Interstate 82
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Interstate 82 (abbreviated I-82) is an interstate highway in the northwestern United States. Its western terminus is at an intersection with Interstate 90 in Ellensburg, Washington; its eastern terminus is at an intersection with Interstate 84 in Hermiston, Oregon. ([Map])
Length
| Miles | km | state | |
| 132.57 | 213.35 | Washington | |
| 10 | 16.1 | Oregon | |
| 142.57 | 229.44 | Total | |
Major cities
Bolded cities are officially-designated control cities for signs.Intersections with other interstates
Spur Routes
| [http://encycl.opentopia.com/ edit ] Auxiliary routes of Interstate 82
|
Notes
I-82 serves two major purposes:
- Long haul/long trip
- *A link between Seattle, Washington and inland western cities such Boise, Idaho, Salt Lake City, Utah, and Denver, Colorado.
- Short trip traffic accounts for the vast majority of the actual traffic it carries:
- *I-82 serves at a local connector between cities along the Yakima River.
- *Between Ellensburg, WA and Yakima, WA
- *Between Yakima, WA and lower Yakima Valley cities such as Toppenish, WA and Sunnyside, WA
- *Continuing on to the Tri-Cities area (Kennewick, WA, Richland, WA, and Pasco, WA) and the Hanford Nuclear Reservation
On I-82, exits 88 and 93 are the only interstate exits in the state of Washington still lit with mercury vapor streetlights. The closest possible exception is on I-5 at the 320th St. S. exit in Federal Way, where at the intersection of the northbound offramp and 320th St. there is one lone mercury vapor light. It is not actually on the freeway, though, only on the offramp.
Mercury vapor lights cast a cold, blue light. Most of the Washington interstate system has high pressure sodium lighting, the common yellow streetlight. There are a few areas that have metal halide (clean, white light) as well, but those are growing in number while the use of mercury is shrinking. I-5 north of the Ship Canal Bridge has metal halide. State route 520 just east of 405 has some mercury lighting left over, as does the Valley Freeway (167) north of the SuperMall. Basically everywhere else, the lighting is sodium.
On I-90, exit 93, Elk Heights Road, is the only unlit interchange. There are no unlit interchanges on 5, 405, 705 or 182. 82 has at least one unlit exit, the "Military Training Area" just south of Ellensburg.
In 1999, a plan surfaced to extend Interstate 82 further south in Oregon. Three major routes were proposed:
- Madras Route: "From Umatilla through Heppner, Condon, Fossil and Antelope to Madras, where the interstate would replace Highway 97 south through Bend to the California border."
- Prineville Route: "From Umatilla through Heppner, Hardman, Spray, Prineville, Powell Butte to Highway 97 near Bend, then continue south to the border."
- Highway 395 Route: "From Umatilla through John Day, Burns and Lakeview," presumably to the California border and beyond. [link]
I-82's designation is a violation of the Interstate system's numbering rules, as it's located north of I-84. The original designation for I-84 was I-80N, but was renumbered in 1980 as part of a mandate to eliminate suffixed routes. Some road fans suggest swapping the I-82 designation with the western I-88, which connects the Quad Cities to Chicago, or less intrusively, just redesignating it as I-284 or I-290.
External links
- [Interstate 82] at Larry's Phat Page
| 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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