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There was significant local opposition in the 1960s and 1970s to expansion of the freeway system. [4] Because of this, by the time public opinion began to favor freeway expansion in the 1980s and 1990s, Phoenix freeways had to be funded primarily by local sales tax dollars rather than diminishing sources of federal money; newer freeways were, and continue to be, given state route designations ...
Map of w:Metropolitan Phoenix Freeways. Source: self-made, updated map made by Algorerhythms using data from the U.S. Federal Highway Administration. Map of Phoenix Freeways as of 2022: Author: Algorerhythms
Description: This is a map showing existing, planned and conceptual freeways in the Phoenix Metropolitan area. It is based on planning documents for the cities of Phoenix, Mesa, Peoria, Buckeye, Surprise, Goodyear, Coolidge, Florence and Apache Junction, MAG studies and ADOT information.
Freeway map of the Phoenix Area. The Phoenix Metropolitan Area is served by several controlled-access freeways, including: I-10 (Papago Freeway, Maricopa Freeway) I-17 (Black Canyon Freeway, Maricopa Freeway) US 60 (Maricopa Freeway, Superstition Freeway) SR 51 (Piestewa Freeway) SR 143 (Hohokam Expressway) Loop 101 (Agua Fria, Pima, Price Freeway)
State Route 30 (SR 30), also known as the Tres Rios Freeway, is a planned freeway in the southwest part of the Phoenix metropolitan area. It is planned as a reliever for Interstate 10 five miles to the south and will run through the communities of Buckeye , Goodyear , Avondale , and Phoenix .
The SanTan Freeway runs from there to an interchange with Interstate 10 (I-10) in Chandler. The Congressman Ed Pastor Freeway runs from there to I-10 in western Phoenix. Loop 202 was created after different sections of freeway within the Phoenix metro were given the designation, with the first section designated in 1990.
Arizona State Route 303 (SR 303) or Loop 303, also known as the Bob Stump Memorial Parkway (formerly the Estrella Freeway), is a freeway that serves the west part of the Phoenix metropolitan area. The freeway, originally a two-lane rural highway, was maintained by Maricopa County until 2004 after approved sales tax when the Arizona Department ...
As of 2005, the metropolitan area of Phoenix contains one of the nation's largest and fastest growing freeway systems, consisting of over 1,405 lane miles (2,261 lane km). [5] The freeway system is a mix of Interstate, U.S., and state highways which include Interstate 10, Interstate 17, US 60, Loop 101, Loop 202, SR 51, SR 143, and Loop 303.