List of gaps in Interstate Highways
Dwight D. Eisenhower National System of Interstate and Defense Highways | |
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Interstate Highways in the 48 contiguous states | |
System information | |
Formed: | June 29, 1956[1] |
Highway names | |
Interstates: | Interstate X (I-X) |
System links | |
There are gaps in the Interstate Highway system, where the roadway carrying an Interstate shield does not conform to the standards set by the Federal Highway Administration (FHWA), the body that sets the regulations for the Interstate Highway System. For the most part, the Interstate Highway System in the United States is a connected system, with most freeways completed; however, some Interstates still have gaps. These gaps can be due to unconnected segments of the same route or from failure of the road to fully conform to Interstate standards by including such things as at-grade crossings, traffic lights, undivided or narrow freeways, or movable bridges (lift bridges and drawbridges). This article deals with present day gaps, as such examples were far more numerous during construction of the Interstate Highway System and the upgrading of existing roads to meet these standards, which did not occur everywhere at the same time. Temporary gaps, such as lane closures that reduce traffic to one lane and reduce speed limits, are also excluded.
True gaps
True gaps are where two disjoint sections of road have the same Interstate highway number and can reasonably be considered part of "one highway" in theory, based on the directness of connections via other highways, or based on future plans to fill in the gap in the Interstate, or simply based on the shortness of the gap. The two sections are either not physically connected at all, or they are connected but the connection is not signed as part of the highway. It should be noted that most of these gaps (except for the one on I-95) exist because the two segments are actually two unrelated highways that were built at different times, but assigned the same number; many times, the same number was assigned to the second segment with the intention of eventually connecting it to the first segment.
- Interstate 49 currently has five sections: one from Lafayette to Shreveport, Louisiana; the second one from Louisiana Highway 1 near Shreveport to Texarkana; the third section from I-40 near Alma, to US 71 south of Bella Vista, replacing most of I-540 and Arkansas Highway 549; and the last section from Pineville, to Kansas City, Missouri. A short, isolated section of I-49 exists in Bella Vista, Arkansas as Arkansas Highway 549. These gaps are expected to be eventually closed.
- Interstate 69 has five sections: the original alignment travels from Indianapolis, Indiana, to Port Huron, Michigan. On October 2, 2006, a segment of I-69 opened in Tunica and DeSoto counties in Mississippi; this segment continues to Memphis, Tennessee in the north. Another section exists from near Evansville, Indiana to Scotland, Indiana, and is under construction to Martinsville, Indiana; this section is expected to be connected to the original I-69 in Indianapolis in the next decade. Also in late 2011, the section of the Wendell H. Ford Western Kentucky Parkway between I-24 and Exit 38/Pennyrile Parkway became signed as I-69. In 2012, a portion of US 59 between Houston and Cleveland, Texas became part of I-69.[2] On February 28, 2013, a portion of US 59 between Houston and Rosenberg, Texas became part of I-69.[3] This gap was bridged by the signing of the portion between the two segments of US 59 as I-69 in March 2015.[4]
- Interstate 73 has two sections: a section of the Greensboro Urban Loop in Greensboro, North Carolina, the only section of I-73 signed with normal Interstate shields,[5] and one concurrent with the entire section of I-74 from Ulah to Ellerbe, North Carolina.[6] On the other segments (where I-73 is cosigned with Interstate 74 and U.S. Route 220) the exact signage varies. However, immediately south of Greensboro, I-73 is signed FUTURE. Further south along the freeway, the Interstate is signed INTERSTATE.
- Interstate 74 currently has five sections,[7] one heading west from Cincinnati, Ohio, to Davenport, Iowa; one from the Virginia/North Carolina line along Interstate 77 south/east to a point southeast of Mount Airy, North Carolina; one traveling concurrent with US 311 around High Point connecting with I-85; one concurrent with the entire section of I-73 from Ulah to Ellerbe, North Carolina; and from west of Laurinburg to south of Lumberton, North Carolina, at Interstate 95. Other sections up to freeway standards are signed with I-74 shields that have FUTURE instead of INTERSTATE. Future I-73 shields are also placed along some of these sections. North Carolina is currently working on connecting all its sections of I-74, though the gap to Cincinnati will remain for the foreseen future.
- The eastern Interstate 86 currently has two sections. One travels for 197 miles (317 km) from I-90 in North East, Pennsylvania, (which is a town in Northwestern PA) to exit 56 in Elmira, New York. The second section is a 9.9-mile (15.9 km) stretch outside of Binghamton traveling from I-81 in Kirkwood to exit 79 in Windsor. The gap is currently signed as Future 86. I-86 will eventually travel from North East, Pennsylvania, to the New York State Thruway (I-87) near Harriman, New York. All the designated sections and gaps in New York are part of New York State Route 17.
- Interstate 95. Probably the best-known and most notoriously confusing of all the Interstate gaps, I-95 is discontinuous in Lawrence Township, New Jersey (near Trenton). Coming north from Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, I-95 loops around the north side of Trenton and ends at U.S. Route 1, where it becomes I-295, which heads back south, heading to southern New Jersey. The other section of I-95 begins on the Pennsylvania Turnpike at the Pennsylvania/New Jersey state line, heads east into New Jersey along a spur of the New Jersey Turnpike, then heads north along the New Jersey Turnpike mainline, though it is only signed as far down the NJ Turnpike as I-195. Originally I-95 was planned to have left the alignment north of Trenton and headed northeast to Interstate 287 and travel east along I-287 to Exit 10 on the Turnpike, but the Somerset Freeway was never built. Extensions over the years have taken I-95 several miles further north to the US-1 interchange northeast of Trenton, and along the New Jersey Turnpike to the Pennsylvania state line. An interchange is under construction, connecting the southern alignment with the Pennsylvania Turnpike, and I-95 will be rerouted via it, with the part north of that interchange becoming an extension of I-295.
- Interstate 99 currently has two sections: one from the Pennsylvania Turnpike north to just south of Interstate 80, concurrent with U.S. Route 220, and one from the Pennsylvania–New York state line north to the eastern Interstate 86 in Corning, New York, concurrent with U.S. Route 15. Much of the intervening route, including the entire US 15 section between Interstate 180 in Williamsport and the New York state line, has been constructed to freeway standards but as yet is not signed as part of I-99.
Freeway gaps
Freeway gaps occur where the Interstate is signed as a continuous route, but part or all of it is not up to freeway standards. This includes drawbridges where traffic on the Interstate can be stopped for vessels. This does not include facilities such as tollbooths, toll plazas, agricultural inspection stations, or border stations.
At-grade intersections and traffic lights
Several Interstates in rural areas of the U.S. have at-grade intersections (including median breaks) with minor farm access roads. This is usually due to the lack of an old highway; the need to provide access to property that was accessed via the road prior to its upgrade to an Interstate; and the high cost to construct an interchange for the small amount of traffic that would use such a connection or to build a frontage road parallel to the freeway to the nearest interchange. Other at-grade intersections are restricted to municipal service vehicles, of which make it easier for maintenance to be done in places like in the mountains as well as tollways.
- The northbound lanes of I-5 in Washington intersect with an at-level pedestrian crosswalk approximately 100 feet (30 m) south of the Canadian border. This crosswalk allows pedestrians access to a monument which is part of Peace Arch Park.
- I-19 between North West Street and its southern terminus at West Crawford Street at North Sonotia Avenue, in Nogales, Arizona, consists of surface roads.
- I-35 in the Flint Hills of Kansas along with I-10 and I-40 in remote areas of west Texas have several at-grade access points for cattle ranches. I-40 also has access to dirt roads in the mountains of western North Carolina.
- I-70 uses part of US 30 along a surface road in Breezewood, Pennsylvania. Traffic traveling eastbound on I-70/I-76 must exit and travel a short distance on US 30 in order to continue south on I-70 heading to Hancock, Maryland. (The routing is similar for traffic following I-70 in the opposite direction: traffic traveling north on I-70 must exit and travel a short distance on US 30 in order to continue west on I-70/I-76 or to enter the Pennsylvania Turnpike.) This is probably the best-known instance of traffic lights on an interstate. There used to be a sign of a policeman pointing at drivers leaving the Pennsylvania Turnpike to enter US 30, saying, "You! Slow Down!" Local businesses have lobbied to keep the gap to avoid loss of business (Map).[8]
- I-676 has a surface street section at the west end of the Ben Franklin Bridge in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, because of historically-significant areas. Signage and the Federal Highway Administration consider I-676 to use the surface streets; the Pennsylvania Department of Transportation and the New Jersey Department of Transportation consider I-676 to be continuous across the Ben Franklin Bridge, even though the bridge, built in 1926, is not up to Interstate standards (Aerial photo). This does not specifically violate Interstate standards, however, as the two separated segments of I-676 are in different states.
- I-78 travels along a one-way pair of surface streets, 12th Street and 14th Street, in Jersey City, New Jersey, between the end of the New Jersey Turnpike Newark Bay Extension and the Holland Tunnel, which leads into New York City. Between the two aforementioned points are four signalized intersections.[9]
- I-180 in Cheyenne, Wyoming, has no parts built to Interstate standard; in fact the interchange with I-80 is just a simple diamond interchange with two traffic lights on I-180. However, it is expressway-quality with a few grade separations (Map).
- I-585 in Spartanburg, South Carolina, is concurrent with US 176, in which I-585 shields are present beyond the point where it ceases to be a freeway, having passed through traffic lights. There also exists a sign that marks the road there as "I-585 Business Spur" and hence it is unclear whether that surface section of US 176 also belongs to I-585.
- I-587 in Kingston, New York has a traffic circle (with yield signs) at its northern terminus at I-87.
- I-690 in Syracuse, New York, has a traffic light 12 days each year for buses to carry Great New York State Fair attendees from parking areas across the road to the fair.
- I-94 at Fort Custer west of Battle Creek, Michigan, is the only instance of an Interstate freeway in the state of Michigan to have a driveway, which facilitates access of military vehicles.[10]
Undivided and narrow freeways
This section addresses two-lane freeways and other narrow or undivided freeway sections of the Interstate, excepting instances of continuing routes using one-lane ramps and merge leads. Narrow gaps between opposing directions with jersey barriers taller than four feet (1.2 m) are excluded from this section; therefore the separation criteria is really either a 4-foot-tall (1.2 m) wall, or a 100-foot-wide (30 m) median, whichever is greater.
- I-40's western 15 miles (24 km) in North Carolina in the Harmon Den Wildlife Management Area has several S-curves, a Jersey barrier with extremely narrow left shoulders and a few at-grade intersections albeit in RIRO style.
- I-55 is one-lane-only for northbound through traffic for several hundred feet at the Poplar Street Bridge in St. Louis, Missouri, when the highway approaches the Poplar Street Bridge, which carries the highway over the Mississippi River toward East St. Louis, Illinois. A similar situation exists on the southbound lanes as I-55 must travel down a one-lane twisty ramp onto the main highway once traffic enters the Missouri side of the bridge. In 2015, the Missouri Department of Transportation will widen the Poplar Street Bridge to allow northbound traffic two lanes onto the bridge.[11]
- Interstate 70 is one-lane only for these following reasons:
- Interstate 70 in Kansas is one-lane-only for eastbound through traffic for several hundred feet in Kansas City, Kansas where the highway approaches the Lewis and Clark Viaduct Bridge, which carries the highway over the Kansas River toward Kansas City, Missouri. Interstate 670, just a few blocks south provides an alternate route without this bottleneck
- Interstate 70 in West Virginia is one-lane-only for through traffic for several thousand feet in Wheeling, West Virginia, where the highway enters the Wheeling Tunnel and crosses the Ohio River on the Fort Henry Bridge. Nearby I-470 provides relief from this situation.
- The Murray Baker Bridge, which carries I-74 over the Illinois River in Peoria, Illinois, has no shoulders, which makes it too narrow for Interstate standards. Trucks of all sizes, however, are permitted on this bridge.
- The Mackinac Bridge, which carries I-75 over the Straits of Mackinac between St. Ignace and Mackinaw City, Michigan, has no wide median or hard shoulders due to space constraints, nor does it have a Jersey barrier; instead, it has a 4-inch-tall (10 cm) divider between the opposing directions of the green grate lanes, and the north side of the bridge approaching the toll booth uses a double-yellow line to separate opposing sides. The speed limit is also reduced to 45 mph (70 km/h) for cars and 20 mph (30 km/h) for trucks on the bridge. The highway returns to Interstate standard until it reaches the Sault Ste. Marie International Bridge, which carries only two undivided lanes of the Interstate to its terminus at the Canadian border.
- A short stretch of I-278 is one lane in Astoria, New York, and has height limits due to its being on the Grand Central Parkway, a height-restricted parkway.
- The Thousand Islands Bridge, which carries I-81 over part of the Saint Lawrence River, is an undivided road with one lane in each direction.
- I-93 is a two-lane divided parkway, or a "super two", through Franconia Notch in New Hampshire. A four-lane Interstate Highway was once proposed here, but the concept was abandoned because of environmental concerns, in part because of vibrations that could harm the Old Man of the Mountain rock formation (prior to the formation's 2003 collapse). This section of highway was for many years marked as US 3 and "To I-93", but these have now been replaced with regular I-93 signs. The Federal Highway Act of 1973 exempts this stretch from the Interstate Highway standards that apply elsewhere, and this highway is considered to be I-93 for all practical purposes.[12]
- Some stretches of Interstate highway use a barrier transfer machine on some bridges where it would be too costly to upgrade/rebuild to a higher-capacity bridge. In any case the traffic distribution is strongly asymmetric depending on the hour of the day. This kind of bridge typically contains undivided lanes without the flexible Jersey barrier that is manipulated by machines.
Movable bridges
By Interstate standard, all bridges on the Interstate system must be fixed as to not interrupt the flow of traffic. Several bridges on the system, however, are movable:
- I-5 crosses the Columbia River from Portland, Oregon, to Vancouver, Washington, on the Interstate Bridge, a vertical-lift bridge. The Columbia River Crossing project sought to replace this bridge[13] until being abandoned in 2013.[14]
- I-110 has a drawbridge across the Back Bay of Biloxi in Biloxi, Mississippi.
- I-64—the Hampton Roads Beltway—crosses the South Branch Elizabeth River in Chesapeake, Virginia, on the High Rise Bridge, which is a drawbridge.
- I-264 has a drawbridge, the Berkley Bridge, crossing the Elizabeth River in Norfolk, Virginia.
- I-278 has a drawbridge across the Bronx River in New York City.
- I-280 has a drawbridge, the Stickel Memorial Bridge, crossing over the Passaic River between Newark and Harrison, New Jersey.
- I-95/I-495 pass together as the Capital Beltway over the Potomac River on the Woodrow Wilson Bridge, a double-leaf bascule span. Even though the original bridge was replaced in the 2000s, the new bridge also has a draw span, albeit with more vertical clearance resulting in fewer openings than the old bridge — about 65 per year, an average of about one every six days.
- I-695 has a drawbridge over Curtis Creek, south of Baltimore and just west of the Francis Scott Key Bridge. However, this section of the Baltimore Beltway is not part of the Interstate Highway System, and is officially Maryland Route 695 despite the Interstate signage on the highway.[15][16]
Other movable bridges on the Interstate System have been replaced after spending many years as part of the system. These include:
- I-75 had a bascule bridge from 1960 to 1988 at Zilwaukee, Michigan, just north of Saginaw; the high-level Zilwaukee Bridge replaced it on December 23, 1987, for northbound traffic, and on September 19, 1988, for southbound traffic.[17] Interstate 675 was built as an in-town bypass of the bascule bridge prior to the construction of the tall Zilwaukee bridge. Since the completion of the tall Zilwaukee bridge in 1987, I-675 has had less traffic than its capacity; though it is a feasible detour for bridge, or other maintenance between both ends of the loop.
- I-280 formerly had a drawbridge, the Craig Bridge, in Toledo, Ohio. The fixed-span Veterans' Glass City Skyway replaced the drawbridge on the Interstate Highway in 2007.
Freeway-to-freeway crosspaths without direct connection
- I-475 has no direct interchange with I-80/I-90 on the Ohio Turnpike; I-271 also lacks a direct interchange with the I-80 section of the Ohio Turnpike.
- The Pennsylvania Turnpike mainline (I-70, I-76, and I-276) currently lacks several direct interchanges, including with I-81, I-95, and I-99.
- The southern segment of Interstate 99 ends just south of Interstate 80, with no direct freeway-to-freeway connection.
- I-90 (Massachusetts Turnpike) does not have a direct interchange with I-391.
Connection gaps
Auxiliary Interstates (also known as three-digit Interstates) are intended to connect to their parent either directly or via a same-parented Interstate (like I-280 in California being connected to I-80 via I-680). Often, these connection gaps occur to eliminate concurrencies between other three-digit routes. Freeway gaps (signed or unsigned) that officially connect auxiliary routes to the parent are excluded.
Current day examples
- I-210 in California does not currently connect directly to I-10 - it connected to I-10 until 1998, when California State Route 57 replaced the portion of I-210 through Covina and San Dimas to provide a proper connection to current State Route 210. State Route 210, built as an extension to replace Route 30, connects to I-10, and California is petitioning to have that portion signed as I-210 as well. When that happens, this gap will close. I-210 also does not connect to any of the spurs of I-10, with the exception of a short, unsigned, unfinished section of I-710 which connects to I-110 and State Route 110 only via surface streets.
- Interstate 269 is near Memphis, Tennessee, but doesn't actually connect to Interstate 69 yet, since I-69 is still under construction.
- None of the spurs of I-78 (I-278, I-478, I-678, I-878) connect to its parent, nor is there any surface-street with a state route designation with the same number that continues with a solid connection. (see disputed gaps below)
- Interstate 585 near Spartanburg, South Carolina uses a business loop, albeit in freeway form of I-85, but this puts the example in some dispute of consensus (see disputed gaps below)
- Interstate 495 doesn't currently have any official connection to Interstate 95, though it has a FUTURE sign along US-64 in North Carolina until as far east as Interstate 95.
- Numerous three-digit Interstate routes are unsigned on some portions, which would lead some to think they were "connection gaps". However these aforementioned "connection gaps" don't even have internal unsigned concurrencies on other Interstate highway segments between the "parent route" and signed terminus.
Disputed gaps
Gaps where different criteria constitute contradictory circumstances.
- I-265—the Indiana portion of I-265 does not yet connect with the Kentucky portion. Each of the two segments, circling the outskirts and suburbs of Louisville, ends before crossing the Ohio River, making them completely in separate states, thus following numbering guidelines. A bridge to connect the two segments is currently under construction.[18]
- None of the spurs of I-78 (I-278, I-478, I-678, I-878) connect to its parent. I-78 was planned to extend through New York City and end as two branches, where I-295 and I-695 now end at I-95. I-478 comes the closest, and would have intersected if the Westway project were not canceled; I-278, the only I-78 spur to leave New York City, was planned to extend northwest to I-78 at Route 24. Since all the spurs are interconnected, only one of them needs to be eventually connected to its parent route for all of them to conform to numbering standards.
- I-585 used to connect with I-85 in Spartanburg, South Carolina, but I-85 was moved to a new bypassing route, where I-585 now ends. The signed connection to I-85 is via a surface section of US 176.
- I-90 at the Chicago Skyway—historically, the Skyway was commonly considered to be, and was signed as, part of I-90 (originally I-94). However, around 1999, the City of Chicago determined it may never have applied for approval to sign it as an Interstate. (It also is not designed to Interstate standards.) The city re-signed the Skyway, and it is now mostly posted with "TO I-90/94" signs with a few older signs remaining. However, the Illinois Department of Transportation has always and continues to report the Skyway as part of the Interstate system, and the Federal Highway Administration still considers it as such. An FHWA legal memo says "There is no doubt about it. The Chicago Skyway is officially part of I-90 that (has) always been included in the Dwight D. Eisenhower National System of Interstate and Defense Highways."[19][20]
- The northern end of the I-99 freeway ends less than 1 mile (1.6 km) from I-80 in Pennsylvania, and motorists can continue north on US 220/PA 26 along surface street to grade-level ramps to access I-80, which is planned to overlap in the eastward direction with I-99 northbound, once the extension of I-99 is completed.
See also
- U.S. Roads portal
References
- ↑ Weingroff, Richard F. (Summer 1996). "Federal-Aid Highway Act of 1956, Creating the Interstate System". Public Roads (Washington, DC: Federal Highway Administration) 60 (1). Retrieved March 16, 2012.
- ↑ "Report to SCOH May 19, 2012" (PDF).
- ↑ "Alliance for I-69 Texas: More Houston Areas Freeway Added to Interstate 69" (Press release).
- ↑ http://ftp.dot.state.tx.us/pub/txdot/commission/2015/0326/5.pdf
- ↑ Malme, Bob. "I-73 Segment 4". Self-published. Archived from the original on January 1, 2009. Retrieved November 19, 2009.
- ↑ Malme, Bob. "I-73 Segment 9/I-74 Segment 10". Self-published. Archived from the original on December 30, 2008. Retrieved November 19, 2009.
- ↑ Malme, Bob. "I-74 North Carolina Progress Page". Self-published. Archived from the original on July 25, 2010. Retrieved August 28, 2009.
- ↑ Roig-Franzia, Manuel (November 22, 2001). "The Town That Stops Traffic: Travelers Encounter Way Station as Way of Life in Breezewood". Washington Post. p. B1.
- ↑ Google (August 28, 2009). "Intersection of 14th St (ostensibly 78 West) and Erie St" (Map). Google Maps. Google. Retrieved August 28, 2009.
- ↑ Staff. "Road & Highway Facts". Michigan Department of Transportation. Retrieved October 28, 2014.
- ↑ "I-64 Corridor Improvements" (PDF).
- ↑ Weingroff, Richard (April 7, 2011). "Interstate System Conditions and Performance". Highway History. Federal Highway Administration. Retrieved August 20, 2012.
- ↑ Project staff. "Home". Columbia River Crossing. Oregon Department of Transportation and Washington State Department of Transportation. Retrieved August 28, 2009.
- ↑ Read, Richard (July 5, 2013). "Bridge Funds to Nowhere: Some of the $175 million in work for the now-defunct Columbia River Crossing might be useful someday, but much of it is just gone". The Oregonian (Portland, OR). p. A1. Retrieved July 5, 2013.
- ↑ Highway Information Services Division (December 31, 2007). Highway Location Reference. Maryland State Highway Administration. Retrieved April 15, 2009.
- Anne Arundel County (PDF)
- ↑ Highway Services Division (2010). "Movable Bridges on State Maintained Highways" (PDF). Maryland State Highway Administration. Retrieved October 18, 2010.
- ↑ Staff writer (September 19, 1988). "Zilwaukee Bridge Now Open North, South—Partly". Toledo Blade. p. 1.
- ↑ "Home". Ohio River Bridges Project of Kentucky and Indiana. Kentucky Transportation Cabinet and Indiana Department of Transportation. Retrieved August 28, 2009.
- ↑ Office of Operations. "Tolling and Pricing Program". Federal Highway Administration. Retrieved August 28, 2009.
- ↑ Samuel, Peter (June 29, 2005). "Skyway Is Interstate 90 Unless State Withdraws Reports: Feds". TollRoadsNews. Archived from the original on September 22, 2008.
External links
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