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Wikipedia

Interstate 69

Interstate 69 (I-69) is an Interstate Highway in the United States currently consisting of 10 unconnected segments with an original continuous segment from Indianapolis, Indiana, northeast to the Canadian border in Port Huron, Michigan, at 355.8 miles (572.6 km). The remaining separated segments are variously completed and posted or not posted sections of an extension southwest to the Mexican border in Texas. Of this extension—nicknamed the NAFTA Superhighway because it would help trade with Canada and Mexico spurred by the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA)—seven pieces in Laredo, Texas; Pharr, Texas; Brownsville, Texas; Corpus Christi, Texas; Houston, Texas; northwestern Mississippi; and Memphis, Tennessee, have been built or upgraded and signposted as I-69. Indiana is currently working on a fifth segment that will extend I-69 through the entire state while a sixth segment of I-69 through Kentucky utilizing that state's existing parkway system and a section of I-24 was established by federal legislation in 2008 with several more parkway segments being upgraded since then. This brings the total length to about 880 miles (1,420 km).

Interstate 69

NAFTA Superhighway
  Segments open, planned, or under construction
  Proposed segments
  Other segments of National Highway System Corridor 18
Route information
Length879.822 mi (1,415.936 km)
Original length 355.8 miles (572.6 km)[1]
Existed1957–present
History
  • First completed in 1992
NHSEntire route
Major junctions
South end US 59 in Rosenberg, TX
Major intersections
East end Highway 402 at Canada–US border on Blue Water Bridge in Port Huron, MI
Location
CountryUnited States
StatesTexas, Mississippi, Tennessee, Kentucky, Indiana, Michigan
Highway system

The proposed extension evolved from the combination of Corridors 18 and 20 of the National Highway System as designated in the Intermodal Surface Transportation Efficiency Act of 1991 (ISTEA), but the federally recognized corridor also includes connecting and existing infrastructure, including I-94 between Chicago, Illinois, and Port Huron, Michigan, and several spurs from I-69. Among these proposed spurs are an extension of I-530 from Pine Bluff, Arkansas; an upgrade of U.S. Route 59 (US 59) from Texarkana, Texas being designated as Interstate 369; and a split in southern Texas (I-69E, I-69C, I-69W) to serve three border crossings at Laredo, Pharr, and Brownsville.

In August 2007, I-69 was selected by the United States Department of Transportation (USDOT) as one of six Corridors of the Future, making it eligible for additional federal funding and streamlined planning and review.[2] This funding has since been withheld, causing some states to suspend completion of the entire route until federal funding is restored. There is no estimated timeline for completion of the entire I-69 route.

Route description edit

I-69 currently exists as a number of distinct segments, mostly corresponding to defined sections of independent utility (SIUs):

Lengths
  mi km
TX 172.200 277.129
LA
AR
MS 21.393 34.429
TN 21.000 33.796
KY 148.090 238.328
IN 314.822 506.657
MI 202.317 325.598
Total 879.822 1,415.936
 
Looking on I-69 just outside Indianapolis near Pendleton; the exit in the picture has since been renumbered to 214
 
I-69/I-94's northern terminus at the Blue Water Bridge at the Canadian border in Port Huron, Michigan, connecting it to Highway 402 in Point Edward, Ontario

The original portion of I-69 in Indiana (SIU 1 of the overall national plan) starts at an interchange with I-465, the beltway around Indianapolis on the northeast side of that city. I-69 heads northeast to near Anderson, where it turns more easterly to provide indirect access to Muncie before turning more northerly toward Marion and Fort Wayne. In Fort Wayne, I-69 runs along the western edge of the city while I-69's first (and for many years only) signed auxiliary route, I-469, loops east of the city. After crossing the Indiana East–West Toll Road (I-80/I-90) near Angola and Fremont, I-69 enters Michigan just south of Kinderhook.

I-69 in Michigan runs north passing through Coldwater and Marshall. There, it crosses I-94 east of Battle Creek. Near Olivet, I-69 begins to turn in a northeasterly direction, passing through the Lansing–East Lansing metropolitan area. Here, I-69 is cosigned with I-96 as an overlap west of Lansing, the only such palindromic pairing in the Interstate Highway System. Where it splits from I-96, I-69 turns east, both in compass direction and in signed direction, and heads north of Lansing and through Flint (where it crosses I-75) to a junction with I-94 just outside Port Huron. At its eastern terminus, I-69 joins I-94 to the Blue Water Bridge across the St. Clair River, where traffic continues on Highway 402 in the Canadian province of Ontario to London, Ontario.

The new section of I-69 in southern Indiana presently begins at the US 41 interchange south of Evansville at the former southern terminus of I-164. From there, it runs first east, then north, meeting SR 662, SR 66, and SR 62. At exit 18, SR 57 joins I-69 on a concurrency. Shortly thereafter, it meets I-64 at a cloverleaf interchange. From there, it runs north to SR 68. Construction was completed on November 19, 2012, on a 67-mile (108 km) segment (SIU 3, Sections 1–3). This extension takes the route north-northeast from there to SR 64 near Oakland City, then north-northeast to US 50/US 150 at Washington, and finally northeast to US 231 near Naval Surface Warfare Center Crane Division (NSWC Crane Division). Construction for the final new terrain segment (SIU 3, Section 4), which takes I-69 from NSWC Crane Division northeast to SR 37 on the southwest side of Bloomington, was completed in December 2015 and was extended north to Martinsville in late 2018 (Section 5).[5] Section 6 (Martinsville to Indianapolis) of I-69's SIU 3 is currently being upgraded to full Interstate Highway standards all the way north-northeast to I-465 on the southwest side of Indianapolis.

The new I-69 in Mississippi and Tennessee starts at an at-grade intersection with the former route of Mississippi Highway 304 (MS 304) in Banks, Tunica County, Mississippi. It continues roughly north-northeast, crossing into DeSoto County to a partial interchange with the current route of MS 304, then runs easterly to an interchange with I-55 in northern Hernando. It then continues north, overlapping I-55 to the Tennessee state line, and continues northward concurrently with I-55 to the south side of Memphis. It then follows I-240 northward through downtown before joining I-40. Presently, the northern end of this section of I-69 is at the I-40/I-69/SR 300 interchange on the north side of Memphis. This portion of the route was the first SIU of the proposed extension to be signed as part of the national I-69 route, and the first portion designed as part of the extension.

Planned and delayed extensions edit

Past progress edit

 

On June 6, 2008, President George W. Bush signed HR 1195, designating the Purchase Parkway as Future I-69. Kentucky officials planned to place I-69 signs on the Pennyrile Parkway, Western Kentucky Parkway, and Purchase Parkway in 2008, but the Federal Highway Administration (FHWA) had not yet given Kentucky approval to do so for the entire route.[6][7][8][9] Kentucky was making spot improvements to its parkways to bring them up to Interstate Highway standards in anticipation of the I-69 designation. Meanwhile, Indiana examined building most of SIU 3 as a toll road but quickly reverted to making it toll-free in 2006 with an announcement to that effect by Indiana Governor Mitch Daniels after widespread opposition from I-69 opponents and supporters alike. Indiana had been using funds from the $3.8-billion Indiana Toll Road lease deal along with public–private partnerships to construct SIU 3 between Indianapolis and Evansville.

As of 2015, SIU 1 (all of original I-69 north of Indianapolis, plus the I-469 loop around Fort Wayne) and SIU 2 were open, as was SIU 5 in Kentucky, part of SIU 9 in the Memphis, Tennessee, area, and the short SIU 10 in northwestern Mississippi. SIU 6 in Kentucky was built as a freeway but was not yet up to Interstate standards in all areas. At around the same time, Texas was actively pursuing completing its portion of I-69 by upgrading existing U.S. Routes and state highways along the I-69 corridor to Interstate standards. Several portions of the 15 SIUs in Texas were being worked on, with active construction in progress on US 59 from SH 99 to Kendleton (SIU 20), and on US 77 between Robstown and Kingsville (SIU 22).[10] As of 2016, four mainline SIUs outside of Texas were under construction; SIU 3 in Indiana (using $700 million (equivalent to $841 million in 2022[11]) from the 2006 Major Moves deal), SIU 7 and SIU 9 in Tennessee;[12] and a small part of SIU 13 in Arkansas (Monticello Bypass). Portions of these SIUs have been open to traffic since 2007.[13][14]

Progress delays edit

While federal legislation established a mandate to extend I-69 from Indiana to Texas, it did not provide funding for its construction. I-69 construction must compete against other projects for traditional funding. Despite the approval of several segments, work has been completed on only a few scattered segments due in part to increasing costs for construction materials and machinery. As a result, several states have indicated that construction of I-69 may not be possible without the use of tolls as the primary means to finance building the highway. Tennessee, Arkansas, and Mississippi passed legislation authorizing toll roads within each state but have not applied tolling to their sections of I-69 due to the widespread unpopularity of toll roads in these states. A bridge over the Ohio River, which was to have been built along I-69 to connect Indiana with Kentucky, stalled in 2004 because each state did not have enough funding for it. In 2016, both states reached an agreement to restart environmental studies and develop a funding strategy for the Ohio River crossing; more funding has allowed for design and construction work to begin since that time. Mississippi has suspended work on I-69 indefinitely due to a lack of funding to build the highway outside of the Memphis metropolitan area. Arkansas has halted work on its mainline portion of I-69, aside from the Monticello Bypass, although it has applied for a federal grant to complete design and construction for the 25-mile (40 km) section between Monticello and McGehee. Phase 1 started construction in December 2022. As of 2023, no portion of I-69 in Louisiana has been built nor has any construction started.

Current progress and plans edit

Texas, Kentucky, and Indiana have been slowly advancing construction of I-69 within each state through traditional funding sources when available and innovative financing methods, such as public–private partnerships. In December 2018, the I-69 River Crossing project team for Kentucky and Indiana announced a preferred plan to build a new toll bridge across the Ohio River as part of I-69.[15] In January 2023, contracts were awarded for work on the Kentucky approach to the new bridge (section 1).[16] In March 2023, Kentucky and Indiana signed an initial memorandum of agreement to allow preliminary development and financial planning to move forward.[17] The Indiana approach (section 3) is expected to begin construction in early 2024. Construction of the bridge (section 2) is currently scheduled to begin in 2027 and be completed in 2031, although efforts to speed up the timeframe are being explored.[18]

In 2021, Tennessee announced it was reviving construction of segment 7 of I-69 in northwestern Tennessee to link it to I-55 on the west side of the Mississippi River. This will provide an interim direct freeway link to Memphis that will bypass the suspended segment 8 pending its eventual completion to take I-69 even more directly into Memphis. The Tennessee Department of Transportation (TDOT) halted the Interstate work about four years earlier because they lacked federal funding for the project. The revived portion of I-69 will run from the Kentucky state line to Dyersburg where it will connect with I-155, a spur that crosses the Mississippi River and extends to I-55 in southeastern Missouri. From there, I-55 extends south running parallel to the Mississippi River on the Missouri–Arkansas side then crosses the river into Memphis.[19]

Texas edit

 
Upcoming connection from I-610, the North Loop to I-69 in Houston
 
The Southwest Freeway, now I-69, in Houston in 1972

In Texas, I-69 planning has become part of the Trans-Texas Corridor (TTC) studies. This part of the TTC, called I-69/TTC, includes I-69 and all of its spurs authorized by Congress. It will extend from three border crossings, at Laredo, Pharr, and Brownsville, along US 59, US 281, and US 77 toward Victoria. After the three branches join, I-69 will continue along the general US 59 corridor through Houston to Tenaha, where it will turn easterly to Louisiana along US 84. In Greater Houston, I-69 will follow the US 59 freeway corridor through town. A branch (I-369) continues north on US 59 from Tenaha to Texarkana, where it will eventually connect to I-30 and I-49. Most of the proposed I-69 route in Texas already exists as four-lane highways, with a lengthy freeway section stretching north and south of Houston along US 59 and shorter freeway sections of US 77, US 83, and US 281 in the Lower Rio Grande Valley.

The I-69/TTC project has been split into 15 SIUs, which match the original ones but do not share numbers. SIUs 1 to 8 (original 16 to 23) cover the mainline along the "Interstate 69 East" branch to the Mexican border at Brownsville. The "Interstate 69 Central" branch to Pharr is SIUs 9, 11, and 12 (original 24 to 26). The "Interstate 369" and "Interstate 69 West" branches to Texarkana and the Mexican border at Laredo, respectively, are SIUs 13 and 14 (original 29 and 30), and two connections to Brownsville and Pharr are SIUs 10 and 15 (original 31 and 32). The I-69/TTC study also includes SIU L-CC, a connection between Freer and Corpus Christi that was not in the 2000 study.[20] The Texas Department of Transportation (TxDOT) originally considered building the I-69/TTC over new terrain paralleling US 59, US 77, and US 281.

Responding to widespread opposition from environmental groups and property rights activists, TxDOT announced in June 2008 that it will complete I-69 by upgrading the existing US 59, US 77, and US 281 roadways to Interstate standards through rural areas, with bypasses around urban centers along the route. Instead of building the Trans-Texas Corridor as originally planned, TxDOT now plans to finance upgrading the existing highways to I-69 through private sector investment. Under the proposed arrangement, I-69 would remain toll-free where it overlaps preexisting highways, while bypasses of cities may be tolled. The private firms awarded contracts for I-69 would also build and operate toll roads throughout the state; some of those revenues would then be applied to I-69 construction.

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".[21] In response to TxDOT's request, a six-mile (9.7 km) segment of US 77 between I-37 and SH 44 near Corpus Christi was approved for the "I-69" designation by the FHWA in August 2011 and was approved by the American Association of State Highway and Transportation Officials (AASHTO) in October 2011;[22] signage was posted at an official ceremony on December 5, 2011;[23] it was resigned as I-69E on May 29, 2013.

At the May 18, 2012, meeting of AASHTO, 35 miles (56 km) of US 59 from I-610 in Houston to Fostoria Road in Liberty County were also approved as ready for I-69 signage.[24]

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. US 77 through Cameron and Willacy counties will be signed as I-69E, including 52 miles (84 km) of existing freeway starting at the Rio Grande in Brownsville and running north past Raymondville. The 13 miles (21 km) of US 281 freeway in Pharr and Edinburg will be signed as I-69C.[25]

The section of US 59 inside the I-610 loop that runs through Downtown Houston was approved by the FHWA for designation as I-69 on March 9, 2015, and approved for signage as such by the Texas Transportation Commission on March 24, 2015.[26]

Louisiana, Arkansas, and Mississippi edit

 
A stretch of I-69 cosigned with MS 304 in Mississippi
 
Future I-69 along with US 49, US 61, and US 278 near Clarksdale, Mississippi

The nearly 350-mile (560 km) portion of the I-69 extension from south of Clarksdale, Mississippi, to the Louisiana–Texas state line is planned to be built as a new-terrain route that parallels existing U.S. Routes and state highways in some locations. As well as covering the part in Texas northeast of Nacogdoches, SIU 16 also extends into Louisiana, ending at US 171 near Stonewall. SIU 15 continues around the south and east sides of the Shreveport area, crossing I-49 and ending at I-20 near Haughton.[27] SIU 14 extends northeast from I-20 to US 82 near El Dorado, Arkansas,[28] and SIU 13 continues northeast to US 65 near McGehee, mainly paralleling US 278.[29] Also included in Corridor 18, as SIU 28, is an extension of I-530 from Pine Bluff south along the US 425 corridor to I-69 west of Monticello; a short piece at the south end opened in mid-2006 as Highway 530 (AR 530).[30] Another segment of AR 530 opened in 2013 and another in 2015. The only section of Future I-69 that is currently open to traffic is the 8.5-mile (13.7 km) eastern leg of the Monticello Bypass. This section of the Monticello Bypass is currently two lanes and signed as US Highway 278 Bypass (US 278 Byp.). Another two-lane segment to McGehee started construction in late 2022. The Charles W. Dean Bridge, SIU 12, is planned to cross the Mississippi River between McGehee, Arkansas, and Benoit, Mississippi, while SIU 11 will parallel US 61 to Tunica Resorts.[31] SIU 10, the first completed portion of the I-69 extension, runs east from Tunica Resorts to I-55 near Hernando and opened in late 2006.[32] With the record of decision signed in 2007, the FHWA authorized the Mississippi Department of Transportation (MDOT) to add I-69 signs on I-55 from the I-55/I-69 interchange in Hernando to the Tennessee state line.

Tennessee, Kentucky, and southern Indiana edit

 
I-69 cosigned with Western Kentucky Parkway near Dawson Springs, Kentucky

From a point south of Clarksdale, Mississippi, to Henderson, Kentucky, most of the I-69 alignment is planned to consist of upgrades to existing U.S. Highways, Interstates and substandard freeways, although some sections are expected be built as bypasses around cities and towns along the route.

I-69 SIU 9 overlaps I-55 into Memphis, Tennessee, switching there to I-240 and then I-40 before leaving onto the short SR 300 connection and then paralleling US 51 to near Millington. On January 18, 2008, the FHWA authorized TDOT to erect I-69 signs on I-55, I-240, and I-40 from the Mississippi state line to the I-40/SR 300 interchange. The recently completed I-269 will bypass this part of I-69, beginning where I-69 joins I-55 in Mississippi and ending near Millington, and will include the northern part of SR 385 near Millington. SIU 8 is planned to continue beyond Millington, near US 51, to I-155 near Dyersburg. Despite these plans, it is unclear if the entire I-69 project in Tennessee will ever be completed. The state has suspended work indefinitely on the 65-mile (105 km) SIU 8 and the remaining nine-mile (14 km) unbuilt portion of SIU 9 between SR 300 and the northern end of I-269 near Millington due to a lack of federal funding. Work on SIU 7 was also suspended for a few years, but this project has now been revived by the state which has decided there's value in having a continuous chain of freeways running partly on other completed Interstates between Memphis and the Kentucky state line. SIU 7 follows the existing US 51 freeway with new bypasses to the state line at Fulton, Kentucky. Completion of this stretch of I-69 where it bypasses Union City is to be completed and temporarily signed as SR 690 in early 2024. A bypass for Troy is proposed. After that, Tennessee–Missouri–Arkansas I-55 link to I-155 which crosses back across the Mississippi River to the newly completed I-69 will serve as the main freeway routes between Memphis and northwestern Tennessee, at least on an interim basis.[19]

In Kentucky, I-69 mostly follows existing freeways originally built as toll roads. SIU 6 follows the Julian M. Carroll Purchase Parkway and I-24 from Fulton to Eddyville, while SIU 5 continues along the Wendell H. Ford Western Kentucky Parkway and the Edward T. Breathitt Pennyrile Parkway from Eddyville to Henderson. While these parkways received the I-69 designation by federal legislation signed in 2008, upgrades have been necessary to bring the freeways to Interstate standards—but required less work compared to other states where entirely new highway must be built. A number of construction contracts have been let by the state of Kentucky to reconfigure several interchanges along the parkways. Many of these interchanges were originally designed with opposing loop ramps to accommodate toll barriers at the interchanges; these "tollbooth" style interchanges were (or will be) reconfigured to standard diamond interchanges as part of the parkways' conversion to I-69.[33]

On August 31, 2011, Kentucky Governor Steve Beshear announced an agreement between the state and the FHWA which allowed the Kentucky Transportation Cabinet (KYTC) to erect I-69 signage along the new Interstate's 17-mile (27 km) overlap with I-24 and the 38-mile (61 km) stretch of the Western Kentucky Parkway between I-24 and the Pennyrile Parkway. Signage was placed in late 2011, with construction on necessary upgrades of the portion of the Western Kentucky Parkway expected to be bid in September.[34] On October 25, 2011, I-69 was officially designated by Beshear along a 55-mile (89 km) stretch of I-24 and the Western Kentucky Parkway between Calvert City and Nortonville.[35] Signage and milemarkers were replaced on the 38-mile (61 km) stretch of the Western Kentucky Parkway in mid-December 2012.[36] An additional 43.6 miles (70.2 km) along the Pennyrile Parkway from the Western Kentucky Parkway to Kentucky Route 425 (KY 425), south of Henderson, was designated and resigned on November 16, 2015.[37][38] The Purchase Parkway between Mayfield and Calvert City was signed in July 2018.[39] The next phase of upgrading Purchase Parkway from Mayfield to the Tennessee state line began in December 2022 and is expected to be done by December 15, 2024.[40]

The Indiana and Kentucky governors agreed on June 30, 2016, to spend a combined $17 million (equivalent to $20.4 million in 2022[11]) for an environmental and design study to determine how the two states will pay for a bridge spanning the Ohio River and where it will run. This is the second study conducted by the two states. The first study was commissioned in 2001, and a preliminary report in 2004 put the cost of a bridge at $1.4 billion (equivalent to $2.09 billion in 2022[11]). Only a draft environmental report was issued at this time; no final environmental report or approval was issued due to a lack of money. Since 2004, Indiana and Kentucky (combined) have completed nearly 300 miles (480 km) of the Interstate. The bridge is the last remaining piece to connect the two states.[41] The preferred alternative for SIU 4 was to leave the Pennyrile Parkway near its north end and cross the Ohio River to I-164 near Evansville, Indiana, and then use I-164 to I-64.[42] At the October 18, 2013, AASHTO meeting, an Indiana Department of Transportation (INDOT) request to redesignate I-164 as part of I-69 was approved, pending concurrence from the FHWA.[43] I-69 was officially designated on this corridor in late 2014.[44]

SIU 3, connecting I-69 to I-465 in southern Indianapolis, will roughly parallel SR 57 and SR 45 and will use an upgraded version of the existing SR 37 from just south of Bloomington to a point just south of Indianapolis. A 67-mile (108 km) stretch from Evansville to NSWC Crane Division was completed on November 19, 2012,[45] and the remaining 27-mile (43 km) portion to Bloomington opened to traffic on December 9, 2015.[46] Construction on upgrading a 21-mile (34 km) section of SR 37 from Bloomington to just south of Martinsville to Interstate standards was completed in late 2018.[47][5] Construction began on the final segment from Martinsville to Indianapolis in 2019, with completion anticipated by the end of 2024.[48] SIU 2 will follow the southeastern quarter of I-465 around the city.[49]

History edit

Original route edit

 
Map of the original I-69 route

A route from I-465 in Indianapolis northeast via Fort Wayne to I-80/I-90 near Angola was added to the proposed "Interregional Highway System" by the early 1940s. Unlike most of the routes, it was not drawn along an existing U.S. Route corridor, except north of Fort Wayne (where it used US 27); most of it ran roughly parallel to SR 9 and SR 37.[50] The extension beyond Angola to I-94 near Marshall, Michigan, actually started out as part of what evolved into I-94. On early plans, the Chicago–Detroit route would have replaced US 112 (now US 12), splitting from I-80/I-90 at South Bend.[50][51] By 1947, the route had been shifted north to present I-94, along what was then US 12, but the connection to South Bend remained, splitting at Kalamazoo.[52]

The I-69 designation was assigned to the Indianapolis–Angola route in 1957, while the short South Bend–Kalamazoo route became proposed I-67.[53] The I-67 designation was shifted east to the US 27 corridor by early 1958, eventually being absorbed into the extension of I-69 to I-94 near Marshall which was built in 1967.[54][55] The Federal-Aid Highway Act of 1968 authorized an additional 1,500 miles (2,400 km) of Interstates to be chosen by the FHWA; among Michigan's proposals was a 156-mile (251 km) extension of I-69 northeast and east via US 27 to Lansing, M-78 to Flint, and M-21 to Port Huron.[56] However, the FHWA initially only approved the route to I-475 in Flint.[57][58] The continuation to Port Huron was eventually approved in February 1987.[59] Michigan's 1,241-mile (1,997 km) portion of the Interstate Highway System was completed in 1992, when the last piece of I-69 opened southwest of Lansing between I-96 and Charlotte.[60]

Extended route edit

 
The current US 59 will become I-69W; picture taken east of Laredo, Texas

ISTEA included two High Priority Corridors that would later become parts of a proposed crosscountry extension of I-69:[61]

Corridor 18 was extended southwest to Houston, where it connected to Corridor 20, by the Department of Transportation and Related Agencies Appropriations Act, 1993; the new definition read "Corridor from Indianapolis, Indiana, through Evansville, Indiana, Memphis, Tennessee, Shreveport/Bossier, Louisiana, and to Houston, Texas."[62] The National Highway System Designation Act of 1995 made further amendments to the description of Corridor 18, specifying that it would serve Mississippi and Arkansas, extending it south to the Mexican border in the Lower Rio Grande Valley and adding a short connection at Brownsville, Texas. This act also specified that Corridors 18 and 20 were "future parts of the Interstate System" to become actual Interstates when built to Interstate Highway standards and connected to other Interstates. Although the act designated Corridor 9 as I-99, no number was assigned to Corridors 18 and 20 yet.[63]

The Transportation Equity Act for the 21st Century (TEA-21), enacted in 1998, greatly expanded the definition of Corridor 18 to include the existing I-69, as well as I-94 between Port Huron, Michigan, and Chicago, Illinois. A connection to Pine Bluff, Arkansas, was added, and the extension to the Lower Rio Grande Valley was detailed as splitting into two routes just south of Victoria, one following US 77 and the other following US 59 and US 281 to the Rio Grande. This act also assigned the I-69 designation to Corridors 18 and 20, with the branches on US 77, US 281, and US 59 to the Rio Grande being "Interstate 69 East", "Interstate 69 Central", and "Interstate 69 West", respectively.[64] With TEA-21, the I-69 extension took shape and remains today as those segments.[65]

In 2000, Corridors 18 and 20 were split into 32 SIUs as part of the I-69 (Corridor 18) Special Environmental Study.[66] In Texas, it was originally envisioned that private firms will build, operate, then transfer portions of the highway to the state after a specified period of time. Lawmakers in Kentucky once considered a bill that would authorize the re-tolling of three parkways slated to become part of I-69.[citation needed]

Opposition and controversy edit

The construction of the I-69 extension beyond Indianapolis has angered environmentalists. In particular, the southern portion of the route in Indiana would run through wetlands, existing farmland, and forested areas, and cut through geologically sensitive karst topography, which environmentalists argue threatens to pollute underground water systems and harm the rare species that live there.[67][68] Fiscal conservatives also oppose completion of I-69, arguing that federal legislation establishing the I-69 corridor amounts to an unfunded mandate imposed by the federal government upon the states through which the highway will travel, as the legislation requires states to pursue construction of their portions of I-69 but provides no funding mechanism to cover its estimated $25-billion cost, thereby leaving cash-strapped states to figure out how to finance its construction. Three states (Louisiana, Mississippi, and Tennessee) have publicly stated they will not build their sections of I-69 until Congress appropriates funds to complete environmental studies, design, and construction in each state.[citation needed]

Junction list edit

Texas
  US 59 in Rosenberg. The highways travel concurrently to north-northeast of Splendora.
  Beltway 8 Sam Houston Tollway in Houston
  I-610 in Houston
  I-45 in Houston
   I-10 / US 90 in Houston
  I-610 in Houston
  Beltway 8 Sam Houston Parkway in Houston
  SH 99 Grand Parkway on the PorterNew Caney line
Gap in route
Louisiana
Unbuilt
Arkansas
Unbuilt; two lanes of Monticello Bypass completed and signed as US-278 Bypass.
Mississippi
  MS 713 east-northeast of Robinsonville. The highways travel concurrently for approximately 3.73 miles (6.00 km).
  I-55 in Hernando. The highways travel concurrently to Memphis, Tennessee.
Tennessee
  US 51 in Memphis
   I-55 / I-240 in Memphis. I-69/I-240 travels concurrently through Memphis.
  US 78 in Memphis
     US 51 / US 64 / US 70 / US 79 in Memphis
   I-40 / I-240 in Memphis. I-40/I-69 travels concurrently through Memphis.
  US 51/  SR 300 in Memphis
Gap in route
Kentucky
  US 45 in Mayfield
  I-24 south of Calvert City. The highways travel concurrently to Eddyville.
  US 62 in Calvert City
   US 62 / US 641 in Kuttawa
  US 62 in Eddyville
    I-169 / Future I-569 / Western Kentucky Parkway north-northeast of Nortonville
  US 41 in Madisonville
  US 41 near Henderson
Gap in route
Indiana
  US 41 in Evansville
  I-64 west-northwest of Elberfeld
   US 50 / US 150 east of Washington
  US 231 west-northwest of Scotland
  SR 37 near Bloomington
  SR 39 near Martinsville
Gap in route
  I-465 in Indianapolis
  US 35 east-northeast of Alexandria. The highways travel concurrently to Gas City.
  US 224 in Markle
   I-469 / US 33 east of Roanoke. I-69/US 33 travels concurrently to Fort Wayne.
  US 24 in Fort Wayne. The highways travel concurrently through Fort Wayne.
   US 30 / US 33 in Fort Wayne. I-69/US 30 travels concurrently through Fort Wayne.
  US 27 in Fort Wayne
    I-469 / US 24 / US 30 in Fort Wayne
  US 6 west-northwest of Waterloo
  US 20 west of Angola
   I-80 / I-90 west-northwest of Fremont
Michigan
  US 12 in Coldwater
  I-94 northwest of Marshall
  I-96 in Lansing. The highways travel concurrently to northwest of Waverly.
  I-496 west of Lansing
  US 127 north-northwest of East Lansing
   I-75 / US 23 southwest of Flint
  I-475 in Flint
  I-94 north of Marysville. The highways travel concurrently to the Canada–United States border in Port Huron.
  I-94/  Highway 402 at the Canada–United States border in Port Huron

[69]

Auxiliary routes edit

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ DeSimone, Tony (October 31, 2002). "Table 1: Main Routes of the Dwight D. Eisenhower National System Of Interstate and Defense Highways as of October 31, 2002". Route Log and Finder List. Federal Highway Administration. from the original on April 22, 2012. Retrieved August 20, 2007.
  2. ^ "DOT Selects Six National "Corridors of the Future"". from the original on November 9, 2012. Retrieved August 10, 2012.
  3. ^ a b c Staff (May 30, 2013). "Interstate 69 Comes to Texarkana and the Valley" (Press release). Alliance for I-69 Texas. from the original on October 19, 2013. Retrieved May 31, 2013.
  4. ^ Clark, Steve (May 29, 2013). . The Brownsville Herald. Archived from the original on July 1, 2017. Retrieved May 31, 2013.
  5. ^ a b "Section 5 of I-69 project will be completed near mid-September, according to INDOT". FOX59. August 10, 2018. from the original on August 11, 2018. Retrieved February 18, 2019.
  6. ^ "HR-1195 Text" (PDF). (PDF) from the original on December 27, 2010. Retrieved January 13, 2012.
  7. ^ (Press release). Representative Whitfield. May 4, 2008. Archived from the original on November 4, 2009.
  8. ^ Interstate 69 Legislation, Tristate Homepage.com May 14, 2008, at the Wayback Machine
  9. ^ "President Bush Signs HR-1195" (Press release). The White House. June 6, 2008. from the original on October 25, 2017. Retrieved September 1, 2017.
  10. ^ "I-69 System Funding Program" (PDF). i69texasalliance.com. November 13, 2014. (PDF) from the original on April 2, 2015. Retrieved March 26, 2022.
  11. ^ a b c Johnston, Louis; Williamson, Samuel H. (2023). "What Was the U.S. GDP Then?". MeasuringWorth. Retrieved November 30, 2023. United States Gross Domestic Product deflator figures follow the Measuring Worth series.
  12. ^ . May 20, 2016. Archived from the original on May 24, 2016. Retrieved May 23, 2016.
  13. ^ (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on April 4, 2012. Retrieved January 13, 2012.
  14. ^ "I-69 Indianapolis to Evansville Extension (Official Site)". I69indyevn.org. from the original on December 20, 2014. Retrieved January 13, 2012.
  15. ^ Martin, John (December 14, 2018). "I-69 ORX project team announces preferred route for new Evansville-Henderson bridge". Evansville Courier & Press. from the original on December 14, 2018. Retrieved January 11, 2019.
  16. ^ "Contract awarded for I-69 Ohio River Crossing Section 1 in Kentucky". Roads & Bridges. January 4, 2022. from the original on April 4, 2023. Retrieved April 4, 2023.
  17. ^ "Kentucky, Indiana Officials Sign Agreement For I-69 Bridge". 104.3 The River. WXBC-FM. March 28, 2023. from the original on April 4, 2023. Retrieved April 4, 2023.
  18. ^ Bottorff, Kathy (April 1, 2023). "Bi-State Agreement Paves the Way for New Ohio River Bridge". WTCA-AM. from the original on April 3, 2023. Retrieved April 4, 2023.
  19. ^ a b Obion County News (2021). "I-69 Project Revived". Obion County. from the original on July 29, 2021. Retrieved March 4, 2021.
  20. ^ Staff. . Texas Department of Transportation. Archived from the original on December 14, 2007. Retrieved August 31, 2007.
  21. ^ Staff. "What's Next for I-69 Texas?". Texas Department of Transportation. from the original on August 21, 2011. Retrieved August 31, 2011.
  22. ^ (Press release). Texas Department of Transportation. Archived from the original on November 2, 2011. Retrieved August 31, 2011.
  23. ^ . Archived from the original on April 5, 2012. Retrieved November 4, 2011.
  24. ^ Special Committee on U.S. Route Numbering (May 19, 2012). (PDF) (Report). Washington, DC: American Association of State Highway and Transportation Officials. Archived from the original (PDF) on June 3, 2019.
  25. ^ Essex, Allen (May 30, 2013). "I-69 Comes to the Valley: 111 Miles Added to Interstate System". Valley Morning Star. Harlingen, TX. Archived from the original on June 15, 2013. Retrieved June 3, 2013.
  26. ^ "Minute Order 113100" (PDF). ftp.dot.state.tx.us. Texas Transportation Commission. March 25, 2015. (PDF) from the original on April 2, 2015. Retrieved March 26, 2022.
  27. ^ Staff. . Louisiana Department of Transportation and Development. Archived from the original on August 30, 2007. Retrieved August 31, 2007.
  28. ^ Staff. . Arkansas Highway and Transportation Department and Louisiana Department of Transportation and Development. Archived from the original on March 20, 2003. Retrieved August 31, 2007.
  29. ^ Staff. . Arkansas Highway and Transportation Department. Archived from the original on August 24, 2007. Retrieved August 31, 2007.
  30. ^ Riggin, Amy (May 26, 2006). . Pine Bluff Commercial. Archived from the original on February 20, 2010.
  31. ^ . Mississippi Department of Transportation. Archived from the original on February 8, 2005. Retrieved August 31, 2007.
  32. ^ Risher, Wayne (July 20, 2006). "New Leg of I-69 to Open on Oct. 3". The Commercial Appeal. from the original on September 30, 2007. Retrieved August 20, 2007.
  33. ^ (Press release). Commonwealth of Kentucky. May 15, 2006. Archived from the original on November 26, 2007.
  34. ^ (Press release). Governor of Kentucky. August 31, 2011. Archived from the original on December 2, 2011.
  35. ^ . WPSD-TV. October 25, 2011. Archived from the original on July 28, 2013.
  36. ^ Todd, Keith (December 15, 2012). . SurfKY News. Archived from the original on September 4, 2015. Retrieved December 30, 2012.
  37. ^ "New red, white, and blue highway signs for 42 Miles of I-69". November 16, 2015. from the original on February 21, 2016. Retrieved February 27, 2016.
  38. ^ "New Interstate 69 designated in Ky". Nashville, TN: WSMV-TV. October 26, 2011. Archived from the original on February 9, 2013. Retrieved October 26, 2011.
  39. ^ Inman, Taylor (July 3, 2018). "Completion Of Interchange Projects Adds 30 Miles Of Interstate 69 In Kentucky". www.wkms.org. from the original on February 19, 2019. Retrieved February 18, 2019.
  40. ^ Ledger, Special to the (March 20, 2023). "Work for I-69 upgrades ramping up along Purchase Parkway". Murray Ledger and Times. Retrieved August 11, 2023.
  41. ^ "Pence, Bevin sign agreement for I-69 bridge". Evansville Courier-Press. June 30, 2016. from the original on October 26, 2020. Retrieved July 1, 2016.
  42. ^ (Press release). Indiana Department of Transportation. February 11, 2004. Archived from the original on December 8, 2010.
  43. ^ Special Committee on U.S. Route Numbering (October 28, 2013). (PDF) (Report). Washington, DC: American Association of State Highway and Transportation Officials. Archived from the original (PDF) on June 3, 2019. Retrieved October 25, 2013.
  44. ^ Dozier, Daniel A. (September 5, 2013). (PDF). Letter to Richard J. Marquis. Indianapolis: Indiana Department of Transportation. Archived from the original (PDF) on March 4, 2016. Retrieved January 9, 2015 – via American Association of State Highway and Transportation Officials.
  45. ^ "Indiana I69 extension's 1st stretch opens Nov 19". November 2, 2012. Retrieved January 29, 2013.[dead link]
  46. ^ "Mayors: Next section of I-69 to open next week". Evansville Courier & Press. December 2, 2015. from the original on December 4, 2015. Retrieved December 2, 2013.
  47. ^ . insideindianabusiness.com. Archived from the original on May 5, 2015.
  48. ^ "INDOT: Project Updates and News". www.in.gov. October 6, 2021. from the original on March 4, 2016. Retrieved February 27, 2016.
  49. ^ "Frequently Asked Questions". I-69 Finish Line. from the original on July 19, 2021. Retrieved July 19, 2021.
  50. ^ a b Public Roads Administration (c. 1943). Routes of the Recommended Interregional Highway System (Map). Scale not given. Washington, DC: Public Roads Administration. Archived from the original on January 30, 2016. Retrieved February 27, 2016 – via Wikimedia Commons.
  51. ^ Public Roads Administration (1939). Proposed Interregional Highway System (Map). Scale not given. Washington, DC: Public Roads Administration. Archived from the original on January 2, 2016. Retrieved February 27, 2016 – via Wikimedia Commons.
  52. ^ Public Roads Administration. National System of Interstate Highways, August 2, 1947 (Map). Scale not given. Washington, DC: Public Roads Administration. Archived from the original on October 29, 2013. Retrieved October 25, 2013 – via Wikimedia Commons.
  53. ^ Public Roads Administration (August 14, 1957). Official Route Numbering for the National System of Interstate and Defense Highways (Map). Scale not given. Washington, DC: Public Roads Administration. Archived from the original on November 10, 2012. Retrieved February 27, 2016 – via Wikimedia Commons.
  54. ^ Michigan State Highway Department (April 25, 1958). (Report). Michigan State Highway Department. Archived from the original on October 16, 2002.
  55. ^ Public Roads Administration (June 27, 1958). Official Route Numbering for the National System of Interstate and Defense Highways (Map). Scale not given. Washington, DC: Public Roads Administration. Archived from the original on October 29, 2013. Retrieved October 25, 2013 – via Wikimedia Commons.
  56. ^ "Highway Additions Requested By State". The Owosso Argus-Press. Associated Press. November 14, 1968. p. 7. OCLC 9802802. from the original on June 7, 2021. Retrieved December 5, 2010.
  57. ^ Michigan Department of Transportation (1984). Say Yes to Michigan!: Official Transportation Map (Map). c. 1:190,080. Lansing: Michigan Department of Transportation. Flint inset. OCLC 12701177. Retrieved October 17, 2019 – via Michigan History Center.
  58. ^ Federal Highway Administration (October 1, 1970). The National System of Interstate and Defense Highways (Map). Scale not given. Washington, DC: Federal Highway Administration. Archived from the original on October 29, 2013. Retrieved October 25, 2013 – via Wikimedia Commons.
  59. ^ Weingroff, Richard (July 16, 2013) [1998]. "Part I: History". The Dwight D. Eisenhower System of Interstate and Defense Highways. Federal Highway Administration. from the original on June 7, 2021. Retrieved August 18, 2013.
  60. ^ "I-69 Now Open South of Lansing". Marshall Evening Chronicle. Associated Press. p. 20. OCLC 18110507. from the original on June 7, 2021. Retrieved August 17, 2013.
  61. ^ . Thomas.loc.gov. Archived from the original on December 15, 2012. Retrieved January 13, 2012.
  62. ^ . Thomas.loc.gov. Archived from the original on December 15, 2012. Retrieved January 13, 2012.
  63. ^ . Thomas.loc.gov. February 16, 1995. Archived from the original on September 4, 2015. Retrieved January 13, 2012.
  64. ^ . Thomas.loc.gov. Archived from the original on December 16, 2012. Retrieved January 13, 2012.
  65. ^ Staff. . Federal Highway Administration. Archived from the original on February 10, 2007. Retrieved August 31, 2007.
  66. ^ I-69 (Corridor 18) Special Environmental Study (Report). February 7, 2000.
  67. ^ . ELPC. Archived from the original on June 26, 2008. Retrieved January 13, 2012.
  68. ^ Bisbort, Alan. . The Valley Advocate. Archived from the original on December 1, 2007. Retrieved December 3, 2007.
  69. ^ Rand McNally (2014). The Road Atlas (Walmart ed.). Chicago: Rand McNally. pp. 36–37, 42, 51, 56, 94, 100–101. ISBN 978-0-528-00771-2.

Further reading edit

  • Dellinger, Matt (2010). Interstate 69: The Unfinished History of the Last Great American Highway. New York: Scribner. ISBN 978-1-4165-4249-0.
  • Higgs, Steven (2009). Twenty Years of Crimes Against Democracy: A Grassroots History of the I-69/NAFTA Highway. Los Angeles: New World Digital Publishing. ISBN 978-0-9825314-4-0.

External links edit

KML is from Wikidata
  • I69Info.com
  • Highway Position: Is an Indiana Congressman introducing legislation to change the name of Interstate 69? (Snopes.com)
  • Official DOT websites:
    • I-69 Indianapolis-Evansville Study (Indiana Department of Transportation, SIU 3)
    • (SIUs 7, 8, and 9)
    • (SIU 15)
    • I-69 Driven By Texans, a Texas Department of Transportation site

interstate, redirects, here, japanese, submarine, japanese, submarine, airport, ohio, clermont, county, airport, interstate, highway, united, states, currently, consisting, unconnected, segments, with, original, continuous, segment, from, indianapolis, indiana. I 69 redirects here For the Japanese submarine I 69 see Japanese submarine I 169 For the airport in Ohio see Clermont County Airport Interstate 69 I 69 is an Interstate Highway in the United States currently consisting of 10 unconnected segments with an original continuous segment from Indianapolis Indiana northeast to the Canadian border in Port Huron Michigan at 355 8 miles 572 6 km The remaining separated segments are variously completed and posted or not posted sections of an extension southwest to the Mexican border in Texas Of this extension nicknamed the NAFTA Superhighway because it would help trade with Canada and Mexico spurred by the North American Free Trade Agreement NAFTA seven pieces in Laredo Texas Pharr Texas Brownsville Texas Corpus Christi Texas Houston Texas northwestern Mississippi and Memphis Tennessee have been built or upgraded and signposted as I 69 Indiana is currently working on a fifth segment that will extend I 69 through the entire state while a sixth segment of I 69 through Kentucky utilizing that state s existing parkway system and a section of I 24 was established by federal legislation in 2008 with several more parkway segments being upgraded since then This brings the total length to about 880 miles 1 420 km Interstate 69NAFTA Superhighway Segments open planned or under construction Proposed segments Other segments of National Highway System Corridor 18Route informationLength879 822 mi 1 415 936 km Original length 355 8 miles 572 6 km 1 Existed1957 presentHistoryFirst completed in 1992NHSEntire routeMajor junctionsSouth endUS 59 in Rosenberg TXMajor intersectionsI 45 in Houston TX I 10 in Houston TX I 55 in Hernando MS I 40 in Memphis TN I 24 near Calvert City KY I 64 near Evansville IN I 80 I 90 near Angola IN I 94 in Marshall MI I 96 near Lansing MI I 75 near Flint MIEast endHighway 402 at Canada US border on Blue Water Bridge in Port Huron MILocationCountryUnited StatesStatesTexas Mississippi Tennessee Kentucky Indiana MichiganHighway systemInterstate Highway SystemMain Auxiliary Suffixed Business FutureThe proposed extension evolved from the combination of Corridors 18 and 20 of the National Highway System as designated in the Intermodal Surface Transportation Efficiency Act of 1991 ISTEA but the federally recognized corridor also includes connecting and existing infrastructure including I 94 between Chicago Illinois and Port Huron Michigan and several spurs from I 69 Among these proposed spurs are an extension of I 530 from Pine Bluff Arkansas an upgrade of U S Route 59 US 59 from Texarkana Texas being designated as Interstate 369 and a split in southern Texas I 69E I 69C I 69W to serve three border crossings at Laredo Pharr and Brownsville In August 2007 I 69 was selected by the United States Department of Transportation USDOT as one of six Corridors of the Future making it eligible for additional federal funding and streamlined planning and review 2 This funding has since been withheld causing some states to suspend completion of the entire route until federal funding is restored There is no estimated timeline for completion of the entire I 69 route Contents 1 Route description 2 Planned and delayed extensions 2 1 Past progress 2 2 Progress delays 2 3 Current progress and plans 2 4 Texas 2 5 Louisiana Arkansas and Mississippi 2 6 Tennessee Kentucky and southern Indiana 3 History 3 1 Original route 3 2 Extended route 3 2 1 Opposition and controversy 4 Junction list 5 Auxiliary routes 6 See also 7 References 8 Further reading 9 External linksRoute description editMain articles Interstate 69 in Texas Interstate 69 in Louisiana Interstate 69 in Arkansas Interstate 69 in Mississippi Interstate 69 in Tennessee Interstate 69 in Kentucky Interstate 69 in Indiana and Interstate 69 in Michigan I 69 currently exists as a number of distinct segments mostly corresponding to defined sections of independent utility SIUs The original with later additions fully completed route from Indianapolis Indiana to the Blue Water Bridge at Port Huron Michigan SIU 1 Portions of the Indianapolis beltway I 465 though not currently signed as such SIU 2 A 137 mile 220 km section including both the former I 164 near Evansville Indiana north from a temporary end at US 41 signed as I 69 in 2014 SIU 4 to I 64 and onward north to State Road 37 SR 37 near Martinsville Indiana Sections 1 5 of SIU 3 The upgraded portions of the Kentucky Parkway System Purchase Western Kentucky and Pennyrile parkways in addition to a portion of I 24 SIU 5 and SIU 6 A 42 mile 68 km section from Tunica Resorts Mississippi to the I 40 I 69 State Route 300 SR 300 interchange in Memphis Tennessee part of SIU 9 and SIU 10 The existing US 59 freeway from Rosenberg Texas to Cleveland Texas SIU 19 A 7 8 mile 12 6 km segment of US 77 from south of State Highway 44 SH 44 to I 37 near Corpus Christi Texas SIU 22 designated as I 69 in August 2011 and redesignated as I 69E on May 30 2013 3 An 18 mile 29 km section of US 281 from I 2 in Pharr Texas to Edinburg Texas designated as I 69C on May 30 2013 3 A 58 9 mile 94 8 km section of US 77 and part of US 83 from the Veterans International Bridge at Brownsville Texas to north of Raymondville Texas designated as I 69E on May 30 2013 SIU 23 3 4 and A 1 4 mile 2 3 km section of both US 59 and State Highway Loop 20 Loop 20 in Laredo Texas between the World Trade International Bridge and I 35 designated as I 69W on June 17 2014 Lengths mi kmTX 172 200 277 129LAARMS 21 393 34 429TN 21 000 33 796KY 148 090 238 328IN 314 822 506 657MI 202 317 325 598Total 879 822 1 415 936 nbsp Looking on I 69 just outside Indianapolis near Pendleton the exit in the picture has since been renumbered to 214 nbsp I 69 I 94 s northern terminus at the Blue Water Bridge at the Canadian border in Port Huron Michigan connecting it to Highway 402 in Point Edward OntarioThe original portion of I 69 in Indiana SIU 1 of the overall national plan starts at an interchange with I 465 the beltway around Indianapolis on the northeast side of that city I 69 heads northeast to near Anderson where it turns more easterly to provide indirect access to Muncie before turning more northerly toward Marion and Fort Wayne In Fort Wayne I 69 runs along the western edge of the city while I 69 s first and for many years only signed auxiliary route I 469 loops east of the city After crossing the Indiana East West Toll Road I 80 I 90 near Angola and Fremont I 69 enters Michigan just south of Kinderhook I 69 in Michigan runs north passing through Coldwater and Marshall There it crosses I 94 east of Battle Creek Near Olivet I 69 begins to turn in a northeasterly direction passing through the Lansing East Lansing metropolitan area Here I 69 is cosigned with I 96 as an overlap west of Lansing the only such palindromic pairing in the Interstate Highway System Where it splits from I 96 I 69 turns east both in compass direction and in signed direction and heads north of Lansing and through Flint where it crosses I 75 to a junction with I 94 just outside Port Huron At its eastern terminus I 69 joins I 94 to the Blue Water Bridge across the St Clair River where traffic continues on Highway 402 in the Canadian province of Ontario to London Ontario The new section of I 69 in southern Indiana presently begins at the US 41 interchange south of Evansville at the former southern terminus of I 164 From there it runs first east then north meeting SR 662 SR 66 and SR 62 At exit 18 SR 57 joins I 69 on a concurrency Shortly thereafter it meets I 64 at a cloverleaf interchange From there it runs north to SR 68 Construction was completed on November 19 2012 on a 67 mile 108 km segment SIU 3 Sections 1 3 This extension takes the route north northeast from there to SR 64 near Oakland City then north northeast to US 50 US 150 at Washington and finally northeast to US 231 near Naval Surface Warfare Center Crane Division NSWC Crane Division Construction for the final new terrain segment SIU 3 Section 4 which takes I 69 from NSWC Crane Division northeast to SR 37 on the southwest side of Bloomington was completed in December 2015 and was extended north to Martinsville in late 2018 Section 5 5 Section 6 Martinsville to Indianapolis of I 69 s SIU 3 is currently being upgraded to full Interstate Highway standards all the way north northeast to I 465 on the southwest side of Indianapolis The new I 69 in Mississippi and Tennessee starts at an at grade intersection with the former route of Mississippi Highway 304 MS 304 in Banks Tunica County Mississippi It continues roughly north northeast crossing into DeSoto County to a partial interchange with the current route of MS 304 then runs easterly to an interchange with I 55 in northern Hernando It then continues north overlapping I 55 to the Tennessee state line and continues northward concurrently with I 55 to the south side of Memphis It then follows I 240 northward through downtown before joining I 40 Presently the northern end of this section of I 69 is at the I 40 I 69 SR 300 interchange on the north side of Memphis This portion of the route was the first SIU of the proposed extension to be signed as part of the national I 69 route and the first portion designed as part of the extension Planned and delayed extensions editPast progress edit nbsp On June 6 2008 President George W Bush signed HR 1195 designating the Purchase Parkway as Future I 69 Kentucky officials planned to place I 69 signs on the Pennyrile Parkway Western Kentucky Parkway and Purchase Parkway in 2008 but the Federal Highway Administration FHWA had not yet given Kentucky approval to do so for the entire route 6 7 8 9 Kentucky was making spot improvements to its parkways to bring them up to Interstate Highway standards in anticipation of the I 69 designation Meanwhile Indiana examined building most of SIU 3 as a toll road but quickly reverted to making it toll free in 2006 with an announcement to that effect by Indiana Governor Mitch Daniels after widespread opposition from I 69 opponents and supporters alike Indiana had been using funds from the 3 8 billion Indiana Toll Road lease deal along with public private partnerships to construct SIU 3 between Indianapolis and Evansville As of 2015 update SIU 1 all of original I 69 north of Indianapolis plus the I 469 loop around Fort Wayne and SIU 2 were open as was SIU 5 in Kentucky part of SIU 9 in the Memphis Tennessee area and the short SIU 10 in northwestern Mississippi SIU 6 in Kentucky was built as a freeway but was not yet up to Interstate standards in all areas At around the same time Texas was actively pursuing completing its portion of I 69 by upgrading existing U S Routes and state highways along the I 69 corridor to Interstate standards Several portions of the 15 SIUs in Texas were being worked on with active construction in progress on US 59 from SH 99 to Kendleton SIU 20 and on US 77 between Robstown and Kingsville SIU 22 10 As of 2016 update four mainline SIUs outside of Texas were under construction SIU 3 in Indiana using 700 million equivalent to 841 million in 2022 11 from the 2006 Major Moves deal SIU 7 and SIU 9 in Tennessee 12 and a small part of SIU 13 in Arkansas Monticello Bypass Portions of these SIUs have been open to traffic since 2007 13 14 Progress delays edit This section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed February 2024 Learn how and when to remove this template message While federal legislation established a mandate to extend I 69 from Indiana to Texas it did not provide funding for its construction I 69 construction must compete against other projects for traditional funding Despite the approval of several segments work has been completed on only a few scattered segments due in part to increasing costs for construction materials and machinery As a result several states have indicated that construction of I 69 may not be possible without the use of tolls as the primary means to finance building the highway Tennessee Arkansas and Mississippi passed legislation authorizing toll roads within each state but have not applied tolling to their sections of I 69 due to the widespread unpopularity of toll roads in these states A bridge over the Ohio River which was to have been built along I 69 to connect Indiana with Kentucky stalled in 2004 because each state did not have enough funding for it In 2016 both states reached an agreement to restart environmental studies and develop a funding strategy for the Ohio River crossing more funding has allowed for design and construction work to begin since that time Mississippi has suspended work on I 69 indefinitely due to a lack of funding to build the highway outside of the Memphis metropolitan area Arkansas has halted work on its mainline portion of I 69 aside from the Monticello Bypass although it has applied for a federal grant to complete design and construction for the 25 mile 40 km section between Monticello and McGehee Phase 1 started construction in December 2022 As of 2023 update no portion of I 69 in Louisiana has been built nor has any construction started Current progress and plans edit Texas Kentucky and Indiana have been slowly advancing construction of I 69 within each state through traditional funding sources when available and innovative financing methods such as public private partnerships In December 2018 the I 69 River Crossing project team for Kentucky and Indiana announced a preferred plan to build a new toll bridge across the Ohio River as part of I 69 15 In January 2023 contracts were awarded for work on the Kentucky approach to the new bridge section 1 16 In March 2023 Kentucky and Indiana signed an initial memorandum of agreement to allow preliminary development and financial planning to move forward 17 The Indiana approach section 3 is expected to begin construction in early 2024 Construction of the bridge section 2 is currently scheduled to begin in 2027 and be completed in 2031 although efforts to speed up the timeframe are being explored 18 In 2021 Tennessee announced it was reviving construction of segment 7 of I 69 in northwestern Tennessee to link it to I 55 on the west side of the Mississippi River This will provide an interim direct freeway link to Memphis that will bypass the suspended segment 8 pending its eventual completion to take I 69 even more directly into Memphis The Tennessee Department of Transportation TDOT halted the Interstate work about four years earlier because they lacked federal funding for the project The revived portion of I 69 will run from the Kentucky state line to Dyersburg where it will connect with I 155 a spur that crosses the Mississippi River and extends to I 55 in southeastern Missouri From there I 55 extends south running parallel to the Mississippi River on the Missouri Arkansas side then crosses the river into Memphis 19 Texas edit Main article Interstate 69 in Texas nbsp Upcoming connection from I 610 the North Loop to I 69 in Houston nbsp The Southwest Freeway now I 69 in Houston in 1972In Texas I 69 planning has become part of the Trans Texas Corridor TTC studies This part of the TTC called I 69 TTC includes I 69 and all of its spurs authorized by Congress It will extend from three border crossings at Laredo Pharr and Brownsville along US 59 US 281 and US 77 toward Victoria After the three branches join I 69 will continue along the general US 59 corridor through Houston to Tenaha where it will turn easterly to Louisiana along US 84 In Greater Houston I 69 will follow the US 59 freeway corridor through town A branch I 369 continues north on US 59 from Tenaha to Texarkana where it will eventually connect to I 30 and I 49 Most of the proposed I 69 route in Texas already exists as four lane highways with a lengthy freeway section stretching north and south of Houston along US 59 and shorter freeway sections of US 77 US 83 and US 281 in the Lower Rio Grande Valley The I 69 TTC project has been split into 15 SIUs which match the original ones but do not share numbers SIUs 1 to 8 original 16 to 23 cover the mainline along the Interstate 69 East branch to the Mexican border at Brownsville The Interstate 69 Central branch to Pharr is SIUs 9 11 and 12 original 24 to 26 The Interstate 369 and Interstate 69 West branches to Texarkana and the Mexican border at Laredo respectively are SIUs 13 and 14 original 29 and 30 and two connections to Brownsville and Pharr are SIUs 10 and 15 original 31 and 32 The I 69 TTC study also includes SIU L CC a connection between Freer and Corpus Christi that was not in the 2000 study 20 The Texas Department of Transportation TxDOT originally considered building the I 69 TTC over new terrain paralleling US 59 US 77 and US 281 Responding to widespread opposition from environmental groups and property rights activists TxDOT announced in June 2008 that it will complete I 69 by upgrading the existing US 59 US 77 and US 281 roadways to Interstate standards through rural areas with bypasses around urban centers along the route Instead of building the Trans Texas Corridor as originally planned TxDOT now plans to finance upgrading the existing highways to I 69 through private sector investment Under the proposed arrangement I 69 would remain toll free where it overlaps preexisting highways while bypasses of cities may be tolled The private firms awarded contracts for I 69 would also build and operate toll roads throughout the state some of those revenues would then be applied to I 69 construction 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 21 In response to TxDOT s request a six mile 9 7 km segment of US 77 between I 37 and SH 44 near Corpus Christi was approved for the I 69 designation by the FHWA in August 2011 and was approved by the American Association of State Highway and Transportation Officials AASHTO in October 2011 22 signage was posted at an official ceremony on December 5 2011 23 it was resigned as I 69E on May 29 2013 At the May 18 2012 meeting of AASHTO 35 miles 56 km of US 59 from I 610 in Houston to Fostoria Road in Liberty County were also approved as ready for I 69 signage 24 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 US 77 through Cameron and Willacy counties will be signed as I 69E including 52 miles 84 km of existing freeway starting at the Rio Grande in Brownsville and running north past Raymondville The 13 miles 21 km of US 281 freeway in Pharr and Edinburg will be signed as I 69C 25 The section of US 59 inside the I 610 loop that runs through Downtown Houston was approved by the FHWA for designation as I 69 on March 9 2015 and approved for signage as such by the Texas Transportation Commission on March 24 2015 26 Louisiana Arkansas and Mississippi edit Main articles Interstate 69 in Louisiana Interstate 69 in Arkansas and Interstate 69 in Mississippi nbsp A stretch of I 69 cosigned with MS 304 in Mississippi nbsp Future I 69 along with US 49 US 61 and US 278 near Clarksdale MississippiThe nearly 350 mile 560 km portion of the I 69 extension from south of Clarksdale Mississippi to the Louisiana Texas state line is planned to be built as a new terrain route that parallels existing U S Routes and state highways in some locations As well as covering the part in Texas northeast of Nacogdoches SIU 16 also extends into Louisiana ending at US 171 near Stonewall SIU 15 continues around the south and east sides of the Shreveport area crossing I 49 and ending at I 20 near Haughton 27 SIU 14 extends northeast from I 20 to US 82 near El Dorado Arkansas 28 and SIU 13 continues northeast to US 65 near McGehee mainly paralleling US 278 29 Also included in Corridor 18 as SIU 28 is an extension of I 530 from Pine Bluff south along the US 425 corridor to I 69 west of Monticello a short piece at the south end opened in mid 2006 as Highway 530 AR 530 30 Another segment of AR 530 opened in 2013 and another in 2015 The only section of Future I 69 that is currently open to traffic is the 8 5 mile 13 7 km eastern leg of the Monticello Bypass This section of the Monticello Bypass is currently two lanes and signed as US Highway 278 Bypass US 278 Byp Another two lane segment to McGehee started construction in late 2022 The Charles W Dean Bridge SIU 12 is planned to cross the Mississippi River between McGehee Arkansas and Benoit Mississippi while SIU 11 will parallel US 61 to Tunica Resorts 31 SIU 10 the first completed portion of the I 69 extension runs east from Tunica Resorts to I 55 near Hernando and opened in late 2006 32 With the record of decision signed in 2007 the FHWA authorized the Mississippi Department of Transportation MDOT to add I 69 signs on I 55 from the I 55 I 69 interchange in Hernando to the Tennessee state line Tennessee Kentucky and southern Indiana edit Main articles Interstate 69 in Tennessee Interstate 69 in Kentucky and Interstate 69 in Indiana nbsp I 69 cosigned with Western Kentucky Parkway near Dawson Springs KentuckyFrom a point south of Clarksdale Mississippi to Henderson Kentucky most of the I 69 alignment is planned to consist of upgrades to existing U S Highways Interstates and substandard freeways although some sections are expected be built as bypasses around cities and towns along the route I 69 SIU 9 overlaps I 55 into Memphis Tennessee switching there to I 240 and then I 40 before leaving onto the short SR 300 connection and then paralleling US 51 to near Millington On January 18 2008 the FHWA authorized TDOT to erect I 69 signs on I 55 I 240 and I 40 from the Mississippi state line to the I 40 SR 300 interchange The recently completed I 269 will bypass this part of I 69 beginning where I 69 joins I 55 in Mississippi and ending near Millington and will include the northern part of SR 385 near Millington SIU 8 is planned to continue beyond Millington near US 51 to I 155 near Dyersburg Despite these plans it is unclear if the entire I 69 project in Tennessee will ever be completed The state has suspended work indefinitely on the 65 mile 105 km SIU 8 and the remaining nine mile 14 km unbuilt portion of SIU 9 between SR 300 and the northern end of I 269 near Millington due to a lack of federal funding Work on SIU 7 was also suspended for a few years but this project has now been revived by the state which has decided there s value in having a continuous chain of freeways running partly on other completed Interstates between Memphis and the Kentucky state line SIU 7 follows the existing US 51 freeway with new bypasses to the state line at Fulton Kentucky Completion of this stretch of I 69 where it bypasses Union City is to be completed and temporarily signed as SR 690 in early 2024 A bypass for Troy is proposed After that Tennessee Missouri Arkansas I 55 link to I 155 which crosses back across the Mississippi River to the newly completed I 69 will serve as the main freeway routes between Memphis and northwestern Tennessee at least on an interim basis 19 In Kentucky I 69 mostly follows existing freeways originally built as toll roads SIU 6 follows the Julian M Carroll Purchase Parkway and I 24 from Fulton to Eddyville while SIU 5 continues along the Wendell H Ford Western Kentucky Parkway and the Edward T Breathitt Pennyrile Parkway from Eddyville to Henderson While these parkways received the I 69 designation by federal legislation signed in 2008 upgrades have been necessary to bring the freeways to Interstate standards but required less work compared to other states where entirely new highway must be built A number of construction contracts have been let by the state of Kentucky to reconfigure several interchanges along the parkways Many of these interchanges were originally designed with opposing loop ramps to accommodate toll barriers at the interchanges these tollbooth style interchanges were or will be reconfigured to standard diamond interchanges as part of the parkways conversion to I 69 33 On August 31 2011 Kentucky Governor Steve Beshear announced an agreement between the state and the FHWA which allowed the Kentucky Transportation Cabinet KYTC to erect I 69 signage along the new Interstate s 17 mile 27 km overlap with I 24 and the 38 mile 61 km stretch of the Western Kentucky Parkway between I 24 and the Pennyrile Parkway Signage was placed in late 2011 with construction on necessary upgrades of the portion of the Western Kentucky Parkway expected to be bid in September 34 On October 25 2011 I 69 was officially designated by Beshear along a 55 mile 89 km stretch of I 24 and the Western Kentucky Parkway between Calvert City and Nortonville 35 Signage and milemarkers were replaced on the 38 mile 61 km stretch of the Western Kentucky Parkway in mid December 2012 36 An additional 43 6 miles 70 2 km along the Pennyrile Parkway from the Western Kentucky Parkway to Kentucky Route 425 KY 425 south of Henderson was designated and resigned on November 16 2015 37 38 The Purchase Parkway between Mayfield and Calvert City was signed in July 2018 39 The next phase of upgrading Purchase Parkway from Mayfield to the Tennessee state line began in December 2022 and is expected to be done by December 15 2024 40 The Indiana and Kentucky governors agreed on June 30 2016 to spend a combined 17 million equivalent to 20 4 million in 2022 11 for an environmental and design study to determine how the two states will pay for a bridge spanning the Ohio River and where it will run This is the second study conducted by the two states The first study was commissioned in 2001 and a preliminary report in 2004 put the cost of a bridge at 1 4 billion equivalent to 2 09 billion in 2022 11 Only a draft environmental report was issued at this time no final environmental report or approval was issued due to a lack of money Since 2004 Indiana and Kentucky combined have completed nearly 300 miles 480 km of the Interstate The bridge is the last remaining piece to connect the two states 41 The preferred alternative for SIU 4 was to leave the Pennyrile Parkway near its north end and cross the Ohio River to I 164 near Evansville Indiana and then use I 164 to I 64 42 At the October 18 2013 AASHTO meeting an Indiana Department of Transportation INDOT request to redesignate I 164 as part of I 69 was approved pending concurrence from the FHWA 43 I 69 was officially designated on this corridor in late 2014 44 SIU 3 connecting I 69 to I 465 in southern Indianapolis will roughly parallel SR 57 and SR 45 and will use an upgraded version of the existing SR 37 from just south of Bloomington to a point just south of Indianapolis A 67 mile 108 km stretch from Evansville to NSWC Crane Division was completed on November 19 2012 45 and the remaining 27 mile 43 km portion to Bloomington opened to traffic on December 9 2015 46 Construction on upgrading a 21 mile 34 km section of SR 37 from Bloomington to just south of Martinsville to Interstate standards was completed in late 2018 47 5 Construction began on the final segment from Martinsville to Indianapolis in 2019 with completion anticipated by the end of 2024 48 SIU 2 will follow the southeastern quarter of I 465 around the city 49 History editOriginal route edit nbsp Map of the original I 69 routeA route from I 465 in Indianapolis northeast via Fort Wayne to I 80 I 90 near Angola was added to the proposed Interregional Highway System by the early 1940s Unlike most of the routes it was not drawn along an existing U S Route corridor except north of Fort Wayne where it used US 27 most of it ran roughly parallel to SR 9 and SR 37 50 The extension beyond Angola to I 94 near Marshall Michigan actually started out as part of what evolved into I 94 On early plans the Chicago Detroit route would have replaced US 112 now US 12 splitting from I 80 I 90 at South Bend 50 51 By 1947 the route had been shifted north to present I 94 along what was then US 12 but the connection to South Bend remained splitting at Kalamazoo 52 The I 69 designation was assigned to the Indianapolis Angola route in 1957 while the short South Bend Kalamazoo route became proposed I 67 53 The I 67 designation was shifted east to the US 27 corridor by early 1958 eventually being absorbed into the extension of I 69 to I 94 near Marshall which was built in 1967 54 55 The Federal Aid Highway Act of 1968 authorized an additional 1 500 miles 2 400 km of Interstates to be chosen by the FHWA among Michigan s proposals was a 156 mile 251 km extension of I 69 northeast and east via US 27 to Lansing M 78 to Flint and M 21 to Port Huron 56 However the FHWA initially only approved the route to I 475 in Flint 57 58 The continuation to Port Huron was eventually approved in February 1987 59 Michigan s 1 241 mile 1 997 km portion of the Interstate Highway System was completed in 1992 when the last piece of I 69 opened southwest of Lansing between I 96 and Charlotte 60 Extended route edit nbsp The current US 59 will become I 69W picture taken east of Laredo TexasISTEA included two High Priority Corridors that would later become parts of a proposed crosscountry extension of I 69 61 18 Corridor from Indianapolis Indiana to Memphis Tennessee via Evansville Indiana 20 US 59 Corridor from the Mexican border in Laredo Texas through Houston to the vicinity of Texarkana Texas Corridor 18 was extended southwest to Houston where it connected to Corridor 20 by the Department of Transportation and Related Agencies Appropriations Act 1993 the new definition read Corridor from Indianapolis Indiana through Evansville Indiana Memphis Tennessee Shreveport Bossier Louisiana and to Houston Texas 62 The National Highway System Designation Act of 1995 made further amendments to the description of Corridor 18 specifying that it would serve Mississippi and Arkansas extending it south to the Mexican border in the Lower Rio Grande Valley and adding a short connection at Brownsville Texas This act also specified that Corridors 18 and 20 were future parts of the Interstate System to become actual Interstates when built to Interstate Highway standards and connected to other Interstates Although the act designated Corridor 9 as I 99 no number was assigned to Corridors 18 and 20 yet 63 The Transportation Equity Act for the 21st Century TEA 21 enacted in 1998 greatly expanded the definition of Corridor 18 to include the existing I 69 as well as I 94 between Port Huron Michigan and Chicago Illinois A connection to Pine Bluff Arkansas was added and the extension to the Lower Rio Grande Valley was detailed as splitting into two routes just south of Victoria one following US 77 and the other following US 59 and US 281 to the Rio Grande This act also assigned the I 69 designation to Corridors 18 and 20 with the branches on US 77 US 281 and US 59 to the Rio Grande being Interstate 69 East Interstate 69 Central and Interstate 69 West respectively 64 With TEA 21 the I 69 extension took shape and remains today as those segments 65 In 2000 Corridors 18 and 20 were split into 32 SIUs as part of the I 69 Corridor 18 Special Environmental Study 66 In Texas it was originally envisioned that private firms will build operate then transfer portions of the highway to the state after a specified period of time Lawmakers in Kentucky once considered a bill that would authorize the re tolling of three parkways slated to become part of I 69 citation needed Opposition and controversy edit The construction of the I 69 extension beyond Indianapolis has angered environmentalists In particular the southern portion of the route in Indiana would run through wetlands existing farmland and forested areas and cut through geologically sensitive karst topography which environmentalists argue threatens to pollute underground water systems and harm the rare species that live there 67 68 Fiscal conservatives also oppose completion of I 69 arguing that federal legislation establishing the I 69 corridor amounts to an unfunded mandate imposed by the federal government upon the states through which the highway will travel as the legislation requires states to pursue construction of their portions of I 69 but provides no funding mechanism to cover its estimated 25 billion cost thereby leaving cash strapped states to figure out how to finance its construction Three states Louisiana Mississippi and Tennessee have publicly stated they will not build their sections of I 69 until Congress appropriates funds to complete environmental studies design and construction in each state citation needed Junction list editTexas nbsp US 59 in Rosenberg The highways travel concurrently to north northeast of Splendora nbsp Beltway 8 Sam Houston Tollway in Houston nbsp I 610 in Houston nbsp I 45 in Houston nbsp nbsp I 10 US 90 in Houston nbsp I 610 in Houston nbsp Beltway 8 Sam Houston Parkway in Houston nbsp SH 99 Grand Parkway on the Porter New Caney line Gap in route Louisiana Unbuilt Arkansas Unbuilt two lanes of Monticello Bypass completed and signed as US 278 Bypass Mississippi nbsp MS 713 east northeast of Robinsonville The highways travel concurrently for approximately 3 73 miles 6 00 km nbsp I 55 in Hernando The highways travel concurrently to Memphis Tennessee Tennessee nbsp US 51 in Memphis nbsp nbsp I 55 I 240 in Memphis I 69 I 240 travels concurrently through Memphis nbsp US 78 in Memphis nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp US 51 US 64 US 70 US 79 in Memphis nbsp nbsp I 40 I 240 in Memphis I 40 I 69 travels concurrently through Memphis nbsp US 51 nbsp SR 300 in Memphis Gap in route Kentucky nbsp US 45 in Mayfield nbsp I 24 south of Calvert City The highways travel concurrently to Eddyville nbsp US 62 in Calvert City nbsp nbsp US 62 US 641 in Kuttawa nbsp US 62 in Eddyville nbsp nbsp nbsp I 169 Future I 569 Western Kentucky Parkway north northeast of Nortonville nbsp US 41 in Madisonville nbsp US 41 near Henderson Gap in route Indiana nbsp US 41 in Evansville nbsp I 64 west northwest of Elberfeld nbsp nbsp US 50 US 150 east of Washington nbsp US 231 west northwest of Scotland nbsp SR 37 near Bloomington nbsp SR 39 near Martinsville Gap in route nbsp I 465 in Indianapolis nbsp US 35 east northeast of Alexandria The highways travel concurrently to Gas City nbsp US 224 in Markle nbsp nbsp I 469 US 33 east of Roanoke I 69 US 33 travels concurrently to Fort Wayne nbsp US 24 in Fort Wayne The highways travel concurrently through Fort Wayne nbsp nbsp US 30 US 33 in Fort Wayne I 69 US 30 travels concurrently through Fort Wayne nbsp US 27 in Fort Wayne nbsp nbsp nbsp I 469 US 24 US 30 in Fort Wayne nbsp US 6 west northwest of Waterloo nbsp US 20 west of Angola nbsp nbsp I 80 I 90 west northwest of Fremont Michigan nbsp US 12 in Coldwater nbsp I 94 northwest of Marshall nbsp I 96 in Lansing The highways travel concurrently to northwest of Waverly nbsp I 496 west of Lansing nbsp US 127 north northwest of East Lansing nbsp nbsp I 75 US 23 southwest of Flint nbsp I 475 in Flint nbsp I 94 north of Marysville The highways travel concurrently to the Canada United States border in Port Huron nbsp I 94 nbsp Highway 402 at the Canada United States border in Port Huron 69 Auxiliary routes editInterstate 69C Texas Interstate 69E Texas Interstate 69W Texas Interstate 69 Spur Kentucky proposed Interstate 169 Indiana proposed Interstate 169 Kentucky Interstate 169 Tennessee proposed Interstate 169 Texas Interstate 269 Indiana proposed Interstate 269 Mississippi Tennessee Interstate 369 Texas Interstate 469 Indiana Interstate 569 Kentucky proposedSee also edit nbsp U S Roads portalReferences edit DeSimone Tony October 31 2002 Table 1 Main Routes of the Dwight D Eisenhower National System Of Interstate and Defense Highways as of October 31 2002 Route Log and Finder List Federal Highway Administration Archived from the original on April 22 2012 Retrieved August 20 2007 DOT Selects Six National Corridors of the Future Archived from the original on November 9 2012 Retrieved August 10 2012 a b c Staff May 30 2013 Interstate 69 Comes to Texarkana and the Valley Press release Alliance for I 69 Texas Archived from the original on October 19 2013 Retrieved May 31 2013 Clark Steve May 29 2013 SH 550 ribbon cutting crowd gets big I 69 news The Brownsville Herald Archived from the original on July 1 2017 Retrieved May 31 2013 a b Section 5 of I 69 project will be completed near mid September according to INDOT FOX59 August 10 2018 Archived from the original on August 11 2018 Retrieved February 18 2019 HR 1195 Text PDF Archived PDF from the original on December 27 2010 Retrieved January 13 2012 KY I 69 Designation Cruises Through Congress Press release Representative Whitfield May 4 2008 Archived from the original on November 4 2009 Interstate 69 Legislation Tristate Homepage com Archived May 14 2008 at the Wayback Machine President Bush Signs HR 1195 Press release The White House June 6 2008 Archived from the original on October 25 2017 Retrieved September 1 2017 I 69 System Funding Program PDF i69texasalliance com November 13 2014 Archived PDF from the original on April 2 2015 Retrieved March 26 2022 a b c Johnston Louis Williamson Samuel H 2023 What Was the U S GDP Then MeasuringWorth Retrieved November 30 2023 United States Gross Domestic Product deflator figures follow the Measuring Worth series Progress being made on future Interstate 69 in Union City May 20 2016 Archived from the original on May 24 2016 Retrieved May 23 2016 TDOT I 69 Segment 9 Newsletter January 2007 PDF Archived from the original PDF on April 4 2012 Retrieved January 13 2012 I 69 Indianapolis to Evansville Extension Official Site I69indyevn org Archived from the original on December 20 2014 Retrieved January 13 2012 Martin John December 14 2018 I 69 ORX project team announces preferred route for new Evansville Henderson bridge Evansville Courier amp Press Archived from the original on December 14 2018 Retrieved January 11 2019 Contract awarded for I 69 Ohio River Crossing Section 1 in Kentucky Roads amp Bridges January 4 2022 Archived from the original on April 4 2023 Retrieved April 4 2023 Kentucky Indiana Officials Sign Agreement For I 69 Bridge 104 3 The River WXBC FM March 28 2023 Archived from the original on April 4 2023 Retrieved April 4 2023 Bottorff Kathy April 1 2023 Bi State Agreement Paves the Way for New Ohio River Bridge WTCA AM Archived from the original on April 3 2023 Retrieved April 4 2023 a b Obion County News 2021 I 69 Project Revived Obion County Archived from the original on July 29 2021 Retrieved March 4 2021 Staff I 69 TTC Northeast Texas to Mexico Texas Department of Transportation Archived from the original on December 14 2007 Retrieved August 31 2007 Staff What s Next for I 69 Texas Texas Department of Transportation Archived from the original on August 21 2011 Retrieved August 31 2011 Portion of US 77 Approved as Part of US Interstate System Press release Texas Department of Transportation Archived from the original on November 2 2011 Retrieved August 31 2011 First I 69 signs going up on US 77 in December Archived from the original on April 5 2012 Retrieved November 4 2011 Special Committee on U S Route Numbering May 19 2012 Report to SCOH PDF Report Washington DC American Association of State Highway and Transportation Officials Archived from the original PDF on June 3 2019 Essex Allen May 30 2013 I 69 Comes to the Valley 111 Miles Added to Interstate System Valley Morning Star Harlingen TX Archived from the original on June 15 2013 Retrieved June 3 2013 Minute Order 113100 PDF ftp dot state tx us Texas Transportation Commission March 25 2015 Archived PDF from the original on April 2 2015 Retrieved March 26 2022 Staff I 69 SIU 15 Project Site Louisiana Department of Transportation and Development Archived from the original on August 30 2007 Retrieved August 31 2007 Staff Interstate 69 Shreveport to El Dorado Arkansas Highway and Transportation Department and Louisiana Department of Transportation and Development Archived from the original on March 20 2003 Retrieved August 31 2007 Staff Interstate 69 El Dorado to McGehee Arkansas Highway and Transportation Department Archived from the original on August 24 2007 Retrieved August 31 2007 Riggin Amy May 26 2006 Interstate Plan is Moving Forward Pine Bluff Commercial Archived from the original on February 20 2010 I 69 Robinsonville to Benoit Mississippi Department of Transportation Archived from the original on February 8 2005 Retrieved August 31 2007 Risher Wayne July 20 2006 New Leg of I 69 to Open on Oct 3 The Commercial Appeal Archived from the original on September 30 2007 Retrieved August 20 2007 Governor Fletcher Unveils I 69 Corridor Designation Press release Commonwealth of Kentucky May 15 2006 Archived from the original on November 26 2007 Governor Beshear announces approval of historic I 69 agreement Press release Governor of Kentucky August 31 2011 Archived from the original on December 2 2011 Governor puts I 69 on the map WPSD TV October 25 2011 Archived from the original on July 28 2013 Todd Keith December 15 2012 I 69 is Official with New Signs and Mile Points in Lyon Hopkins amp Trigg Counties SurfKY News Archived from the original on September 4 2015 Retrieved December 30 2012 New red white and blue highway signs for 42 Miles of I 69 November 16 2015 Archived from the original on February 21 2016 Retrieved February 27 2016 New Interstate 69 designated in Ky Nashville TN WSMV TV October 26 2011 Archived from the original on February 9 2013 Retrieved October 26 2011 Inman Taylor July 3 2018 Completion Of Interchange Projects Adds 30 Miles Of Interstate 69 In Kentucky www wkms org Archived from the original on February 19 2019 Retrieved February 18 2019 Ledger Special to the March 20 2023 Work for I 69 upgrades ramping up along Purchase Parkway Murray Ledger and Times Retrieved August 11 2023 Pence Bevin sign agreement for I 69 bridge Evansville Courier Press June 30 2016 Archived from the original on October 26 2020 Retrieved July 1 2016 Preferred Alternative Identified for I 69 Corridor Linking Henderson and Evansville Press release Indiana Department of Transportation February 11 2004 Archived from the original on December 8 2010 Special Committee on U S Route Numbering October 28 2013 Special Committee on US Route Numbering Meeting Minutes for October 17 2013 and Report to SCOH October 18 2013 PDF Report Washington DC American Association of State Highway and Transportation Officials Archived from the original PDF on June 3 2019 Retrieved October 25 2013 Dozier Daniel A September 5 2013 Request for I 69 Designation for I 164 from I 64 to US 41 PDF Letter to Richard J Marquis Indianapolis Indiana Department of Transportation Archived from the original PDF on March 4 2016 Retrieved January 9 2015 via American Association of State Highway and Transportation Officials Indiana I69 extension s 1st stretch opens Nov 19 November 2 2012 Retrieved January 29 2013 dead link Mayors Next section of I 69 to open next week Evansville Courier amp Press December 2 2015 Archived from the original on December 4 2015 Retrieved December 2 2013 Officials Mark Start of Next I 69 Section insideindianabusiness com Archived from the original on May 5 2015 INDOT Project Updates and News www in gov October 6 2021 Archived from the original on March 4 2016 Retrieved February 27 2016 Frequently Asked Questions I 69 Finish Line Archived from the original on July 19 2021 Retrieved July 19 2021 a b Public Roads Administration c 1943 Routes of the Recommended Interregional Highway System Map Scale not given Washington DC Public Roads Administration Archived from the original on January 30 2016 Retrieved February 27 2016 via Wikimedia Commons Public Roads Administration 1939 Proposed Interregional Highway System Map Scale not given Washington DC Public Roads Administration Archived from the original on January 2 2016 Retrieved February 27 2016 via Wikimedia Commons Public Roads Administration National System of Interstate Highways August 2 1947 Map Scale not given Washington DC Public Roads Administration Archived from the original on October 29 2013 Retrieved October 25 2013 via Wikimedia Commons Public Roads Administration August 14 1957 Official Route Numbering for the National System of Interstate and Defense Highways Map Scale not given Washington DC Public Roads Administration Archived from the original on November 10 2012 Retrieved February 27 2016 via Wikimedia Commons Michigan State Highway Department April 25 1958 Recommended Numbering Interstate Highways in Michigan Report Michigan State Highway Department Archived from the original on October 16 2002 Public Roads Administration June 27 1958 Official Route Numbering for the National System of Interstate and Defense Highways Map Scale not given Washington DC Public Roads Administration Archived from the original on October 29 2013 Retrieved October 25 2013 via Wikimedia Commons Highway Additions Requested By State The Owosso Argus Press Associated Press November 14 1968 p 7 OCLC 9802802 Archived from the original on June 7 2021 Retrieved December 5 2010 Michigan Department of Transportation 1984 Say Yes to Michigan Official Transportation Map Map c 1 190 080 Lansing Michigan Department of Transportation Flint inset OCLC 12701177 Retrieved October 17 2019 via Michigan History Center Federal Highway Administration October 1 1970 The National System of Interstate and Defense Highways Map Scale not given Washington DC Federal Highway Administration Archived from the original on October 29 2013 Retrieved October 25 2013 via Wikimedia Commons Weingroff Richard July 16 2013 1998 Part I History The Dwight D Eisenhower System of Interstate and Defense Highways Federal Highway Administration Archived from the original on June 7 2021 Retrieved August 18 2013 I 69 Now Open South of Lansing Marshall Evening Chronicle Associated Press p 20 OCLC 18110507 Archived from the original on June 7 2021 Retrieved August 17 2013 H R 2950 Thomas loc gov Archived from the original on December 15 2012 Retrieved January 13 2012 H R 5518 Thomas loc gov Archived from the original on December 15 2012 Retrieved January 13 2012 S 440 Thomas loc gov February 16 1995 Archived from the original on September 4 2015 Retrieved January 13 2012 H R 2400 Thomas loc gov Archived from the original on December 16 2012 Retrieved January 13 2012 Staff NHS High Priority Corridors Description Federal Highway Administration Archived from the original on February 10 2007 Retrieved August 31 2007 I 69 Corridor 18 Special Environmental Study Report February 7 2000 Indiana I 69 ELPC Archived from the original on June 26 2008 Retrieved January 13 2012 Bisbort Alan The World This Week Nafty Business Super Corridor will pave over the heart of America The Valley Advocate Archived from the original on December 1 2007 Retrieved December 3 2007 Rand McNally 2014 The Road Atlas Walmart ed Chicago Rand McNally pp 36 37 42 51 56 94 100 101 ISBN 978 0 528 00771 2 Further reading editDellinger Matt 2010 Interstate 69 The Unfinished History of the Last Great American Highway New York Scribner ISBN 978 1 4165 4249 0 Higgs Steven 2009 Twenty Years of Crimes Against Democracy A Grassroots History of the I 69 NAFTA Highway Los Angeles New World Digital Publishing ISBN 978 0 9825314 4 0 External links editKML file edit help Template Attached KML Interstate 69KML is from Wikidata nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Interstate 69 I69Info com Highway Position Is an Indiana Congressman introducing legislation to change the name of Interstate 69 Snopes com Official DOT websites I 69 Indianapolis Evansville Study Indiana Department of Transportation SIU 3 Interstate 69 in Tennessee SIUs 7 8 and 9 Shreveport bypass SIU 15 I 69 Driven By Texans a Texas Department of Transportation site Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Interstate 69 amp oldid 1207500993, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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