Interstate 64 in Missouri
Route information | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|
Maintained by MoDOT | ||||
Length | 40.817 mi[1] (65.689 km) | |||
Existed | 1987–present | |||
NHS | Entire route | |||
Major junctions | ||||
West end | I-70 / US 40 / US 61 in Wentzville | |||
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East end | I-55 / I-64 / US 40 in St. Louis | |||
Location | ||||
Country | United States | |||
State | Missouri | |||
Counties | St. Charles, St. Louis, City of St. Louis | |||
Highway system | ||||
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Interstate 64 (I-64) passes through the Greater St. Louis area in the US state of Missouri. The entire route overlaps U.S. Route 40 (US 40). Because the road was a main thoroughfare in the St. Louis area before the development of the Interstate Highway System, it is not uncommon for locals to refer to the stretch of highway as "Highway 40" rather than "I-64". On December 6, 2009, the portion of the highway running through the city of St. Louis was named the Jack Buck Memorial Highway in honor of the late sportscaster.[2]
Route description
I-64 begins at an interchange with I-70, US 40, and US 61 in St. Charles County and heads south. Previously, the freeway was a divided highway signed only as US 40 with at-grade intersections, which were slowly converted to limited-access exits. The final intersection at Callahan Road was removed on October 14, 2009.[3] The next major exit is for Route N and the western terminus of Route 364. Route 364 was completed and opened on November 2, 2014.[4] From here, I-64 continues past interchanges with Route DD/Winghaven Boulevard, Route 94, and Research Park Circle and then crosses the Missouri River via the Daniel Boone Bridge and enters St. Louis County.
The freeway travels through the congested Chesterfield Valley, where it gains a fourth lane and then meets I-270 at a flyover interchange built in the early 1990s in the city of Town and Country. Continuing east, I-64 remains four lanes and travels through the affluent areas of Frontenac and Ladue. The next major interchange is I-170 in the city of Richmond Heights. This stretch, located between Ballas Road and I-170, was closed in 2008 for a complete reconstruction, at which point substandard exits were upgraded and the fourth lane was added. The interchange with I-170 was also overhauled, creating a full interchange with highspeed ramps in all directions. The reconstructed expressway opened to traffic on the morning of December 15, 2008.
East of the interchange with I-170, I-64 drops a lane and stays at three throughlanes to Clayton Road. Through here, the expressway passes through older neighborhoods and enters into the city of St. Louis. After readding a fourth lane, the freeway skirts the southern edge of Forest Park. In this area, one finds both the Saint Louis Science Center and Saint Louis Zoo. Kingshighway marks the end of the completely reconstructed eastern half, where again outdated exits were updated and shoulders widened. The eastern half was closed from December 15, 2008, to December 7, 2009.[5] I-64's speed limit drops from 60 to 55 mph (97 to 89 km/h) east of Kingshighway and drops a lane at Vandeventer Avenue (the opposite of the westbound lanes). Passing by Saint Louis University, the freeway becomes double-decked for the first time (eastbound lanes at a lower level; westbound lanes at an upper one), gaining back a fourth lane east of Compton Avenue. Another lane drop occurs at the Chestnut and 20th Street exit, where the canceled Route 755 was to interchange. The freeway passes just south of the Enterprise Center and again becomes double-decked in the same arrangement, passing within 50 feet (15 m) of the New Busch Stadium. The route becomes two lanes as it approaches the Mississippi River and the Poplar Street Bridge, where it is intersects I-55 and I-44 at an incomplete interchange; it was also at this interchange that I-70 joined I-55 and I-64 to cross the Poplar Street Bridge, but its former downtown route is now an extension of I-44. Eastbound I-64 cannot directly access either one of the other routes, but westbound I-64, however, can directly access both. I-64 continues into Illinois concurrent with I-55; until 2014, it also ran concurrent with I-70, which has since been rerouted onto the Stan Musial Veterans Memorial Bridge further upstream.
History
Initial construction
Before the Interstate Highway System, US 40 was a main thoroughfare through St. Louis and Kansas City. From each state line, there were signs saying "Future I-55/I-64 Corridor" and "Future I-70 Corridor".
Reconstruction
The Missouri Department of Transportation (MoDOT) rebuilt the stretch of I-64 from Spoede Road to Kingshighway Boulevard between 2008 and 2009. The project included new concrete pavement on the highway; approximately 25 rebuilt bridges; and several reconfigured interchanges, including a new freeway-to-freeway interchange at I-170.
The section between Spoede Road and I-170 was closed for reconstruction on January 2, 2008, and opened to traffic on December 15, 2008. The section between I-170 and Kingshighway Boulevard was closed on December 15, 2008, and reopened to traffic on December 7, 2009.[6] The project was completed with a dedication and opening day ceremony on Sunday, December 6.[2] In 2020, exits 39 and 38B were closed and demolished to make way for the St. Louis MLS Stadium on the site.[7] The ramps were the remnants of a 3.3-mile-long (5.3 km) north–south distributor highway that was never built.[8]
Exit list
County | Location | mi[1] | km | Exit | Destinations | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
St. Charles | Wentzville | 0.000– 0.305 | 0.000– 0.491 | – | US 61 north / Avenue of the Saints – Hannibal | Western end of concurrency with US 61/AOTS, national western terminus of I-64 |
1 | I-70 / US 40 west – Kansas City, St. Louis | Signed as exits 1A (west) and 1B (east); exit 210 on I-70; western end of concurrency with US 40; cloverleaf interchange | ||||
Lake St. Louis | 1.433 | 2.306 | 1C | Prospect Road | ||
3.038 | 4.889 | 2 | Lake Saint Louis Boulevard | |||
3.926 | 6.318 | 4A | Route N | To Route N | ||
4.326 | 6.962 | 4B | Route 364 – Dardenne Prairie | Exits 1A-B on SR 364; cloverleaf interchange | ||
O'Fallon | 6.275 | 10.099 | 6 | Route DD (Winghaven Boulevard) | ||
9.995 | 16.085 | 9 | Route K – O'Fallon | |||
Weldon Spring | 10.726 | 17.262 | 10 | Route 94 – St. Charles | Eastbound exit is via exit 9. | |
11.928 | 19.196 | 11 | Research Park Circle | No westbound entrance | ||
Missouri River | 13.186 | 21.221 | Daniel Boone Bridge | |||
St. Louis | Chesterfield | 13.757– 14.043 | 22.140– 22.600 | 14 | Chesterfield Airport Road | Eastbound exit and westbound entrance |
14.651 | 23.578 | Spirit of Saint Louis Boulevard | Westbound exit and eastbound entrance | |||
14.917– 16.204 | 24.007– 26.078 | 16 | Long Road / Chesterfield Airport Road | Westbound exit and eastbound entrance | ||
17.150 | 27.600 | 17 | Boone's Crossing | |||
19.221 | 30.933 | 19A | Chesterfield Parkway West | |||
19.848 | 31.942 | 19B | Route 340 (Olive Boulevard / Clarkson Road) | |||
20.50 | 32.99 | 20 | Chesterfield Parkway East | Westbound exit and eastbound entrance | ||
20.316 | 32.695 | 21 | Timberlake Manor Parkway | |||
Town and Country | 22.553 | 36.296 | 22 | Route 141 (Woods Mill Road) | ||
23.231 | 37.387 | 23 | Maryville Centre Drive | No eastbound exit | ||
24.186 | 38.924 | 24 | Mason Road | |||
25.886 | 41.659 | 25 | I-270 – Chicago, Memphis | Exit 12 on I-270 | ||
26.207 | 42.176 | 26 | Route JJ (Ballas Road) | Access to Mercy Hospital, Missouri Baptist Medical Center, and Covenant Seminary | ||
Frontenac | 27.745 | 44.651 | 27 | Spoede Road | ||
28.267 | 45.491 | 28A | US 61 south / US 67 (Lindbergh Boulevard) | Eastern end of concurrency with US 61; national southern terminus of the Avenue of the Saints | ||
Ladue | 28.862 | 46.449 | 28B | Clayton Road | Westbound exit and eastbound entrance | |
30.735 | 49.463 | 30 | McKnight Road | |||
Richmond Heights | 31.770 | 51.129 | 31A | I-170 north – Clayton | Exit 1 on I-170; southern terminus of I-170; access to Lambert–St. Louis Airport | |
32.249 | 51.900 | 31B | Brentwood Boulevard / Hanley Road | Roads connected via one way collector road | ||
32 | Laclede Station Road | Former westbound exit and eastbound entrance; removed 2007[9] | ||||
33.071 | 53.223 | 33A | Big Bend Boulevard | |||
33.462 | 53.852 | 33B | Bellevue Avenue | Eastbound exit; westbound entrance via collector road connected to exit 33A | ||
City of St. Louis | 33.807 | 54.407 | 33C | McCausland Avenue | ||
34.042 | 54.785 | 34A | Clayton Road / Skinker Boulevard | Westbound exit and eastbound entrance | ||
34.949 | 56.245 | 34B | Hampton Avenue | Eastbound slip ramp exit to Oakland Avenue eastbound; access to Forest Park and the Saint Louis Zoo | ||
36.111 | 58.115 | 36A | Kingshighway Boulevard | Access to Barnes-Jewish Hospital, St. Louis Children's Hospital, Forest Park, the Missouri Botanical Garden, Ranken Technical College, the St. Louis Science Center, and St. Louis Community College | ||
36.722– 36.800 | 59.098– 59.224 | 36B | Boyle Avenue / Tower Grove Avenue | Boyle Avenue only westbound | ||
37.361 | 60.127 | 36C | Vandeventer Avenue | Eastbound exit and westbound entrance; access to the Missouri Botanical Garden | ||
37.750 | 60.753 | 37A | Market Street / Bernard Street | Eastbound exit and westbound entrance | ||
37.825 | 60.873 | 37B | Grand Boulevard | Eastbound exit and westbound entrance; access to Saint Louis University Hospital | ||
38.000– 38.262 | 61.155– 61.577 | 38A | Forest Park Avenue / Grand Boulevard | Westbound exit and eastbound entrance; access to Forest Park, Chaifetz Arena and Washington University | ||
38B | Chestnut Street at 20th Street / Market Street at 21st Street | Chestnut Street and 20th Street signed eastbound only; Market Street and 21st Street signed westbound only; portion of never-completed Missouri State Route 755; removed 2020 for construction of St. Louis City stadium | ||||
38.793 | 62.431 | 38C | Jefferson Avenue | Eastbound exit and westbound entrance | ||
39.124 | 62.964 | 39A | 22nd Street | access to St. Louis City stadium and St. Louis Union Station | ||
39.646 | 63.804 | 39B | 14th Street | Eastbound exit and westbound entrance; access to the Enterprise Center and the Stifel Theatre | ||
39.806 | 64.062 | 39C | 11th Street | Eastbound exit and westbound entrance; access to Busch Stadium | ||
40.011 | 64.391 | 40B | 6th Street | Eastbound exit and westbound entrance | ||
40.140 | 64.599 | 40A | 9th Street / Tucker Boulevard | Westbound exit only; eastbound entrance via 6th Street; access to Busch Stadium | ||
40.369 | 64.968 | 40C | I-55 south / I-44 west – Memphis, Tulsa | Western end of concurrency with I-55; westbound exit and eastbound entrance | ||
40.407 | 65.029 | 40 | I-44 east to I-70 west / Walnut Street – Kansas City | Westbound exit and eastbound entrance; Access to St. Louis Lambert International Airport | ||
Mississippi River | 40.817 | 65.689 | Poplar Street Bridge | |||
– | I-55 north / I-64 east / US 40 east to I-70 east – Illinois | Continuation into Illinois | ||||
1.000 mi = 1.609 km; 1.000 km = 0.621 mi
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References
- ^ a b Missouri Department of Transportation (October 16, 2018). MoDOT HPMAPS (Map). Missouri Department of Transportation. Retrieved October 16, 2018.
- ^ a b "Public Invited to I-64 'Fun on the Freeway'" (Press release). Missouri Department of Transportation. November 30, 2009. Retrieved December 9, 2009.
- ^ "MoDOT to celebrate completion of Route 40/61 work" (Press release). Missouri Department of Transportation. October 7, 2009. Retrieved October 23, 2009.
- ^ "Route 364 upgrade - Phase 3". Missouri Department of Transportation. Retrieved May 2, 2012.
- ^ "The New I-64". Missouri Department of Transportation. Retrieved May 2, 2012.
- ^ Leiser, Ken. "Highway 40 to reopen Dec. 7". St. Louis Post-Dispatch. Archived from the original on December 12, 2009. Retrieved December 21, 2011.
- ^ Staff reports. "Five Highway 40 (I-64) ramps to close permanently on Feb. 3 for new soccer stadium". STLtoday.com. Retrieved 2020-03-06.
- ^ O'Malley, Beth. "Those soon-to-close Highway 40 ramps are remnants of a never-built north-south highway". STLtoday.com. Retrieved 2020-03-06.
- ^ "This week on Highway 40". St. Louis Post Dispatch. August 20, 2007. pp. C3. Retrieved April 22, 2021.