List of gaps in Interstate Highways

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For the most part, the Interstate Highway System in the United States is a connected system, with most roads completed. However, some Interstates still have gaps.

Contents

[edit] True gaps

True gaps are where two sections of road are intended to be part of the same Interstate, but the two sections are not physically connected, or are only connected by non-Interstates, or are connected but the connection is not signed as part of the highway.

[edit] Disputed gaps

  • 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, Illinois 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" 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. A 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."[1][2] Incidentally, this stretch of I-90 is north of I-94, contrary to the usual south-to-north numbering order.
  • I-265. The Indiana portion of I-265 does not yet connect with the Kentucky portion of I-265. Each of the two segments, circling the outskirts and suburbs of Louisville, ends before crossing the Ohio River. Plans for constructing a bridge to connect the two segments have been finalized, though the project is far from complete.[3]

[edit] 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 or toll plazas, agricultural inspection stations (as found in California), or border stations.

[edit] At-grade intersections and traffic lights

[edit] Undivided freeways

This section addresses two-lane freeways and other undivided freeway sections of the Interstate, excepting instances of continuing routes using one-lane ramps.

  • I-93 is a two-lane, divided parkway, or "Super Two", through Franconia Notch in New Hampshire. A four-lane interstate was proposed, but was abandoned due to environmental concerns, in part related to vibrations which could harm the Old Man of the Mountain (which collapsed in 2003). The section was, for many years, signed as US 3 and "To 93" but has since been replaced with I-93 shields. The Federal Highway Act of 1973 exempts this stretch from Interstate standards, and it is considered I-93 by FHWA.[6]

[edit] Drawbridges

[edit] Connection gaps

Auxiliary Interstates (also known as 3-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).

  • I-210 in California at present does not directly connect to I-10, though it used to (via what is now State Route 57) and will again (through what is now State Route 30) by 2008, when the last segment of State Route 210 is finished and renamed to I-210.
  • I-238 in Alameda County, California, is unique in that there is no parent I-38. I-238 does intersect two spurs of I-80, I-580 and I-880. I-238 was named after the connecting State Route 238, because there were eight I-80 spurs in California already at the time, and a State Route 180 (California does not like to use the same number twice, even for different designation shields). Since then, I-480 has been demolished and its number is now unused.
  • None of the spurs of I-78 (I-278, I-478, I-678, I-878) connects 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 wasn't 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 standards.
  • I-585 used to connect with I-85 in Spartanburg, South Carolina, but I-85 was moved to a new bypassing route, and now I-585 ends at the I-85 Business loop. The signed connection to I-85 is via a surface section of US 176.

[edit] Other gaps

  • In four cases — I-76, I-84, I-86 and I-88 — the same primary interstate route numbers is used on two separate, unconnected lengths of roadway, one in the eastern portion of the country and one in the western portion. These gaps are intentional – the two segments of roadway are not planned to be linked together.
  • Gaps in Interstate Highway standards, such as shoulder widths and bridge clearances, since these are too frequent
  • Gaps on the Interstates in Alaska and Puerto Rico, since those are not held to the same standards
  • Places where Interstates cross but don't connect via a freeway-standard connection (e.g. I-84 and I-87 in New York). There is construction going on to change this by the mid-2010s.
  • "Non-Interchanges" where two Interstates cross but don't connect at all (e.g. I-78 and I-476 in Allentown, PA).
  • Places where a three-digit Interstate connects to its parent via another three-digit Interstate of the same parent; the numbering system allows for this (e.g. I-270 and I-370).
  • Sometimes, near toll booths (e.g. Mackinac Bridge toll booth), a brief segment of the Interstate will have a median break with a double-yellow line but have at least 4 lanes total.
  • Metering lights to regulate the flow of traffic onto bridges and skyways, such as those on westbound I-80 approaching the San Francisco-Oakland Bay Bridge.
  • Median breaks for maintenance and/or emergency vehicles to access government driveways. These exist on many highways that are otherwise considered freeways, including Interstates.
  • Places where non-spur interstates appear to end at a traffic light soon after intersecting with another freeway, such as I-17's terminus at I-40 in Flagstaff, Arizona, I-630's terminus at I-430 in Little Rock, Arkansas however proposals have been made to re engineer the intersection do to increased volumes of traffic or I-89's terminus at I-93 in Bow, New Hampshire.
  • Places where an Interstate technically ends partway across a nonconforming bridge on an international crossing, such as where I-75 and I-81 cross into Canada.
  • Business loops and spurs are not subject to mainline freeway standards.

[edit] Notes

[edit] References

Main Interstate Highways (multiples of 5 in pink) Interstate Highway marker
4 5 8 10 12 15 16 17 19 20 22 24 25 26 27 29 30
35 37 39 40 43 44 45 49 55 57 59 64 65 66 68 69
70 71 72 73 74 75 76 (W) 76 (E) 77 78 79 80 81 82
83 84 (W) 84 (E) 85 86 (W) 86 (E) 87 88 (W) 88 (E) 89 90
91 93 94 95 96 97 99 (238) H-1 H-2 H-3
Unsigned  A-1 A-2 A-3 A-4 PRI-1 PRI-2 PRI-3
Lists  Primary  Main - Intrastate - Suffixed - Future - Gaps
Auxiliary  Main - Future - Unsigned
Other  Standards - Business - Bypassed