Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Indiana Toll Road from I-80/I-90/I-94 split in NW Indiana to Ohio state line I-90: 156.28: 251.51 I-90 at Illinois state line in Hammond: I-80/I-90 at Ohio state line east of Angola: 1956: current Indiana Toll Road: I-94: 46.13: 74.24 I-80/I-94 at Illinois state line in Munster: I-94 at Michigan state line northeast of Michigan City: 1956: current
I-74/US 52 at Ohio state line 1926 [5] current US 131: 0.643: 1.035 I-80/I-90 (Indiana Toll Road) near Middlebury: US 131 near Middlebury 1961: current US 136: 74.930: 120.588 US 136 near Foster: I-74/I-465 in Speedway: 1952: current US 150: 177.17: 285.13 US 150 near West Terre Haute: I-64/US 150 at New Albany: 1926: current
State Roads in the U.S. state of Indiana are numbered rationally: in general, odd one-digit and two-digit highways are north–south highways, numbers increasing toward the west; even one-digit and two-digit highways are east-west highways, numbers increasing toward the south, the opposite of the Interstate Highway System.
Interstate 65 in Indiana; Interstate 165 (Indiana) Interstate 265; Interstate 465; Interstate 665; Interstate 865; Interstate 69 in Indiana; Interstate 269 (Indiana) Interstate 469; Interstate 70 in Indiana; Interstate 74 in Indiana; Interstate 275 (Ohio–Indiana–Kentucky) Interstate 80 in Indiana; Interstate 94 in Indiana; Interstate 90 in ...
There is no rule preventing the same numbering between state roads, U.S. routes, and Interstate highways, although traditionally, INDOT has avoided state road numbers which are the same as those on U.S. routes within the state. Indiana has a mileage cap of 12,000 miles (19,000 km) for its highway system. [1]
The Pershing Map FDR's hand-drawn map from 1938. The United States government's efforts to construct a national network of highways began on an ad hoc basis with the passage of the Federal Aid Road Act of 1916, which provided $75 million over a five-year period for matching funds to the states for the construction and improvement of highways. [8]
Like all Interstate Highways in Indiana, I-70 was constructed in segments which, when all were complete, make up the route as it is today. There were three large segments in the western portion of the route between the Illinois border and I-465 in Indianapolis , and five more in the eastern portion connecting the east side of Indianapolis to Ohio.
Map of the Interstates in Puerto Rico. Puerto Rico signs its Interstate Highways as territorial routes, as the numbers do not match their official Interstate Highway designations. Many of the territory's routes are freeway-standard toll roads. [10]