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The Interstate Highway System in Louisiana consists of 933.84 miles (1,502.87 km) [4] of freeways constructed and maintained by the Louisiana Department of Transportation and Development (La DOTD). The system was authorized on June 29, 1956 when President Dwight D. Eisenhower signed into law the Federal Aid Highway Act of 1956 . [ 1 ]
Interstate 310 (Louisiana) Interstate 410 (Baton Rouge, Louisiana) Interstate 410 (New Orleans, Louisiana) Interstate 410 (Louisiana 1955) Interstate 410 (Louisiana 1960) Interstate 410 (Louisiana 1969) Interstate 510; Interstate 610 (Louisiana) Interstate 910; Interstate 12; Interstate 20 in Louisiana; Interstate 220 (Louisiana) Interstate 420 ...
2008-style state highway marker on eastbound LA 1064 in Natalbany. After months of posting the black-and-white shields without a line border, La DOTD began posting some state shields with a white border, as in this photo taken on January 14, 2010.
Interstate 10 (I-10), a major transcontinental Interstate Highway in the Southern United States, runs across the southern part of Louisiana for 274.42 miles (441.64 km) [1] [3] from Texas to Mississippi.
The U.S. Highway System in Louisiana consists of 2,490.851 miles (4,008.636 km) of mainline highway routes and 107.785 miles (173.463 km) of special routes (both figures including concurrencies) that are constructed and maintained by the Louisiana Department of Transportation and Development (La DOTD).
U.S. Highway 90 (US 90), one of the major east–west U.S. Highways in the Southern United States, runs through southern Louisiana for 297.6 miles (478.9 km), serving Lake Charles, Lafayette, New Iberia, Morgan City, and New Orleans.
Interstate 49 (I-49) is an Interstate Highway that currently spans 244.021 miles (392.714 km) in a north–south direction in the US state of Louisiana. [1] Currently, I-49 runs from I-10 in Lafayette to the Arkansas state line.
Louisiana Highway 427 (LA 427) runs 14.57 miles (23.45 km) in a northwest to southeast direction from LA 73 in Baton Rouge, East Baton Rouge Parish to a second junction with LA 73 at Hope Villa, Ascension Parish. It is a busy suburban commercial and residential thoroughfare over most of its route and almost entirely parallels I-10.