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Lake Hefner is a reservoir in northwestern Oklahoma City, Oklahoma.It was built in the 1940s to expand the water supply for the city of Oklahoma City, [2]. It is named after Robert A. Hefner, who served as mayor of Oklahoma City from April 11, 1939, to April 8, 1947, but was originally named the "Bluff Creek Reservoir."
The first part of the northern section is a freeway, called the Lake Hefner Parkway because part of it runs along the east shore of Lake Hefner. The freeway, a major part of the Oklahoma City freeway system, serves the northwestern part of Oklahoma City. The freeway ends at 164th Street, and SH-74 continues northward on Portland Avenue.
Listings are distributed across all of Oklahoma's 77 counties. The following are approximate unofficial tallies of current listings by county. [a] This National Park Service list is complete through NPS recent listings posted January 17, 2025. [1]
Guest column: The completion of MAPS 3, a $777 million capital improvement initiative, marks a significant milestone in Oklahoma City's history.
Name Capacity in acre feet (normal pool) surface acres (normal pool) average depth water clarity Lake Texoma: 2,643,000: 88,000 acres (35,612 ha) 30 feet (9.1 m)
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Oklahoma City: 13.6: 21.9: I-344 Toll (Kilpatrick Turnpike) Interchange: Oklahoma: 20.4: 32.8 — I-44 west / SH-3 – Lawton: Eastbound exit and westbound entrance; west end of freeway — SH-3 west / SH-74 north (Lake Hefner Parkway) Left exit eastbound; Lake Hefner Pkwy. exit 123B — I-44 west to I-40 – Lawton, Amarillo: Western end of I ...
Energy FC owner Bob Funk Jr. is asking Oklahoma City to locate the MAPS 4 stadium on donated land south of Lower Bricktown. OKC could build MAPS 4 stadium south of Lower Bricktown, home for city's ...