH 99 Toll.
  FM 1485 / Loop 494 New Caney
  Loop 494 / Roman Forest Boulevard
Patton Village SH 242
Creekwood Lane
Splendora FM 2090 Splendora
East River Drive
 Fostoria RoadNorthbound exit to Fostoria Road
  US 59 north ClevelandCurrent northern end of US 59 overlap; Montgomery–Liberty county line
Liberty  US 59 south
I-69 begins/ends
Fostoria Road
Current northern end of I-69 overlap; Montgomery–Liberty county line; southbound exit to Fostoria Road; northern end of freeway
  SH 105 Conroe, BeaumontUS 59 northbound exit is a left-handed U-turn just north of the southbound exit; drivers must enter onto and cross over US 59 southbound lanes in order to take the southbound exit
Cleveland Loop 573 (Washington Avenue)Southern end of freeway

Bus. SH 105 Cleveland, Conroe
FM 2025 Coldspring
Loop 573 (Washington Avenue)Northern end of freeway
San Jacinto  FM 2914 east to FM 3460Under construction
Shepherd Loop 424 / FM 3460 ShepherdSigned as exits 453A (on US 59 south) and 453B (on US 59 north)
SH 150 / FM 223 ShepherdSigned as exit 451B (on US 59 north); no exit number southbound
Loop 424No left turn northbound
  FM 1127 east
PolkGoodrich Loop 393 north
FM 1988 to FM 2665
Loop 393 south Goodrich
Livingston
Bus. US 59 north / FM 1988 south Livingston, Woodville, Lake Livingston State Park
Southern end of freeway; signed as exits 436A (on US 59 south) and 436B (on US 59 north to US 59 Bus.); no exit number for US 59 north to FM 1988
Frontage RoadSigned as exits 434B (on US 59 south) and 436D (on US 59 north)
US 190 Huntsville, Livingston
Frontage Road - Pedigo ParkSigned as exits 432B (on US 59 south) and 434D (on US 59 north), access to Memorial Medical Center
 
SH 146 south / Bus. US 59 south Downtown Livingston
Northern end of freeway; no direct northbound exit (signed at exit 434D)
  Loop 116 north
Leggett Loop 116 south
FM 942 north CamdenSouthern end of FM 942 overlap
FM 942 southNorthern end of FM 942 overlap
  FM 62 east Camden
Moscow Loop 117
FM 350
Corrigan FM 942 south
US 287 Groveton, Woodville
FM 352 east (Stryker Road)
FM 1987 north – Damascus
  FM 357 north / FM 1987 south – Wakefield, Damascus
AngelinaDiboll Loop 210 (Thompson Street) / FM 1818 east (Dennis Street) Zavalla
Loop 210 (North Hines Street)
FM 2497 north
  FM 2108 east
  FM 324 north
Lufkin FM 819 (College Drive) Angelina College
FM 3482 (Whitehouse Drive)Southern end of freeway

Bus. US 59 north (South First Street) / Loop 287 west Lufkin
Southern end of Loop 287 overlap; US 59 north follows exit 390; access to FM 1877; access to Woodland Heights Medical Center
Tulane DriveNo direct northbound exit
FM 58 (Chestnut Street)Northern end of freeway
US 69 south (US 69 Bus. north) Huntington, Woodville, BeaumontSouthern end of US 69 overlap
FM 841 (Ford Chapel Road)
FM 325 (Lufkin Avenue)No direct northbound exit (signed at FM 841)
SH 103 (Atkinson Drive)

US 69 north / Loop 287 west / Bus. US 59 south Lufkin
Northern end of US 69 / Loop 287 overlap; access to FM 2021 west and FM 3521 east
  FM 3439
Redland FM 2021
  FM 843 west
Nacogdoches  FM 2782 north
Nacogdoches
Bus. US 59 north / Loop 224 east – Downtown Nacogdoches
Southern end of Loop 224 overlap; US 59 south follows exit 59S
SH 7 Crockett, Airport
FM 225 (Durst Street)
SH 21 (Douglass Road)
FM 2609 north (Austin Street)Northbound access only
FM 1638 (Old Tyler Road) / FM 3314 (Lone Star Road)
Loop 224 east (Stallings Drive) / Westward DriveNorthern end of Loop 224 overlap
FM 343 (Industrial Boulevard)
Redfield
US 259 north / Bus. US 59 south Henderson, Nacogdoches, SFASU
  FM 2864 north
Appleby FM 941 south
  FM 2435 north
Fitze FM 2476 south
Garrison FM 95 southSouthern end of FM 95 overlap
FM 138 east Center
FM 95 north – ConcordNorthern end of FM 95 overlap
Rusk
No major junctions
Shelby  FM 2667 south – Blair
Timpson US 84 west Rusk, PalestineSouthern end of US 84 overlap
SH 87 south
FM 947 east
Spur 470 south
  FM 1645 south
Tenaha FM 2141 south
FM 947 west (West Drive)Southern end of FM 947 overlap
FM 947 east (Main Street)Northern end of FM 947 overlap
Loop 157 (Center Street) Center
I-369 north / US 59 north Carthage, Texarkana
US 96 south Center
Future northern end of US 59 overlap; southern end of future I-369; I-369 will follow US 59 (SIU 15) to I-30 in Texarkana, Texas.
I-69 north / US 84 east LogansportUnbuilt; future I-69 follows SIU 16 to US 171 in Stonewall, Louisiana.
  FM 2669 south
Paxton FM 699 Carthage, Center
  FM 3343 south
Joaquin FM 2428 south
SH 7 west
  FM 3174 north
Haslam FM 2787 south Toledo Bend Reservoir
  I-69 north / US 84 east Shreveport, MansfieldLouisiana state line (Toledo Bend Reservoir/Sabine River)
1.000 mi = 1.609 km; 1.000 km = 0.621 mi

References

  1. Clark, Steve (May 29, 2013). "SH 550 Ribbon-Cutting crowd Gets big I-69 News". Brownsville Herald. Retrieved June 5, 2013.
  2. Minute Order 5 - March 25, 2015, Texas Transportation Commission
  3. Cross, Mark (June 11, 2008). "TxDOT Recommends Narrowing Study Area for Texas Portion of I-69" (Press release). Texas Department of Transportation. Archived from the original on July 5, 2008.
  4. Texas Department of Transportation (June 26, 2008). "Transportation Commission Picks Developer for Texas Portion of I-69". Keep Texas Moving (Texas Department of Transportation). Archived from the original on September 26, 2008.
  5. "What's Next for I-69 Texas?". Texas Department of Transportation. Retrieved August 2011.
  6. "Portion of US 77 Approved as Part of U.S. Interstate System" (Press release). Texas Department of Transportation. Archived from the original on November 2, 2011. Retrieved August 2011.
  7. Clark, Steve (October 30, 2011). "First I-69 signs going up on U.S. 77 in December". Brownsville Herald. Retrieved January 1, 2012.
  8. Vitale, Marty (May 19, 2012). "Report to SCOH" (PDF) (Report). Traverse City, MI: American Association of State Highway and Transportation Officials.
  9. Alliance for I-69 Texas (July 26, 2012). "35 More Miles of I-69 Route Added to Interstate Highway System" (Press release). Alliance for I-69 Texas. Retrieved January 29, 2013.
  10. Fikac, Peggy & Begley, Dug (February 6, 2013). "Interstate 69 coming, piece by piece". Houston Chronicle. Retrieved April 12, 2013.
  11. Media Relations. "I-69 Designation as an Interstate Means More Jobs for Texas and Economic Development in Growing Communities" (Press release). Texas Department of Transportation. Retrieved June 5, 2013.
  12. Alliance for I-69 Texas (February 28, 2013). "Southwest Freeway Now Interstate 69" (Press release). Alliance for I-69 Texas. Retrieved June 5, 2013.
  13. "28 miles of US Hwy. 59 now Interstate 69". Houston, TX: KPRC-TV. April 3, 2013. Retrieved June 5, 2013.
  14. Janes, Jared. "Valley's I-69 signage the latest stop along superhighway dream". The Monitor. Retrieved July 16, 2013.
  15. Essex, Allen (May 30, 2013). "I-69 Comes to the Valley: 111 Miles Added to Interstate System". Valley Morning Star (Harlingen, TX). Retrieved June 3, 2013.
  16. 1 2 3 4 Alliance for I-69 Texas. "6.1 Miles in Two New Sections Added to I-69" (Press release). Alliance for I-69 Texas. Retrieved December 2, 2014.

External links

Route map: Bing / Google

Interstate 69
Previous state:
Terminus
Texas Next state:
Louisiana
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