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Interstate 64

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Interstate 64 (abbreviated I-64) is an Interstate Highway in the eastern United States. Its western terminus is just west of an interchange with SSR K in O'Fallon, Missouri--because it is multiplexed with U.S. Route 40 and U.S. Route 61 at the terminus, the road itself continues as an arterial road; its eastern terminus is at an interchange with Interstate 264 and Interstate 664 at Bowers Hill in Chesapeake, Virginia.

The Missouri Department of Transportation is currently extending Interstate 64 to Interstate 70 in Wentzville, Missouri. An interchange at Route N in St. Charles County, Missouri opened in 2005. This interchange will also accommodate the future tie in of the Missouri State Highway 364 freeway to I-64. In 2007, construction will start to rebuild 12 miles of Interstate 64 from Spoede Rd. to Boyle Ave[link]. This project will include repaving the entire road, rebuilding the overpasses and interchanges, adding a fourth lane between Spoede Rd. and Interstate 170, and connecting Interstate 64 to Interstate 170 in all directions. MoDOT will use the Design-Build method in order to complete the project in as little as three years.

Length

Miles km state
31 50 Missouri
131 211 Illinois
124 200 Indiana
191 308 Kentucky
184 296 West Virginia
299 482 Virginia
960 1,547 Total

Major cities

Location of Interstate 64
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Location of Interstate 64

Bolded cities are officially-designated control cities for signs.

Intersections with other interstates

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Of note is that many of these Interstate junctions are actually shared alignments.

Spur routes

[http://encycl.opentopia.com/ edit ]
Auxiliary routes of Interstate 64

History

West Virginia

Early Beginnings

The first interstate highway segment to be let to construction was in Cabell County in 1957. This segment, from US 60 (milepost 15) to Ona (milepost 20) was completed in 1960.

In 1962, a lengthy segment from Exit 28 at Milton to just west of Exit 44 was opened to traffic. This included interchanges 34 and 39. One year later, Interstate 64 was completed to Exit 44, serving originally WV 17, now US 35 near St. Albans.

In 1964, an 8-mile segment of interstate opened from Exit 20 at Ona to Exit 28 at Milton.

1965 saw the completion of a major part of Interstate 64. A lengthy segment opened from the Kentucky state line (milepost 0) to Exit 15 at Barboursville. This consisted of four interchanges: Kenova and Ceredo at milepost 1, the West Huntington Expressway (WV 94, later US 52) at milepost six, US 52 and downtown Huntington (later WV 152/WV 527) at milepost eight, and Hal Greer Blvd. and WV 10 at milepost 10. Two steel-girder bridges were completed over the Big Sandy River connecting Kentucky to West Virginia. That bridge was replaced in 2000 in a reconstruction effort that raised the bridge level and replaced deteriorating bridge girders.

In 1966, the first Kanawha River crossing was completed with new interstate mainlines extending from Exit 44 near St. Albans to Exit 50 at Institute under four contracts. This included three new interchanges: Nitro at milepost 45, Cross Lanes at milepost 47 and Institute at milepost 50. One year later, Interstate 64 was extended eastward to Nitro at milepost 52.40 with a new interchange constructed at that location. For six years, the interstate would end just outside of Charleston's borders.

Charleston's Routing Mess

Planning for the routing of Interstate 64, as well as for Interstate 77 and Interstate 79 through Charleston, was embroiled in controversy since the 1950's. Several alignments were considered which included a northern arc around the Charleston metro area, a downtown route and a southern arc south of South Charleston.

The mayor at the time, John Shanklin, mayor for eight years from 1959 to 1967, was originally a strong opponent of any interstate highway going through the center of the city. Shanklin reversed his decision soon after, stated that Charleston can adjust to the impact and that it will eventually become a "great thing."

In 1971, the city and many residents were swimming in controversy over the routings of the interstate highways. The long planned interstates through West Virginia were either to run directly through the city center or skirt it.

The plan was to bring Interstate 64 through the Triangle District, just west of the downtown center, an urban blight where many of the city's black population lived. Home to the city's highest crime rates where shootings daily were common; it was referred to as the "Red Light District." Urban renewals in the past had failed. Residents living in the Triangle District formed committees and rebelled. They called the highway routing foolish because it wanted to make Charleston just another exit on an endless ribbon of concrete and that it was racist because the black population would bear the brunt of the relocation.

Federal transportation secretary John Volpe stalled for months at the decision on the routing of Interstate 64 through Charleston. By late 1971 however, the final decision was made to route the interstate through the Triangle District. The Triangle Improvement Council fought the decision for the downtown routing and took its case all the way to the Supreme Court. They failed however as they had no basis for their case. Beginning in September of 1971, armies of trucks and earth moving equipment descended on the Kanawha Valley, cutting away parts of 14 mountains and making flatlands out of hills. Over 1,000 homes were demolished on the south banks of the Kanawha River and WV 14, which winded its way along the Kanawha Turnpike and other roads, was relocated. The Fort Hill project, named so because of the mountain that lies near the massive US 119 interchange, became one of the largest earth-moving projects on the North American continent up to that point and one of the biggest changes that Charleston has ever known.

Beckley east to Virginia

The alignment of Interstate 64 was to originally parallel US 60 from Charleston to the Virginia state line. This would go through environmentally sensitive areas such as Hawk's Nest and the New River Gorge area and might have disrupted the natural beauty and the isolation of the area.

In 1969, Governor Arch Moore announced a delay in the construction of Interstate 64 east of Charleston. He concluded that a study needed to be done on whether the highway should run parallel to US 60 east of Charleston. On March 28, 1974, the Governor Arch Moore concludes that Interstate 64 will be routed from Sam Black Church west to a junction with the West Virginia Turnpike near Beckley. The interstate east of Sam Black Church opened in 1973, and if the original routing was in place, Interstate 64 would diverge northwest of Sam Black Church instead of heading west as it does today.

In 1971, Interstate 64 was completed from WV 12 (MP 161.46) to the Virginia state line at MP 184.02. This included six interchanges Exit 161 for WV 12, Exit 169 for US 219 and Lewisburg, Exit 175 for US 60 for White Sulphur Springs, Exit 181 for US 60 (WB only), and for WV 311 (EB only) at Exit 183. It was extended westward to Exit 156 (MP 155.98) at Sam Black Church in 1973.

The final segment of Interstate 64 to be completed in its entirely was completed between Sam Black Church and the West Virginia Turnpike near Beckley. This new interstate alignment, traverses through entirely rural areas. This section, opened in 1988, is 38-miles long and cost approximately $300 million to construct, making it one of the most expensive segments of interstate highway in the United States at $7.8 million per mile. It has some extremely rugged terrain, with one segment boasting a 7% grade for seven miles at Sandstone Mountain, necessitating two emergency truck escape ramps to prevent runaway trucks. The ramps were used with such frequency that a truck speed advisory system was installed to automatically weigh each truck and indicate the speed at which it should begin the downhill section. The journey from Charleston to Lewisburg is far quicker and far safer than the previous trip on U.S. 60, much of which winds through the mountains as a two-lane road.

The New River crossing is at milepost 137 atop the Robert C. Byrd bridge, who as a senator for West Virginia, pushed for funds to complete Interstate 64. The highway also traverses through a wildlife refuge and marsh near milepost 154.

Huntington's Inaccessibility

The difficulty of reaching downtown Huntington from Interstate 64 was quite evident since the highway's opening in the early-1960's. When the highway was first proposed in the late-1950's, Interstate 64 was originally to be led into the city of Huntington and cross much of the city on a viaduct similar to Charleston's. When the interstate was completed on the outskirts of the city instead, other means of shuttling people to and from the interstate and downtown was needed. A plan was devised that would radically reshape the city's major roadways. Two new underpasses would be constructed to carry traffic under the CSX railroad tracks that bisect the city -- one at 15th Street and the other at 5th Street. The original intent was to pair a new and widened 15th Street with Hal Greer Blvd. (WV 10 (they parallel each other) and its existing underpass, and make each a flow in one direction. The plan also goes on to state that the curves on 5th Street Road would be straightened out and a wider bridge to be constructed at Four Pole Creek at Ritter Park. 5th Street from the bridge to the future underpass would be widened as well.

This never happened in full terms as money was in short supply. It would have been expensive to construct all segments of the plan. NIMBYism was also prevalent, as many residents complained it would destroy the quiet, residential neighborhood appeal.

Part of the plan was completed, however, in the early-1960's along Hal Greer Blvd. (WV 10). Proceeding southbound, Hal Greer Blvd. would use two 90-degree turns and use part of 15th Street as a four-lane one-way road. This would have been the southern end of the new 15th Street that was never fully constructed. Work began on March 19, 2003 to remove the dogleg as it appears the plan to add new underpasses and truly widen 15th Street will never be completed.

Continuing Improvements

Continuing improvements and new interchanges were discussed throughout the 1990's.

The state's long-term construction forecast, for a six-lane interstate from milepost 6 at West Huntington to Charleston and bridge replacements west of milepost 6 to the Kentucky state line will take 30 years to complete at present funding levels and cost more than $325 million.

Notes and Trivia

Missouri

I-44/55/64/70 on one highway sign in downtown St. Louis
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I-44/55/64/70 on one highway sign in downtown St. Louis

West Virginia

Virginia

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References

  1. Cahal, Sherman. "Interstate 64." American Byways. 17 July 2005.
  2. 2005 Rand McNally "The Road Atlas 2005" - newest feature- interstate mileage by state
  3. MoDOT: The New I-64 [link].
  4. Bridge Work Starts 6-Lane I-64. 1 March 2005. Herald Dispatch. 7 April 2005 [link].
  5. Motorists can expect delays as I-64 bridge project begins. 7 April 2005. Herald Dispatch. 7 April 2005 [link].
  6. St. Louis Post-Dispatch. 16 August 1987.

See also

External links

Main Interstate Highways

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  Main - Auxiliary - Suffixed - Business - Proposed - Unsigned
Gaps - Intrastate - Interstate standards - Replaced

 


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