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The highway was renamed the Kingery Expressway in 1953, two years after the death of Robert Kingery. He was a former director of the Illinois Public Works, a regional director for the Chicago Regional Planning Association, as well as a proponent of the current northeastern Illinois tollway configuration until his death in 1951.
Illinois Route 83 (IL 83) is a 91.73-mile-long (147.63 km) major north–south state highway in northeast Illinois. It stretches from U.S. Route 30 (US 30, Lincoln Highway) by Lynwood and Dyer, Indiana, north to the Wisconsin border by Antioch at Wisconsin Highway 83 (WIS 83).
Kingery Highway: IL 83: From Bensenville, the Kingery Highway heads south 18 miles to just south of the Des Plaines River. It is a multi-lane divided limited-access road with grade-separated portions. [9] [10] Amstutz Expressway: IL 137: A two-mile expressway located entirely in Waukegan, Illinois. It has only one exit at Grand Avenue. Elgin ...
The section including the Southland Interchange with I-80 and I-294 was reconfigured as part of the Kingery Expressway reconstruction project, completed in 2007, including four lanes south of 159th Street, with the split between I-80 and I-94 east to the left, and I-80 west, I-294 north, and IL 394 south on the right located north of the 170th ...
The Chicago–Kansas City Expressway is a highway that runs between Chicago, Illinois, and Kansas City, Missouri. The road is known as Route 110 in Missouri and Illinois Route 110 (IL 110) in Illinois. IL 110 was created through legislation on May 27, 2010, as the designated route for the Illinois portion of the Chicago–Kansas City Expressway.
IL 83 south (Kingery Highway) Westbound exit and eastbound entrance; toll on eastbound entrance ramp: 137.29: 220.95: 138: 22nd Street (Cermak Road) to IL 83 north (Kingery Highway) Westbound entrance and exit; toll on entrance ramp: 137.73: 221.65: York Road Toll Plaza 53 (westbound) 138.27: 222.52: 138: I-294 Toll south (Tri-State Tollway) to ...
The Tri-State Highway was the designation for an 18 mile expressway in the Chicago metropolitan area. The original designations for the expressway were Interstate 80, 90, and 294, as well as a portion of U.S. Route 6. It connects the Tri-State Tollway, Bishop Ford Freeway, and Illinois Route 394 in the west to the Indiana Toll Road in the east.
The expressway now known as the Borman was originally known as the Tri-State Highway, and construction of the expressway began in 1949. [6] The designation went through the Kingery Expressway and eventually linked with the Tri-State Tollway in Illinois. [7] It was originally designated SR 420 in Indiana. [8]