Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The Sherman Minton Bridge is a double-deck through arch bridge spanning the Ohio River, carrying I-64 and US 150 over the river between Kentucky and Indiana. The bridge connects the west side of Louisville, Kentucky to downtown New Albany, Indiana.
The Ohio River Bridges Project in the Louisville/Falls City metro area, while mainly affecting I-65 and I-265, has sparked opposition, most notably 8664, which calls for I-64 to be rerouted out of downtown Louisville (and, thus, the Minton Bridge) onto the new, extended route for I-265. They suggest the portion of I-64 between the current I-64 ...
I-64 crosses the Sherman Minton Bridge in New Albany, Indiana. I-64 crosses the Wabash River and enters the state of Indiana. It passes Griffin (State Road 69, or SR 69; exit 4) and Poseyville (SR 165; exit 12) and also passes under nearby SR 68 (no direct interchange serves SR 68, though one can access said route from either SR 165 or SR 65).
Interstate 64 was built through New Albany in 1961 and led to the construction of the Sherman Minton Bridge. The project cost $14.8 million. The project cost $14.8 million. The bridge was named for U.S. Senator and later U.S. Supreme Court Justice Sherman Minton , who was a native of nearby Georgetown and practiced law in New Albany.
Commuters, look for lane closure on Interstate 64 in St. Clair County May 7, 2023 at 6:00 AM The left lane of the Interstate 64 bridge over Illinois 3 in downtown East St. Louis will be closed ...
Drivers on Interstate 64 on the Peninsula should expect a major shift in traffic flow across the Hampton River as early as this weekend. According to the Virginia Department of Transportation ...
With the U.S. 64 bridge out, N.C. Department of Transportation engineers used scaffolding to make a footbridge over the Rocky Broad River in Bat Cave, North Carolina.
Sherman Minton Bridge: I-64 / US 150: New Albany and Louisville: 1962 Kentucky & Indiana Terminal Bridge ... New Albany and Louisville (Falls of the Ohio) 1830