The Interstate Highways in Michigan are the segments of the national
that are owned and maintained by the U.S. state of
Michigan, totaling about .
[ The longest of these, Interstate 75 (I-75), is also the longest highway of any kind in the state.][ On a national level, the standards and numbering for the system are handled by the Federal Highway Administration (FHWA) and the American Association of State Highway and Transportation Officials (AASHTO), while the highways in Michigan are maintained by the Michigan Department of Transportation (MDOT) and the ]Mackinac Bridge Authority
The Mackinac Bridge Authority is an independent state agency of the U.S. state of Michigan that operates the Mackinac Bridge across the Straits of Mackinac. The Mackinac Bridge Authority has been directed by the state of Michigan to maintain the ...
(MBA). The Interstates in Michigan have their origins in World War II-era expressways
Expressway may refer to:
*Controlled-access highway, the highest-grade type of highway with access ramps, lane markings, etc., for high-speed traffic.
*Limited-access road, a lower grade of highway or arterial road.
*Expressway, the fictional slide ...
built in the Detroit area. After the system was created in 1956, the state highway department completed its first border-to-border Interstate in 1960. The last highway was completed in 1992, giving Michigan a total of 13 Interstate freeways. The original allotment of mileage to Michigan which would receive federal funding was expanded in 1968, and the United States Congress designated an additional highway in the 1990s that has not yet been built.
There are also 26 current business routes that connect cities bypassed by the Interstates; 23 are business loops
A business route (or business loop, business spur, or city route) in the United States is a short special route connected to a ''parent'' numbered highway at its beginning, then routed through the central business district of a nearby city o ...
that connect on both ends to their parent highway, and three are business spur
A business route (or business loop, business spur, or city route) in the United States is a short special route connected to a ''parent'' numbered highway at its beginning, then routed through the central business district of a nearby city or ...
s that connect on only one end. I-496 has the Capitol Loop
The Capitol Loop is a state trunkline highway running through Lansing, Michigan, in the United States that was commissioned on October 13, 1989. It forms a loop route off Interstate 496 (I-496) through downtown near the Michigan State Capitol ...
as its connection to the Michigan State Capitol
The Michigan State Capitol is the building that houses the legislative branch of the government of the U.S. state of Michigan. It is in the portion of the state capital of Lansing which lies in Ingham County. The present structure, at the interse ...
in downtown Lansing. Another six business routes have been designated but are either no longer signed or maintained as state highways.
Description
MDOT is the agency responsible for the day-to-day maintenance and operations of the State Trunkline Highway System, which includes the Interstate Highways in Michigan. These highways are built to Interstate Highway standards
Standards for Interstate Highways in the United States are defined by the American Association of State Highway and Transportation Officials (AASHTO) in the publication ''A Policy on Design Standards: Interstate System''. For a certain highway to ...
, meaning they are all freeways with minimum requirements for full control of access, design speeds of depending on type of terrain, a minimum of two travel lanes in each direction, and specific widths of lanes or shoulders; exceptions from these standards have to be approved by the FHWA. The numbering scheme
There are many different numbering schemes for assigning nominal numbers to entities. These generally require an agreed set of rules, or a central coordinator. The schemes can be considered to be examples of a primary key of a database management ...
used to designate the Interstates was developed by AASHTO, an organization composed of the various state departments of transportation in the United States.
The Interstate Highway System covers about in the state and consists of four primary highways and nine auxiliary highways. There are additional 29 business routes associated with the system in Michigan. The longest segment of Interstate Highway in the state is Interstate 75 (I-75) at just under ; the shortest is I-375 at . The length of I-75, the longest highway of any kind in the state, includes the Mackinac Bridge, which is maintained by the MBA, the only section of state highway not under MDOT jurisdiction. The Mackinac Bridge is one of three monumental bridges in the state used by I-75; the others are the Zilwaukee
Zilwaukee is a city in Saginaw County in the U.S. state of Michigan. The 2020 census places the population at 1,534. The city is adjacent to and was created from Zilwaukee Township. It is the home of the Zilwaukee Bridge.
History
Zilwaukee was ...
and International bridges. A fourth, the privately owned Ambassador Bridge connects I-75 and I-96 in Detroit to Canada.
History
Construction of the first expressways
Expressway may refer to:
*Controlled-access highway, the highest-grade type of highway with access ramps, lane markings, etc., for high-speed traffic.
*Limited-access road, a lower grade of highway or arterial road.
*Expressway, the fictional slide ...
in Michigan predates the Interstate Highway System. During World War II, the Michigan State Highway Department (MSHD) built the Willow Run and Detroit Industrial expressways (now part of I-94) to carry workers from Detroit to the defense plants at Willow Run Airport.[.] The state created the Michigan Turnpike Authority (MTA) in 1951,[.] which proposed the construction of a toll freeway to run north–south in the state. The original termini for the Michigan Turnpike were Bridgeport and Rockwood. Interagency politics stalled progress on any proposed turnpikes while MSHD had three freeways under planning or construction.[.]
The Interstate Highway System was authorized by the Federal Aid Highway Act of 1956,[ and the state had already designed several freeways for its portion of that system. Seizing the opportunity brought by a 1957 state law, the department sold $700 million in bonds (equivalent to $ in 2011) in the late 1950s and early 1960s to finance land purchases and construction of the new freeways. The goal was to connect every city with a population over 50,000 with four-lane freeways that could accommodate rural traffic traveling at .] The MSHD delayed numbering these freeways as part of the Interstate Highway System until the federal government had finalized the designations to be assigned to Michigan's freeways.[ The first highway to be signed as an Interstate in Michigan was I-75, which received signage in late 1959, along a section near the Ohio state line that opened to traffic in October 1957.][ I-94 was the first of the Interstates to be completed border to border in a US state.] In 1974, the state implemented mileage-based exit numbers along the Interstates in Michigan.
The MSHD asked for in additions to the state's Interstate mileage in 1968. Included in these requests were the extension of the Davison Freeway (now M-8), the extension of I-69 from Marshall to Port Huron, and the conversion of the northern sections of US Highway 23 (US 23) and US 131. Of these, the I-69 proposal was approved when the United States Congress extended it to terminate in at I-75 in Flint. The highway was lengthened twice more: to I-475 in 1973 and to Port Huron on February 10, 1987. These last two extensions were classified '' non-chargeable mileage'', or segments not financed through the Interstate Highway fund. The federal government paid 90 percent of the cost of the chargeable mileage originally approved.[
The last of Michigan's Interstates to be completed was I-69, the last segment of which opened in 1992.] Since then, the United States Congress has designated an additional primary Interstate, I-73 in the state. All studies by MDOT on that highway were cancelled in 2001 over funding concerns.[ Press reports state there is a "lack of need" for the freeway in the state, and the department has no plans to revive I-73 as of 2011.]
If built as designated, I-73 would cross into Michigan near Toledo, Ohio, and connect Jackson, Lansing, and Clare Clare may refer to:
Places Antarctica
* Clare Range, a mountain range in Victoria Land
Australia
* Clare, South Australia, a town in the Clare Valley
* Clare Valley, South Australia
Canada
* Clare (electoral district), an electoral district
* Cl ...
to I-75 at Grayling
Grayling or Greyling may refer to:
Animals Fish
* Grayling, generically, any fish of the genus ''Thymallus'' in the family Salmonidae
** European grayling (''Thymallus thymallus''), the European species of the genus ''Thymallus''
** Arctic grayli ...
.[
]
Primary Interstates
File:I-69 exit 70 MI.jpg, alt=Photograph, I-69 approaching exit 70
File:I-75 Chrysler Freeway looking south.jpg, alt=Photograph, Looking south along I-75 (Chrysler Freeway) at the Detroit skyline
File:Mackinac Bridge from the air4.jpg, alt=Aerial photograph, Mackinac Bridge and I-75 over the Straits of Mackinac
File:Non Interchange Signage with Mileage Signage.jpg, alt=Photograph, I-94 at Park Road near Coloma
File:Interstate 96 and Sternberg Road.jpg, alt=Photograph, I-96 near its western terminus
File:Interstate 96 E-L at M-39.jpg, alt=Photograph, Local-express lanes along I-96 (Jeffries Freeway)
File:Blue Water Bridge.jpg, alt=Aerial photograph, Twin-span Blue Water Bridge carrying I-69 and I-94
Auxiliary Interstates
was completed in 1974 as a connector from Grand Rapids to I-94 in the Benton Harbor
Benton Harbor is a city in Berrien County in the U.S. state of Michigan. It is 46 miles southwest of Kalamazoo and 71 miles southwest of Grand Rapids. According to the 2020 census, its population was 9,103. It is the smaller, by population, of ...
–St. Joseph
Joseph (; el, Ἰωσήφ, translit=Ioséph) was a 1st-century Jewish man of Nazareth who, according to the canonical Gospels, was married to Mary, the mother of Jesus, and was the legal father of Jesus. The Gospels also name some brothers ...
area.
File:Interstate 194 Michigan.jpg, alt=Photograph, I-194/M-66, the Sojourner Truth Downtown Parkway
File:I-196 entering Grand Rapids, MI.jpg, alt=Photograph, I-196 entering downtown Grand Rapids
File:I-275S at M14 1 Northville.jpg, alt=Photograph, Looking south at the I-96/I-275 split
File:Interstate 296 & Grand River cropped.jpg, alt=Panoramic photograph, Unsigned I-296 from across the Grand River
File:Northern end of I-375 Detroit.jpg, alt=Photograph, Northern end of I-375 where it merges into I-75 near Gratiot Avenue in Detroit
File:I-496 at MLK Boulevard.jpg, alt=Photograph, I-496 in Lansing
File:Interstate 675 at Schaefer Street Saginaw Michigan.jpg, alt=Photograph, I-675 crossing Schaefer Street in Saginaw
File:Interstate 696 pedestrian plazas Oak Park.jpg, alt=Aerial photograph, Pedestrian plazas along I-696 in Oak Park
File:Spaghetti Bowl Interchange (Novi, Michigan).png, alt=Satellite photo, Satellite image of the junction of I-96, I-275 and I-696
Proposed Interstates
Business routes
See also
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Notes
References
Footnotes
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External links
Michigan Highways
Michigan Highway Ends
->
Interstate Guide
{{DEFAULTSORT:List Of Interstate Highways In Michigan
Interstate Highways
The Dwight D. Eisenhower National System of Interstate and Defense Highways, commonly known as the Interstate Highway System, is a network of controlled-access highways that forms part of the National Highway System in the United States. Th ...