List Of Gaps In Interstate Highways

For the most part, the United States Interstate Highway System is a connected system, with most roads completed. However, some Interstates have gaps. There are several cases covered here:
  • True gaps, where two sections of road are meant to be part of the same Interstate, but signage indicates otherwise
  • Freeway gaps, where the Interstate is signed as a continuous route, but part or all of it is not up to freeway standards; this includes drawbridges, where traffic on the Interstate can be stopped by boats
  • Connection gaps, where a three-digit Interstate does not connect to its two-digit parent via a freeway-standard connection
Not covered here are a few other cases worth mentioning:
  • Gaps in Interstate Highway standards, such as shoulder widths and bridge clearances, since these are too frequent
  • Two-digit Interstate numbers which are meant to be repeated, one on each side of the country, namely I-76, I-84, I-86 and I-88
  • Gaps on the Interstates in Alaska and Puerto Rico, since those are not held to the same standards
  • Places where Interstates cross but don't connect via a freeway-standard connection
  • Places where a three-digit Interstate connects to its parent via another three-digit Interstate of the same parent; the numbering system allows for this

True gaps

Freeway gaps

Drawbridges

Connection gaps

  • I-176 didn't connect directly to I-76 at Morgantown, Pennsylvania until 1996.
  • I-585 used to connect with I-85 in Spartanburg, South Carolina, but I-85 was moved to a bypass and now I-585 ends at Business Loop I-85. The signed connection to I-85 is via a surface section of US 176. Additionally, some I-585 shields are present at the other end after the road has passed traffic lights, but these may be posted in error, since some signs mark the road there as Business Spur I-585.
  • I-587 in Kingston, New York connects with I-87 via a roundabout. There are no traffic lights or other cross traffic in the connection, and so it is debated whether this actually counts as a gap.
  • The following Interstates connect to their parents only via Interstates of a different parent; it is allowed for this connection to be via a same-parented Interstate (like I-280 in California being connected to I-80 via I-680).
    • I-210 in California at present does not directly connect to I-10, though it used to (via what is now CA 57, and will by 2008 when the last segment of CA 210 is finished and renamed to I-210.
    • None of the spurs of I-78 (I-278, I-478, I-678, I-878) connects to its parent. I-78 was planned to extend through New York City and end as two branches, where I-295 and I-695 now end at I-95. I-478 comes the closest, and would have intersected if the Westway project wasn't canceled; I-278 was planned to extend northwest to I-78 at NJ 24.

See also

Sources

 

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