Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The roads in Memphis, Tennessee, include Interstate 40 (I-40), I-55, I-69, and I-240 with interchanges near the city center, and I-269 with interchanges serving the eastern outskirts. There are eight U.S. Highways serving the city. One beltway surrounds Memphis within the city, plus an additional semi-beltway surrounds the outer reaches of the ...
Live camera feeds from around the city are seen on a wall of screens in front of desks at the Memphis Police Department’s real time crime center on Wednesday, February 14, 2024.
In February 1970, the highway from US 75 westward to I-35E northwest of Dallas opened to traffic. The I-635 designation was truncated on December 2, 1971, when I-20 was rerouted south of Dallas, taking over 13 miles (21 km) of I-635's former route. [1] The connecting section of I-20 from the west was not completed until 1978.
1955 Interstate Highway plan for Memphis. I-240 was first planned in 1955 as a 30.8-mile (49.6 km) beltway that would completely encircle midtown Memphis, with the exception of the segment between I-40 and I-55, which was initially designated as I-255. In 1973, that number was decommissioned in favor of I-240 running in a full loop.
Josh Adams, a member of Decarcerate Memphis' steering committee, discusses the increase in traffic stops over the last year outside Memphis City Hall Monday, Feb. 19, 2024.
The body parts, which appeared to be from chickens and alligators, shut down three lanes of southbound traffic on the busy freeway. Animal body parts strewn across I-635 in Balch Springs after ...
Beltway around Washington, DC: 1961: current Capital Beltway; runs through Virginia, Maryland and a small sliver of Washington, DC, over the Wilson Bridge I-695: 2.00: 3.22 I-395 in Washington, DC: I-295 in Washington, DC [22] 1958: current Unsigned until 2011; future plans call for the route number to be replaced by an extension of I-395
The High Five Interchange is one of the first five-level stack interchanges built in Dallas, Texas.Located at the junction of the Lyndon B. Johnson Freeway (Interstate 635, or I-635) and the Central Expressway (U.S. Highway 75, or US 75), it replaces an antiquated combination interchange constructed in the 1960s.