Interstate 27

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Interstate 27

Marshall Formby Memorial Highway
Map
I-27 highlighted in red
Route information
Maintained by TxDOT
Length124.132 mi[1] (199.771 km)
Existed1969[1]–present
NHSEntire route
Major junctions
South end US 87 / Loop 289 in Lubbock
Major intersections
North end I-40 / US 60 / US 87 / US 287 in Amarillo
Location
CountryUnited States
StateTexas
CountiesLubbock, Hale, Swisher, Randall, Potter
Highway system
SH 26 SH 27

Interstate 27 (I-27[a]) is an Interstate Highway, entirely in the US state of Texas, running north from Lubbock to I-40 in Amarillo. These two cities are the only control cities on I-27;[3] other cities and towns served by I-27 include (from south to north) New Deal, Abernathy, Hale Center, Plainview, Kress, Tulia, Happy, and Canyon. In Amarillo, I-27 is commonly known as the Canyon Expressway (or Canyon E-Way), although it is also called Canyon Drive on its access roads. I-27 was officially designated the Marshall Formby Memorial Highway after former attorney and State Senator Marshall Formby in 2005.[1] The entire length of I-27 replaced US Highway 87 (US 87) for through traffic. An extension of I-27 north to Raton, New Mexico, and south to Laredo, Texas was approved in 2022.

Route description

Southern terminus in Lubbock

I-27 parallels the BNSF Railway's Plainview Subdivision, which splits from its ChicagoSouthern California Transcon line at Canyon and runs south to Lubbock. A large amount of the alignment is on former US 87, but several portions through built-up areas have been bypassed, as well as two longer areas where US 87 still follows the old road.[4]

The Interstate begins at a point along the four-lane US 87 freeway south of downtown Lubbock. Mile 0 is posted near 77th Street,[5] about five blocks south of Loop 289. Exit numbering begins just to the south, with exit 1 at the 82nd Street interchange; the freeway becomes six lanes at its north end. The Loop 289 interchange is a cloverleaf between the oneway frontage roads of each highway, and with direct ramps from I-27 south to Loop 289 west (exit 1A) and Loop 289 east to I-27 north. US 84 (Avenue Q and Slaton Highway) crosses I-27 at a three-level diamond interchange, with an extra approach from the northeast carrying Avenue A into the junction. Exit 1B connects I-27 south to US 84 and the Loop 289 frontage roads, while all traffic from US 87 north to US 84, Avenue A, or Loop 289 must use exit 1 for 82nd Street.[4]

The six-lane cross section that began at exit 1 remains through Lubbock. Major junctions in that city include US 62/State Highway 114 (SH 11, 19th Street; exit 3) and US 82 (Marsha Sharp Freeway; exit 4). Between these two interchanges, the frontage roads temporarily end as I-27 crosses over a rail line. Spur 326 (Avenue Q) merges with I-27 at exit 6A, and exit 6B is a split diamond interchange with Loop 289. The outer lanes leave at Farm to Market Road 2641 (FM 2641, Regis Street; exit 8), reducing I-27 to two lanes in each direction as it passes Lubbock Preston Smith International Airport and leaves the city.[4]

Downtown Lubbock, as seen from I-27

I-27 crosses over the Plainview Sub for the first time north of FM 1294 (Drew Street, exit 11), and another short gap exists in the frontage roads there. North of the overpass, the frontage roads are two-way; I-27 then passes through New Deal, bypassing the central part of the town to the west. Old US 87 between exits 13 and 15 is now Loop 461; at exit 15, I-27 begins to parallel the rail line, just to its west. Along this part of the highway, and other similar portions, slip ramps still connect the mainlanes with the frontage roads, but intersecting roads pass over all four roadways and the railroad on a long bridge; a pair of two-way roadways connects the frontage roads to the crossroad, with the one on the east crossing the railroad at-grade.[4]

As it approaches Abernathy, I-27 curves west away from the Plainview Sub. The old main road through the city, between exits 20 and 22, is now Loop 369; I-27 passes through 1.5 blocks to the east. Despite I-27's location north of Abernathy, 0.5 miles (0.80 km) west of the rail line, all interchanges between Abernathy and Hale Center, except the one at FM 54 (exit 24), use the same configuration where the intersecting road crosses over all roadways. Approaching Hale Center, I-27 curves northeast as it splits from FM 1424 (exit 36) at a simple diamond interchange. The freeway passes through the city one block east of the old road, now Business I-27-T (Bus. I-27-T), which is accessed at exits 36 and 38. As it leaves Hale Center, I-27 turns to the northeast, following the northwest side of the rail line.[4]

The next two interchanges along the railroad between Hale Center and Plainview use the same style, in which the crossroad goes over everything. Bus. I-27-U splits at exit 45, a modified Y interchange, to pass through Plainview, and I-27 travels west of that city on a bypass. The two outer interchanges on this bypass, FM 3466 (exit 48) and Quincy Street (exit 51), are handled in the same way as the interchanges along the railroad, but the other two, US 70 (exit 49) and SH 194 (exit 50), are standard diamonds. Between exits 49 and 50 is another overpass over the frontage roads—24th Street—with no separate slip ramps. Bus. I-27-U ends at a trumpet interchange (exit 53) north of Plainview, where I-27 again begins to parallel the Plainview Sub to the west. Both interchanges between this one and the first split with US 87 (exit 61), a modified Y interchange south of Kress, continue the pattern with the crossroad bridging over everything.[4]

After it leaves US 87, I-27 is no longer next to the rail line, but it continues to handle interchanges as it does alongside the line, except at SH 86 (exit 74), a standard diamond interchange that serves Tulia. US 87 rejoins the freeway at a modified diamond interchange (exit 77) north of Tulia, at which I-27 crosses to the east side of the Plainview Sub before paralleling it to that side. After several of the typical interchanges adjacent to the railroad, US 87 splits again at a modified Y interchange (exit 88) south of Happy. Except for the northernmost one, all the interchanges on the bypass of Happy and Canyon are diamond interchanges; there is a break in the frontage road north of FM 3331 (exit 108), where I-27 crosses the Prairie Dog Town Fork Red River. Exits 109 (Country Club Road) and 110 (US 87 south, US 60 west) are integrated, with some access to one road provided via the other.[4]

Northern terminus at I-40 south of downtown Amarillo

I-27 is overlapped by US 60 and US 87 from exit 110 north of Canyon to the end of the Interstate in Amarillo; here, the frontage roads are one-way. Several near the south end are handled by bridging the intersecting road over all roadways, but, once I-27 crosses Loop 335 (exit 116), almost all interchanges are diamond interchanges. At exit 119A, which marks the south end of the six-lane cross section in Amarillo, Hillside Road passes under both the mainlanes and the frontage roads, with two ramps providing partial access. Other connections with Hillside Road are made via Western Street (exit 119B), which crosses the frontage roads at grade. The end of I-27 at I-40 (exit 123B) is a fully directional turbine interchange; US 287 also passes through, using I-40 to the east and US 60/US 87 to the north. Four lanes continue beyond I-40 and are joined by several from the I-40 ramps, making the northernmost portion of the Canyon Expressway five lanes in each direction. Several blocks beyond I-40, the highway ends at a split into two one-way pairs. Northbound traffic feeds onto Fillmore Street (US 87 north) and Buchanan Street (US 60 east and US 287 north), while southbound traffic approaches on Taylor Street (US 287 south) and Pierce Street (US 60 west and US 87 south). The rightmost of the five northbound lanes is barrier-separated from the rest, forcing traffic exiting I-40 west onto Buchanan Street. Through the I-40 interchange and the split, the frontage roads are discontinuous.[4]

History

I-27 in Tulia

The roadway between Lubbock and Amarillo was part of the Puget Sound to Gulf Highway (SH 9), one of the original state highways defined in 1917.[6] In 1926, it became part of US 385,[7] which was absorbed into US 87 in 1935.[8] The SH 9 overlap was dropped in the 1939 renumbering.[9][10] Paving began in 1929 near Plainview and was almost complete by 1940,[11] with only about eight miles (13 km) south of Canyon still bituminous surfaced until later that decade.[12][13] The Canyon Expressway, a freeway upgrade of US 87 (also US 60 there) between Canyon and Amarillo, was built in the late 1950s and early 1960s.[11] This highway, with a design speed of 45 mph (72 km/h), included frontage roads along its entire length and ended in each city with a Y interchange:[14] the split of US 60 and US 87 in Canyon, and a split between the two oneway pairs of Taylor and Fillmore streets and Pierce and Buchanan streets in Amarillo. The Dumas Expressway, a freeway upgrade of US 87 north from Amarillo, opened several years later, feeding into the same one-way pairs.[15]

Four-laning of US 87 from Canyon to Lubbock was completed in the late 1960s, with the last section to be widened lying between Abernathy and Lubbock. While this was built as a surface divided highway south of Canyon,[16][17][18] short sections of freeway were built through New Deal, Abernathy, and Hale Center, and interchanges were built at US 70 and SH 194 on the new bypass of Plainview and at SH 86 (toward the west) south of Tulia.[19][14][15] The original two-lane road, where bypassed, became Loop 461 (in New Deal in 1968; marked as Bus. US 87-G),[20] Loop 369 (in Abernathy in 1962),[21] a local street (in Hale Center), and Loop 445 (in Plainview in 1967; marked as Bus. US 87-G).[22]

I-27 was not part of the original Interstate Highway System chosen in the 1950s; the spur from I-40 to Lubbock was authorized with the Federal-Aid Highway Act of 1968, which added 1,500 miles (2,400 km) to the system.[23] George H. Mahon, member of the US House of Representatives from 1935 to 1979 and chair of the House Committee on Appropriations after 1964, helped secure funding for the road. Texas officially designated the highway in early 1969, originally running from US 62 near downtown Lubbock to I-40 in Amarillo; the definition was extended south through Lubbock to the south side of the loop in early 1976.[1] The existing freeway sections, including the Canyon Expressway, were absorbed into I-27 despite not being built to Interstate standards. New construction began in 1975, from Lubbock north to New Deal, and most of the freeway was completed in the 1980s.[15] Two long sections of US 87 were bypassed: Happy to Canyon on December 5, 1986,[11] and Kress to Tulia soon after;[15] I-27 was complete north of Lubbock by 1988.[24] Most of the Happy–Canyon bypass was built along the two-lane FM 1541, which now ends at exit 103 southeast of Canyon.[25]

The final section of I-27 to be built was through Lubbock, inside Loop 289; this was built in the early 1990s and completed on September 3, 1992. On that day, a ceremony at the 34th Street overpass opened the road from 19th Street (US 62) to 54th Street,[26] completing Texas's 3,200-mile (5,100 km) portion of the Interstate Highway System.[27] At its south end, the new I-27 connected to an existing freeway upgrade of US 87, built about 1970,[15] to a traffic circle at US 84 (just north of Loop 289).[28] The old route of US 87 through Lubbock became Bus. US 87-G upon completion of I-27.[29] Two business loops of I-27 have been designated: through Plainview (former Loop 445) in early 1991 and through Hale Center (formerly a local street) in 2002.[30][31]

The completion of I-27, costing a total of $453.4 million (equivalent to $884 million in 2023[32]), encouraged growth along the highway: toward the northside of Lubbock and the southwest in Amarillo; Canyon has become a suburb of Amarillo. Plainview, the largest city between Lubbock and Amarillo, has the only significant retail cluster outside the two terminal cities and has attracted several industries. On the other hand, Tulia, once a self-contained community with local businesses, was bypassed by I-27, and residents must now drive elsewhere for most shopping needs.[11]

Future

In 1995, a study of a southern extension of I-27 to I-10 found that a full freeway extension would not be economically feasible,[33] instead recommending limited upgrades to the three corridors studied: SH 349 via Midland and Odessa to east of Fort Stockton, US 87 via Big Spring to Sonora or Junction, and US 84 via Sweetwater to Sonora or Junction. Of the three corridors, the Sweetwater route came the closest to warranting a freeway.[34] The Transportation Equity Act for the 21st Century, passed in 1998, designated I-27 as part of the Ports to Plains Corridor, a High Priority Corridor from Mexico at Laredo to Denver.[35] This corridor crosses I-20 at Big Spring and Midland (via a split) and I-10 at Sonora.[36] It also forms part of the Great Plains International Trade Corridor, continuing north to Saskatoon, Saskatchewan.[37] Currently, no interstates connect to Saskatchewan. The part of the Ports-to-Plains Corridor within Texas was a proposed Trans-Texas Corridor.[38] Some parts of this plan have I-14 possibly ending where I-27 will cross I-20. The Texas Department of Transportation (TxDOT) recommends studying I-27 extension again.[39]

On June 10, 2019, Governor Greg Abbott signed Texas House Bill 1079, which authorizes a comprehensive study to extend I-27 north of Amarillo and south of Lubbock to Laredo.[40] The proposed route south of Lubbock would have the Interstate go to Lamesa, then split with one route going toward Midland and the other traveling to Big Spring. The two routes would then merge near Sterling City, travel through San Angelo and Del Rio, travel near the border until Eagle Pass, turn east to Carrizo Springs, then travel south to Laredo.[41]

Numbering

On March 15, 2022, a bill was signed by President Joe Biden that added the extension of I-27 north to Raton, New Mexico, and south to Laredo to the Interstate Highway System.[42] A bill introduced in March 2023 would explicitly designate the extension as I-27 with two auxiliary routes numbered I-227 and I-327.[43] I-227 is proposed to be routed via SH 158 from Sterling City to Midland and SH 349 from Midland to Lamesa; I-327 would utilize US 287 from Dumas to the Oklahoma border.[44][45] It would also formally name the Interstate the Ports-to-Plains Corridor.[46][47] The bill was introduced by legislators from both Texas and New Mexico.[48]

Exit list

CountyLocationmikmExitDestinationsNotes
LubbockLubbock0.00.01
US 87 south – Tahoka
US 84 / Loop 289 / 82nd Street – Post
Southern terminus; signed as exits 1 (82nd Street), 1A (Loop 289 west) and 1B (US 84 / Loop 289 east) southbound; roadway continues as US 87 south
1.32.11A50th Street – Buffalo Springs Lake, Ransom CanyonSigned as exit 1C southbound
2.23.5234th Street (FM 835) / Buddy Holly Avenue
3.35.33 US 62 / SH 114 (19th Street) – Floydada, Levelland, Texas Tech University
3.76.03A13th Street, BroadwayNorthbound exit and southbound entrance
4.36.94 US 82 (Marsha Sharp Freeway) – Crosbyton, Brownfield, Texas Tech University
5.28.45Buddy Holly Avenue / Municipal DriveSouthbound exit and northbound entrance
6.210.06A Spur 326 (Avenue Q)Southbound exit and northbound entrance
5.89.36B Loop 289Signed as exit 6 northbound
6.810.97Yucca Lane
8.113.08 FM 2641 (Regis Street) – Lubbock Preston Smith International Airport
9.114.69 Lubbock Preston Smith International Airport, General Aviation, FAA
10.516.910Keuka Street
11.618.711 FM 1294 – Shallowater
12.520.112County Road 58Northbound exit and southbound entrance
New Deal13.521.713
Loop 461 north – New Deal
14.623.514 FM 1729
15.625.115
Loop 461 south – New Deal
Southbound exit and northbound entrance
17.728.517County Road 53
20.533.020 FM 597 (Loop 369 north) – Abernathy, AntonNorthbound exit and southbound entrance
HaleAbernathy21.334.321 FM 597 / FM 2060 / Main Street
22.335.922
Loop 369 south – Abernathy
Southbound exit and northbound entrance
24.339.124 FM 54 – Spade, Petersburg
27.644.427County Road
31.751.031
FM 37 east
South end of FM 37 overlap
32.652.532
FM 37 west – Cotton Center, Fieldton
North end of FM 37 overlap
36.358.436
FM 1424 north / Main Street (I-27 Bus. north)
Hale Center37.760.737 FM 1914 (Cleveland Street)
38.562.038Main Street (I-27 Bus. south)Southbound exit and northbound entrance
41.266.341County Road
43.670.243 FM 2337
45.372.945
I-27 BL north – Plainview
Plainview48.077.248 FM 3466 – Hale County AirportNorthbound exit and southbound entrance
48.978.749 US 70 – Plainview, Floydada, Muleshoe
50.881.850 SH 194 – Wayland Baptist University, Hart
51.883.451Quincy Street
52.985.153
I-27 BL south – Plainview
54.287.254 FM 3183
56.290.456 FM 788 – Edmonson
Swisher61.398.761
US 87 north / County Road – Kress
North end of US 87 overlap
63.2101.763 FM 145 – Kress
68.4110.168 FM 928
Tulia74.5119.974 SH 86 – Tulia
75.6121.775NW 6th Street
77.5124.777
US 87 south – Tulia
South end of US 87 overlap
82.0132.082 FM 214
83.1133.783 FM 2698
88.2–
88.6
141.9–
142.6
88
US 87 north / FM 1881 – Happy
North end of US 87 overlap; signed as exits 88A (FM 1881) and 88B (US 87 north) northbound
SwisherRandall
county line
Happy90.2145.290 FM 1075 – Happy
Randall92.2148.492Haley Road
94.1151.494 FM 285 – Wayside
96.3155.096Dowlen Road
99.4160.099Hungate Road
103.5166.6103
FM 1541 north / Cemetery Road
Canyon106.7171.7106 SH 217 – Canyon, Palo Duro Canyon State Park
108.2174.1108


To US 60 west (Hunsley Road) / FM 3331 – Hereford
110.4177.7109Country Club Road
110.8178.3110

US 60 west / US 87 south – Canyon, Hereford
South end of US 60/US 87 overlap; no northbound exit
112.0180.2111Rockwell Road
113.0181.9112 FM 2219
113.8183.1113McCormick Road
116.1186.8115Sundown Lane
Amarillo117.1188.5116 Loop 335 (Hollywood Road)
118.0189.9117Bell Street / Arden Road
119.6192.5119Hillside Road / Western Street / 58th AvenueSigned as exits 119A (Hillside Road west) and 119B (Western Street / 58th Avenue) southbound
120.7194.2120ARepublic AvenueSouthbound exit and northbound entrance
121.0194.7120B45th AvenueSigned as exit 120 northbound
121.6195.7121AGeorgia StreetSigned as exit 121 northbound
122.3196.8121BHawthorne Drive / Austin StreetSouthbound exit and northbound entrance
122.2196.7122AParker Street / Moss LaneNorthbound exit and southbound entrance
122.8197.6122B FM 1541 (Washington Street) / 34th Avenue
123.4198.6122C34th Street / Tyler StreetSouthbound exit and northbound entrance
Potter123.7199.1123A26th AvenueSigned as exit 123 southbound
124.1199.7123B
I-40 / US 287 south – Oklahoma City, Fort Worth, Albuquerque


US 60 east / US 87 / US 287 north – Dumas, Pampa, Downtown
Northern terminus; I-40 exit 70; freeway continues as US 60 east / US 87/US 287 north
1.000 mi = 1.609 km; 1.000 km = 0.621 mi

Business routes

Hale Center

Business Interstate 27-T

LocationHale Center
Length1.168 mi[31] (1.880 km)
Existed2002[31]–present

Business Interstate 27-T (Bus. I-27-T) is a 1.168-mile-long (1.880 km) business loop in Hale Center between exits 36 and 38 of I-27. It was bypassed in about 1962 but was turned over to the city until April 5, 2002, when the new business route was authorized.[15][31] Along the way, it intersects FM 1914 (Cleveland Street).

Major intersections
The entire route is in Hale Center, Hale County.

mi[49]kmDestinationsNotes
0.00.0 I-27 / US 87
0.50.80 FM 1914 (Cleveland Street)
1.1681.880 I-27 / US 87
1.000 mi = 1.609 km; 1.000 km = 0.621 mi

Plainview

Business Interstate 27-U

LocationPlainview
Length9.282 mi[30] (14.938 km)
Existed1990[30]–present

Business Interstate 27-U (Bus. I-27-U) is a 9.282-mile (14.938 km) business loop in Plainview.

Notes

  1. ^ Some sources use "IH-27", as "IH" is an abbreviation used by TxDOT for Interstate Highways.[2]

References

  1. ^ a b c d Transportation Planning and Programming Division (n.d.). "Interstate Highway No. 27". Highway Designation Files. Texas Department of Transportation. Retrieved January 28, 2013.
  2. ^ Transportation Planning and Programming Division (n.d.). "Highway Designations Glossary". Texas Department of Transportation. Retrieved May 20, 2020.
  3. ^ American Association of State Highway and Transportation Officials (2001). List of Control Cities for Use in Guide Signs on Interstate Highways. American Association of State Highway and Transportation Officials.[full citation needed]
  4. ^ a b c d e f g h Google (February 15, 2008). "Overview Map of I-27" (Map). Google Maps. Google. Retrieved February 15, 2008.
  5. ^ Transportation Planning and Programming Division (2018). Texas County Mapbook (PDF) (Map) (2018 ed.). 1:72,224. Texas Department of Transportation. p. 433. Retrieved August 3, 2018.
  6. ^ Commerce Journal, Highway Commission Adopts 25 Highways, July 6, 1917[full citation needed]
  7. ^ Bureau of Public Roads & American Association of State Highway Officials (November 11, 1926). United States System of Highways Adopted for Uniform Marking by the American Association of State Highway Officials (Map). 1:7,000,000. Washington, DC: United States Geological Survey. OCLC 32889555. Archived from the original on April 13, 2017. Retrieved November 7, 2013 – via Wikimedia Commons.
  8. ^ Transportation Planning and Programming Division (n.d.). "U.S. Highway No. 87". Highway Designation Files. Texas Department of Transportation.
  9. ^ H.M. Gousha Company, Official Road Map: Texas (Conoco), 1938 Archived April 9, 2014, at the Wayback Machine[full citation needed]
  10. ^ Transportation Planning and Programming Division (n.d.). "State Highway No. 9". Highway Designation Files. Texas Department of Transportation.
  11. ^ a b c d Jack Faucett Associates. "Economic Development History of Interstate 27 in Texas". Federal Highway Administration. Archived from the original on 2006-05-07.
  12. ^ Texas State Highway Department, General Highway Maps: Lubbock[permanent dead link], Hale[permanent dead link], Swisher[permanent dead link], Randall[permanent dead link], and Potter Counties, partially revised to February 1, 1940[dead link][full citation needed]
  13. ^ Rand McNally & Company, Texas-Oklahoma-Eastern New Mexico (Sinclair), 1946 Archived April 9, 2014, at the Wayback Machine[full citation needed]
  14. ^ a b Texas State Highway Department, General Highway Maps: Lubbock[permanent dead link], Hale[permanent dead link], Swisher[permanent dead link], Randall[permanent dead link], and Potter[permanent dead link] Counties, and Amarillo and vicinity, state highways revised to January 1, 1961[dead link][full citation needed]
  15. ^ a b c d e f Federal Highway Administration, National Bridge Inventory, 2006[full citation needed]
  16. ^ General Drafting Company, Texas (Enco), 1961 Archived April 9, 2014, at the Wayback Machine[full citation needed]
  17. ^ H.M. Gousha Company, Texas (Texaco), 1967 Archived April 9, 2014, at the Wayback Machine[full citation needed]
  18. ^ H.M. Gousha Company, Texas (Texaco), 1969 Archived August 14, 2007, at the Wayback Machine[full citation needed]
  19. ^ United States Geological Survey (July 1, 1983). Plainview, Texas Quadrangle (Map). 15 minute. Reston, VA: United States Geological Survey. Archived from the original on July 15, 2022. Retrieved October 21, 2011 – via MSR Maps. (before the bypass was upgraded to freeway standards)[full citation needed][full citation needed]
  20. ^ Transportation Planning and Programming Division (n.d.). "State Highway Loop No. 461". Highway Designation Files. Texas Department of Transportation.
  21. ^ Transportation Planning and Programming Division (n.d.). "State Highway Loop No. 369". Highway Designation Files. Texas Department of Transportation.
  22. ^ Transportation Planning and Programming Division (n.d.). "State Highway Loop No. 445". Highway Designation Files. Texas Department of Transportation.
  23. ^ Federal Highway Administration. "FHWA By Day: December 13". Federal Highway Administration. Archived from the original on 2006-10-05.
  24. ^ Rand McNally, 1988 Road Atlas[full citation needed]
  25. ^ Transportation Planning and Programming Division (n.d.). "Farm to Market Road No. 1541". Highway Designation Files. Texas Department of Transportation.
  26. ^ Federal Highway Administration (May 5, 2007). "Previous Interstate Facts of the Day". Federal Highway Administration. Archived from the original on April 26, 2006.
  27. ^ Texas Department of Transportation. "TxDOT History: 2000 to 1971". Texas Department of Transportation. Archived from the original on 2007-09-08.
  28. ^ United States Geological Survey (July 1, 1975). Southern Lubbock, Texas Quadrangle (Map). 7.5 minute. Reston, VA: United States Geological Survey. Archived from the original on July 15, 2022. Retrieved October 21, 2011 – via MSR Maps.[full citation needed]
  29. ^ Transportation Planning and Programming Division (n.d.). "Business U.S. Highway No. 87-G". Highway Designation Files. Texas Department of Transportation.
  30. ^ a b c Transportation Planning and Programming Division (n.d.). "Business Interstate Highway No. 27-U". Highway Designation Files. Texas Department of Transportation. Retrieved November 28, 2014.
  31. ^ a b c d Transportation Planning and Programming Division (n.d.). "Business Interstate Highway No. 27-T". Highway Designation Files. Texas Department of Transportation.
  32. ^ Johnston, Louis; Williamson, Samuel H. (2023). "What Was the U.S. GDP Then?". MeasuringWorth. Retrieved November 30, 2023. United States Gross Domestic Product deflator figures follow the MeasuringWorth series.
  33. ^ Austin American-Statesman, Towns to vie for I-27 extension, July 18, 1995[full citation needed]
  34. ^ San Antonio Express-News, Engineers opt for improving 3 roads, May 14, 1996[full citation needed]
  35. ^ Ports to Plains study, Frequestly Asked Questions Archived 2012-01-15 at the Wayback Machine, accessed August 2007[full citation needed]
  36. ^ Ports to Plains study, Corridor Map Archived 2012-01-15 at the Wayback Machine, accessed August 2007[full citation needed]
  37. ^ Ports-to-Plains Trade Corridor Coalition, PTP Partners: Great Plains International Trade Corridor, accessed August 2007 Archived September 16, 2008, at the Wayback Machine[full citation needed]
  38. ^ Texas Department of Transportation, Trans-Texas Corridor conceptual map, 2002 Archived 2007-08-20 at the Wayback Machine[full citation needed]
  39. ^ "TxDOT recommends studying I-27 extension again". Archived from the original on 2018-11-12. Retrieved 2019-06-10.
  40. ^ "Abbott signs bill requesting study on I-27 expansion". Associated Press. June 17, 2019. Archived from the original on June 19, 2019. Retrieved June 19, 2019.
  41. ^ Dotray, Matt (June 12, 2019). "Governor signs bill calling for Interstate 27 extension study". Lubbock Avalanche-Journal. Archived from the original on June 19, 2019. Retrieved June 19, 2019.
  42. ^ Driggars, Alex (March 15, 2022). "Raton to Laredo corridor added to Interstate Highway System, paving way for I-27 expansion". Lubbock Avalanche-Journal. Archived from the original on July 15, 2022. Retrieved March 17, 2022.
  43. ^ Clark, Carol A. (March 30, 2023). "Luján Joins Legislation To Name Future Interstate Ports-To-Plains Corridor From Laredo, Texas To Raton, New Mexico As 'Interstate 27'". Los Alamos Daily Post. Retrieved May 12, 2023.
  44. ^ Text of the I–27 Numbering Act of 2023 at Congress.gov
  45. ^ Driggars, Alex (March 28, 2023). "Cruz, Cornyn introduce legislation to name I-27 extension project". Lubbock Avalanche-Journal. Retrieved April 4, 2023.
  46. ^ Stringer, Matt (March 29, 2023). "Cruz, Cornyn Work to Enable New 'Ports-to-Plains' Texas Interstate Highway". The Texan. Austin. Retrieved May 12, 2023.
  47. ^ Johnston, Georgina (March 28, 2023). "New bill would name Ports-to-Plains Corridor 'Interstate 27'". Everything Lubbock. KLBK-TV/KAMC-TV. Retrieved May 12, 2023.
  48. ^ Maxwell, Nicole (March 30, 2023). "New Mexico and Texas could get new interstate". NM Political Report. Retrieved May 12, 2023.
  49. ^ Google (May 11, 2013). "Directions from I-27 to Cleveland Street" (Map). Google Maps. Google. Retrieved May 11, 2013.

External links