Interstate 70 in Indiana

(Redirected from I-70 (IN))

Interstate 70 (I-70) in the US state of Indiana travels east–west across the central portion of the state, passing through the capital of Indianapolis. I-70 crosses from Illinois into Indiana near Terre Haute and departs into Ohio at Richmond. It covers 156.6 miles (252.0 km) in Indiana, paralleling U.S. Highway 40 (US 40), the old National Road (except for the first approximately 11 miles (18 km) in which the two routes overlap).

Interstate 70 marker
Interstate 70
Map
I-70 highlighted in red
Route information
Maintained by INDOT
Length156.60 mi[1] (252.02 km)
Existed1956 (completed in 1992)–present
NHSEntire route
Major junctions
West end I-70 / US 40 at Illinois state line
Major intersections US 41 / US 150 in Terre Haute
I-74 / I-465 in Indianapolis
I-65 in Indianapolis
I-69 / I-465 in Indianapolis
East end I-70 / US 35 at Ohio state line
Location
CountryUnited States
StateIndiana
CountiesVigo, Clay, Putnam, Morgan, Hendricks, Marion, Hancock, Henry, Wayne
Highway system
  • Indiana State Highway System
SR 69 SR 70

Route description

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The Indiana portion of I-70 begins at the Illinois state line west of Terre Haute. Heading east, I-70 crosses the Wabash River soon after entering the state. The Interstate crosses through the south side of Terre Haute, where it has an interchange with US 41/US 150. Just outside the city to the east, I-70 passes near Terre Haute Regional Airport, where US 40 leaves the Interstate before continuing onward to the east-northeast through rural lands toward Indianapolis. This stretch of I-70 does not have any interchanges with any significant cities until it reaches the Indianapolis metropolitan area, but it does pass within proximity of Greencastle.

 
I-70 sign outside of Indianapolis International Airport

Entering the Indianapolis area, I-70 passes through the southern reaches of Plainfield in Hendricks County, home to many logistics and warehousing companies. Shortly thereafter, it enters Marion County and the city of Indianapolis, passing just to the south of the Indianapolis International Airport, where the freeway now serves as the passenger terminal's main vehicular access point. At the far southeast corner of the airport, I-70 has an interchange with the I-465 circumferential for the first of two times at exit 73; however, motorists heading to the west or south legs of I-465 (or to the concurrent I-74) from eastbound I-70 must exit onto a parallel collector–distributor roadway nearly four miles (6.4 km) prior (at exit 69) to reaching the actual crossing of the beltway. Once beyond the airport, I-70 curves first to the northeast, then to the east, before eventually crossing the White River and passing just to the south of Lucas Oil Stadium, Downtown Indianapolis, and the corporate headquarters campus of pharmaceutical giant Eli Lilly and Company before reaching I-65.

 
Westbound sign for the north split between I-65 and I-70

Turning north, the next section of I-70 along the east side of Downtown Indianapolis travels concurrent with I-65. The two major interchanges at either end of this concurrency are often referred to as the "North Split" and the "South Split", forming the eastern leg of a section of freeways and surface streets locally known as the "Inner Loop" (around the Indianapolis central business district as opposed to the "Outer Loop" of the I-465 beltway). The north split is also called the "Spaghetti Bowl" due to the visual complexity of the overlapping freeways, ghost ramps, and overpasses that were originally intended as a connection to a never-built portion of I-69. Access to I-69 requires continuing on I-70 east to Exit 89 (Exit 90 westbound). The "North Split" was closed for reconstruction in early 2021 and reopened to traffic in late 2022.[2] As part of that reconstruction, the old ramps were replaced with ones that eliminated the lane switching that drivers originally had to perform to stay on I-70 eastbound and I-65 northbound.[3]

Upon leaving I-65 at the north split, I-70 reaches a maximum width of 10 lanes (five in each direction) as it departs Downtown Indianapolis toward the east-northeast. On the east side of the city, I-70 again intersects with the I-465 beltway (also concurrent here with Interstate 69) at another complex interchange before departing the city, county, and metro area in a nearly due-east direction toward Ohio.

 
I-70 shield near Richmond

The portion of I-70 east of Indianapolis has been designated as the "Anton Tony Hulman, Jr. Memorial Way". Tony Hulman is most known for rescuing the Indianapolis Motor Speedway in 1945 and making the Indianapolis 500 popular. This stretch of I-70 does not have any interchanges with any significant cities until it reaches Richmond, but it does pass within proximity of both Greenfield and New Castle. On the northwest side of Richmond, US 35 joins I-70 and remains on the freeway as both routes jointly cross into Ohio. It also has a single-point urban interchange with US 27 providing access to Richmond south of the Interstate. On the east side of Richmond, US 40 intersects with I-70 immediately to the west of the Ohio state line.

The bridge carrying US 27 over I-70 immediately north of Richmond is named the "Officer Seara Burton Memorial Bridge", in honor of a Richmond police officer and K-9 handler who was shot by the subject of a traffic stop on August 10, 2022, and died on September 18.[4][5][6]

History

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Initial construction

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Like all Interstate Highways in Indiana, I-70 was constructed in segments which, when all were complete, make up the route as it is today. There were three large segments in the western portion of the route between the Illinois border and I-465 in Indianapolis, and five more in the eastern portion connecting the east side of Indianapolis to Ohio. The urban portions through the capital city itself within I-465 were mostly deferred until the end of the Interstate construction process in the early to mid-1970s.[7]

The first section of I-70 to be built in Indiana was the portion around Richmond east of the Centerville exit, which opened to traffic on September 17, 1961. The final portion outside of I-465 to be completed was the middle of the three western segments, located between State Road 46 (SR 46) near Terre Haute and SR 59, which opened on October 20, 1969. Within I-465, the short section between Shadeland Avenue (then SR 100) and the I-465 interchange had opened along with the rest of I-70 from that point east to SR 9 near Greenfield on December 2, 1968. Another section of I-70 on the southwest side of Indianapolis between the I-465 beltway and Holt Road had been completed and opened by December 10, 1969.[7] But the remainder of the I-70 mileage through the heart of the city was not finished and open to traffic until October 1976.[8]

Subsequent improvements

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Between 2003 and 2005, I-70 was rebuilt about 1,000 feet (300 m) south of its original alignment on the western edge of Indianapolis. This reconstruction was done to allow expansion of runways at Indianapolis International Airport and to facilitate development of access roads from I-70 to the site of the new midfield Col. H. Weir Cook Passenger Terminal Building (which opened in 2008) at the airport.[9]

Exit list

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CountyLocationmi[10]kmExitDestinationsNotes
VigoSugar Creek Township0.000.00 
 
 
 
I-70 west / US 40 west – Effingham, St. Louis
Illinois state line
1.071.721National RoadWest Terre Haute, Terre HauteEastbound exit and westbound entrance
3.405.473Darwin Road – West Terre Haute
Terre Haute6.8411.017   US 41 / US 150 – Terre Haute, Evansville
11.1817.9911 
 
 
 
 
 
US 40 east / SR 46 east / SR 641 south – Terre Haute International Airport, Rose Hulman Institute of Technology
Eastern end of US 40 concurrency; western terminus of SR 46
ClayPoseyJackson
township line
22.5736.3223  SR 59 – Brazil, Linton
PutnamCloverdale Township37.0959.6937  SR 243 – Putnamville
Cloverdale41.1166.1641  US 231 – Cloverdale, Greencastle
MorganAdams Township50.6581.5151County Road 1100 West
HendricksLiberty Township59.2195.2959  SR 39 – Belleville, Monrovia
Morgan
No major junctions
HendricksPlainfield66.22106.5766Quaker Boulevard - Plainfield, MooresvilleFormer SR 267
68.32109.9568  Ameriplex Parkway / Ronald Reagan Parkway – Indianapolis International AirportSigned as exits 68A (south) and 68B (north) eastbound; airport access via Col. H. Weir Cook Memorial Drive (unsigned)
MarionIndianapolis72.75117.0869
73
   I-465 / I-74 / US 36 / US 40 – Peoria, CincinnatiSigned as exit 69 eastbound and exits 73A (east/south) and 73B (west/north) westbound; exits 68 and 69 are connected to each other via collector/distributor lanes; I-465 exit 9
74.53119.9475Sam Jones Expressway to Raymond StreetDirectional access (eastbound to eastbound and westbound to westbound) only; Raymond Street signed eastbound only
76.38122.9277Holt Road
78.42126.2078Harding Street
79.47127.8979AWest StreetSplit diamond interchange for West Street (one way south) and Missouri Street (one way north)
80.01128.7679BIllinois Street, McCarty StreetEastbound exit and westbound entrance only to Illinois Street; complete access to McCarty Street
80.72129.9180 
 
I-65 south – Louisville
Western end of I-65 concurrency; I-65 exit 110B
80.77129.99110AEast StreetExit number follows I-65; westbound exit only
81.51131.18111Washington StreetExit number follows I-65; eastbound exit and westbound entrance (to collector/distributor)
 
 
I-65 north – Chicago
Eastern end of I-65 concurrency; eastbound exit and westbound left entrance; I-65 exit 112
81.01–
81.78
130.37–
131.61
83AMichigan Street / Ohio Street / Fletcher AvenueWestbound exit and eastbound entrance (via collector/distributor lanes)
82.20132.2983B 
 
I-65 north – Chicago
Westbound exit and eastbound left entrance; I-65 exit 112
84.33135.7285Rural Street south / Keystone Avenue northSigned as exits 85A (south) and 85B (north)
86.20138.7387Emerson Avenue
88.47142.3889Shadeland AvenueConnected to I-465 exit eastbound via collector-distributor lanes
89.04143.3090   I-69 / I-465 (US 31 / US 36 / US 52 / US 421 / SR 67) – Evansville, Fort WayneSigned as exit 89 eastbound due to shared collector-distributor lanes
90.38145.4591Post Road
HancockMount Comfort95.61153.8796Mount Comfort Road
Greenfield103.31166.26104  SR 9 – Maxwell, Greenfield
HenryWayne Township114.93184.96115  SR 109 – Wilkinson, Knightstown
SpicelandFranklin
township line
122.68197.43123  SR 3 – New Castle, Spiceland
Dudley Township130.62210.21131Wilbur Wright Road
WayneJacksonHarrison
township line
136.92220.35137  SR 1 – Hagerstown, Connersville, Cambridge City
Center Township144.88233.16145Centerville Road
Richmond148.64–
148.74
239.21–
239.37
149 
 
 
 
US 35 north to SR 38 – Muncie
Signed as exits 149A (east/south) and 149B (west/north); western end of US 35 concurrency; hybrid cloverleaf interchange, northbound Williamsburg Pike to I-70 west is a left-exit flyover
150.67242.48151  US 27 (Chester Boulevard) – WinchesterSingle-point urban interchange
152.24245.01153  
 
SR 227 to SR 121 – Union City
155.56250.35156A 
 
US 40 west (National Road)
156B 
 
US 40 east – Lewisburg
Westbound exit leads to, and eastbound entrance comes from, Ohio
156.60252.02 
 
 
 
I-70 east / US 35 south – Dayton, Columbus
Ohio state line
1.000 mi = 1.609 km; 1.000 km = 0.621 mi

References

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  1. ^ Federal Highway Administration (October 31, 2002). "FHWA Route Log and Finder List: Table 1". Retrieved February 24, 2009.
  2. ^ "Schedule". North Split Upgrade. Indiana Department of Transportation. Retrieved October 5, 2021.
  3. ^ "Project Overview". North Split Upgrade. Indiana Department of Transportation. Retrieved October 5, 2021.
  4. ^ Longnecker, Emily (September 19, 2022). "Richmond PD chief: Ofc. Seara Burton dies 5 weeks after being shot during traffic stop". WTHR NBC 13. Archived from the original on September 26, 2022. Retrieved August 24, 2024.
  5. ^ Longnecker, Emily (August 15, 2024). "Bridge renamed in honor of fallen Richmond Officer Seara Burton". WTHR. Archived from the original on August 24, 2024. Retrieved August 24, 2024.
  6. ^ Weaver, Evan (August 16, 2024). "300 attend bridge renaming in honor of fallen Richmond officer Seara Burton". Palladium-Item. Archived from the original on August 24, 2024. Retrieved August 24, 2024.
  7. ^ a b Ripple, David Alan. "History of the Interstate System in Indiana", Purdue University, 1975.
  8. ^ "'Under the Highway': How interstates divided Indianapolis neighborhoods and displaced 17,000 people". October 19, 2020.
  9. ^ "Interstate Alignment Shifted To Allow Runway Expansion". Engineering News-Record. January 3, 2005. Retrieved January 10, 2015.
  10. ^ Staff. "INDOT Roadway Referencing System" (PDF). Indiana Department of Transportation. Archived from the original (PDF) on June 15, 2011. Retrieved June 15, 2012.
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  Interstate 70
Previous state:
Illinois
Indiana Next state:
Ohio