U.S. Route 40 in Missouri
Route information | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|
Maintained by MoDOT | ||||
Existed | 1926–present | |||
Major junctions | ||||
West end | I-70 / US-24 / US-40 / US-169 in Kansas City | |||
East end | I-55 / I-64 / US 40 in St. Louis | |||
Location | ||||
Country | United States | |||
State | Missouri | |||
Counties | Jackson, Lafayette, Saline, Cooper, Howard, Boone, Callaway, Montgomery, Warren, St. Charles, St. Louis, City of St. Louis | |||
Highway system | ||||
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U.S. Route 40 (US 40) in the state of Missouri is a U.S. highway that runs from Kansas City to St. Louis. Outside of Greater St. Louis, much of the route either parallels or runs along I-70. East of Wentzville in Greater St. Louis, the route runs along I-64.
Route description
US 40, along with I-70, US 24, and US 169, enters Kansas City via the Intercity Viaduct. US 169 exits the freeway north to the Buck O'Neil Bridge and I-35 joins with the remaining three routes. At the interchange with I-29 and US 71, I-70, US 24, and US 40 turn south while I-35 turns north. At I-670, I-70, US 24, and US 40 turn east while US 71 continues south toward I-49. In East Side, US 40 leaves I-70 before meeting I-435/US 24. Shortly after I-435, US 40 runs along or parallels the Kansas City–Independence line. Between I-470 and Blue Springs, the two roadways splits. At Grain Valley, US 40 rejoins I-70.[1][2]
For 77 miles (124 km), US 40 runs along I-70 through rural areas, meeting US 65 at Marshall Junction as well as multiple state highways in different locations. US 40 eventually leaves the freeway to serve downtown Boonville, running concurrently with I-70 Bus. and Route 5 in the process. As the road approaches downtown, I-70 Bus. turns southeast while US 40 and Route 5 turns north, both running along Route 87. After leaving downtown and crossing above the Missouri River, Route 87 and then Route 5 leaves northward from US 40. US 40 parallels the Missouri River before reaching Rocheport; the route then parallels I-70. US 40 reenters the freeway just after Midway.[1][2]
I-70/US 40 runs north of downtown Columbia. The freeway serves US 63 via a connector road, located east of the US 63 freeway.[1][2]
US 40 continues to run along I-70 through rural areas between Columbia and Wentzville; the freeway, at one point, meets US 54 in Kingdom City. In Wentzville, at the Greater St. Louis area, US 40 leaves I-70 to enter I-64/US 61. US 40, along with I-64 and US 61, then crosses the Missouri River again, this time via the Daniel Boone Bridge. After crossing the river, the freeway serves the Spirit of St. Louis Airport in Chesterfield. At the Frontenac–Ladue line, US 61 leaves the freeway to enter south along US 67 (Lindbergh Boulevard). Next to the I-170 interchange in Richmond Heights, drivers can get on the Brentwood I-64 station on the Blue Line. Just after entering St. Louis proper, I-64/US 40 pares through the southern part of Forest Park. The freeway then becomes a double-decker twice: from Vandeventer Avenue to Compton Avenue and from 14th Street (near the Gateway Transportation Center) to an interchange with I-44/I-55. I-55 merges with I-64/US 40 near Gateway Arch. The freeway then crosses above the Mississippi River via the Poplar Street Bridge to enter Illinois.[1][2]
History
US 40 was formed in 1926.[3] In Missouri, it runs from Kansas City to St. Louis roughly along its current alignment except in the St. Louis area.[4][5] US 40 originally ran through St. Charles, but was rerouted southward closer to its current alignment in 1941.[6][7]
Daniel Boone Expressway
The first section of present-day I-64/US 40 between Skinker Boulevard and Vandeventer Avenue opened in 1937.[8][9] Originally called the Express Highway, it was then renamed to Red Feather Highway in 1948.[10]
The Daniel Boone Expressway was established in 1938 from the Daniel Boone Bridge above the Missouri River to Lindbergh Boulevard. The expressway later extended eastward to Brentwood Boulevard in the 1940s. In 1959, the expressway was extended east from Brentwood to the Red Feather Highway, of which the latter highway became part of the Daniel Boone Expressway.[11][12] In 1965, the expressway was extended to a pair of now-demolished connector ramps (part of a now-canceled expressway) east of Jefferson Avenue.[13][14] The Poplar Street Bridge and the double-decker expressway east of 8th Street opened in 1967, which led to the realignment of US 40 from the Veterans Bridge to the newly-opened freeway bridge.[15][16] The remaining double-decker section in downtown was finished by 1970.[17][18]
In 1987, I-64 was extended west from the I-55/I-70/US 40 interchange in East St. Louis, Illinois, to I-270 in Town and Country via US 40 with a possibility of extending further west to I-70 in Wentzville via US 40/US 61.[19][20][21] In the early 2000s, I-64 was extended west to Route 94.[22][23] In the early 2010s, I-64 was extended to I-70 in Wentzville.[24][25]
Reconstruction
The Daniel Boone Bridge originally had only one bridge carrying two lanes of traffic (one in each direction). In 1989, a second bridge was built to carry four lanes of eastbound traffic to accommodate an increasing amount of traffic attributed to population growth. The old bridge was reconfigured to serve three lanes of westbound traffic.[26] However, due to the deterioration and the substandard lane configuration of the old bridge, a new bridge was built from 2013-2015 to the west of the 1989 bridge. The new bridge opened in 2015 for eastbound traffic, whereas the 1989 bridge reversed direction to serve westbound traffic. The 1937 bridge was demolished in 2016.[27][28]
From 2007 to 2010, MoDOT reconstructed a portion of I-64/US 40 (dubbed "The New I-64" project) from Spoede Road to Kingshighway Boulevard.[29][30]
Major intersections
County | Location | mi[31] | km | Exit | Destinations | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Kansas River | 0.000 | 0.000 | I-70 west / US-24 west / US-40 west / US-169 south / Lewis and Clark Trail – Topeka | Continuation into Kansas | ||
Lewis and Clark Viaduct; Kansas–Missouri line | ||||||
Jackson | Kansas City | 0.886– 1.041 | 1.426– 1.675 | 2A | I-35 south – Wichita | Western end of I-35 / Downtown Loop concurrency |
0.845 | 1.360 | 2B | Beardsley Road | Eastbound exit and westbound entrance | ||
1.060 | 1.706 | 2C | US 169 north (Broadway Boulevard) | Eastern end of US 169 concurrency. Access to Charles B. Wheeler Downtown Airport and Downtown | ||
1.303 | 2.097 | 2D | Main Street / Delaware Street / Wyandotte Street | Signed as Main Street only eastbound | ||
1.651 | 2.657 | 2E | Route 9 north / Oak Street | Westbound access is via exit 2H | ||
1.853– 2.028 | 2.982– 3.264 | 2G | I-29 north / I-35 north / US 71 north / Lewis and Clark Trail – St. Joseph, Des Moines | Eastern end of I-35 concurrency; western end of US 71 concurrency; signed as exit 2G–H eastbound; southern terminus of I-29 | ||
2H | To Route 9 north / Admiral Boulevard US 24 Bus. (Independence Avenue) | Westbound exit and eastbound entrance; Substitute exit for Exits 2F and 2E westbound | ||||
2.273 | 3.658 | 2J | 11th Street to 10th Street VIA Charlotte Street | Eastbound exit and westbound entrance; access to University of Missouri-Kansas City Medical School | ||
2.668 | 4.294 | 2K | 12th Street / 11th Street to Charlotte Street / 10th Street / Harrison Street / Troost Avenue | Westbound exit and eastbound entrance | ||
2.375– 2.295 | 3.822– 3.693 | 2L | I-670 west to I-35 south – Wichita | I-670 exit 2N | ||
2M | US 71 south – Joplin | Eastern end of US 71 and Downtown Loop concurrency; I-670 exit 2N; westbound access is via exit 3A; eastern end of the Bruce Watkins Drive Memorial Parkway; access to UMKC Medical School, and Truman Medical Center-Hospital Hill | ||||
2P | 13th Street / Charlotte Street | Westbound exit only; access to Downtown Kansas City, UMKC Medical School, and Truman Medical Center-Hospital Hill | ||||
14th Street / Charlotte Street | Eastbound entrance only | |||||
2Q | Truman Road / Locust Street / Oak Street / Grand Boulevard / Walnut Street / Main Street / Baltimore Avenue | Westbound exit and eastbound entrance. Access to Power and Light District and T-Mobile Center. | ||||
2.944 | 4.738 | 3A | To US 71 south / The Paseo | Westbound exit and entrance and eastbound entrance only. No eastbound exit from I-70 east; no westbound entrance to I-670 west; I-670 exit 3A; access to the American Jazz Museum and the Negro Leagues Baseball Museum | ||
3.389 | 5.454 | 3B | Brooklyn Avenue | Eastbound exit and westbound entrance | ||
3.644 | 5.864 | 3C | Prospect Avenue | Access to Pioneer College | ||
4.135 | 6.655 | 4A | Benton Boulevard / Truman Road | Eastbound exit and westbound entrance | ||
4.420 | 7.113 | 4B | 17th Street | Access to American Jazz Museum and Negro Leagues Baseball Museum | ||
4.879 | 7.852 | 4C | 22nd Street | |||
5.447 | 8.766 | 5A | 27th Street | Eastbound exit and westbound entrance | ||
5.578 | 8.977 | 5B | Myrtle Avenue to 31st Street | Eastbound exit only | ||
5.756 | 9.263 | 5C | Jackson Avenue / Myrtle Avenue to 27th Street | Westbound exit and eastbound entrance | ||
6.493 | 10.449 | 6 | Van Brunt Boulevard | Access to Veteran Administration Medical Center | ||
7.053 | 11.351 | – | I-70 east / US 24 east / 31st Street west – St. Louis | Eastern end of I-70/US 24 overlap | ||
8.713 | 14.022 | I-435 north / US 24 east – Des Moines | ||||
Kansas City–Independence line | 11.446 | 18.421 | I-70 | |||
Independence | 16.112 | 25.930 | I-470 / Route 291 to I-70 – Lee's Summit, Liberty | |||
Blue Springs | 21.43 | 34.49 | Route 7 to I-70 – Pleasant Hill | |||
Grain Valley | 25.67 | 41.31 | – | I-70 west – Kansas City | Western end of I-70 overlap | |
Oak Grove | 29.426 | 47.357 | 28 | Route F / Route H – Levasy, Oak Grove | ||
Lafayette | Bates City | 31 | Route D / Route Z – Bates City, Napoleon | |||
Odessa | 37A | Action Road - Outlet Mall | Eastbound exit only | |||
37B | Route 131 – Odessa, Wellington | Signed as exit 37 westbound | ||||
38 | Johnson Drive | Westbound exit and eastbound entrance | ||||
| 41 | Route M / Route O – Lexington, Mayview | ||||
| 45 | Route H – Mayview | ||||
Higginsville | 49 | Route 13 – Higginsville, Warrensburg | Access to Wentworth Military Academy and Junior College, Missouri Veterans State Cemetery, Whiteman Air Force Base, the University of Central Missouri, Confederate Memorial State Historic Site, Battle of Lexington State Historic Site, and Maple Leaf Lake Conservation Area | |||
| 52 | Route T – Aullville | ||||
Concordia | 58 | Route 23 – Concordia, Waverly, Knob Noster | ||||
Saline | Emma | 62 | Route VV / Route Y – Emma | |||
Sweet Springs | 66 | Route 127 – Sweet Springs, Mt. Leonard | ||||
| 71 | Route EE / Route K – Houstonia | ||||
| 74 | Route YY | ||||
| 78 | US 65 – Sedalia, Marshall | Signed as exits 78A (south) and 78B (north) | |||
| 84 | Route J | ||||
Cooper | | 89 | Route K / Route M – Arrow Rock, Blackwater | |||
| 98 | Route 41 / Route 135 – Arrow Rock, Pilot Grove | ||||
Boonville | 101 | I-70 east – Columbia I-70 BL begins / Route 5 south (Ashley Road) – Tipton, Lake of the Ozarks | Eastern end of I-70 overlap; western end of I-70 BL/Route 5 overlap | |||
I-70 BL east / Route 87 south (Main Street) | Western end of Route 87 overlap; eastern end of I-70 BL overlap | |||||
Missouri River | Boonslick Bridge | |||||
Howard | | Route 87 north – Glasgow, Boone's Lick State Historic Site | Eastern end of Route 87 concurrency | |||
Route 5 north – New Franklin, Central Methodist University, Katy Trail State Park | Eastern end of Route 5 concurrency | |||||
Route 240 Alt. east – Fayette | ||||||
Route 240 west – Fayette, Central Methodist University | Western end of Route 240 concurrency | |||||
Route 240 Spur east – Rocheport | ||||||
Boone | Midway | I-70 west / Route 240 ends | Western end of I-70 concurrency; eastern terminus of Route 240 | |||
Columbia | 124 | Route E / Route 740 (Stadium Boulvard) – Columbia | Access to the University of Missouri, University Hospital, and Harry S. Truman Memorial Veterans' Hospital | |||
125 | I-70 BL to West Boulevard | |||||
126 | Route 163 (Providence Road) | Access to Downtown | ||||
127 | Route 763 (Range Line Road) | Access to Columbia College and Stephens College | ||||
128 | I-70 BL west – Columbia | Westbound exit only as of 2018; eastbound traffic onto I-70 rerouted to I-70 Connector | ||||
128A | US 63 – Jefferson City, Moberly | Indirect access via I-70 Connector; access to Columbia Regional Airport and the University of Missouri | ||||
131 | St. Charles Road / Lake of the Woods Road | |||||
| 133 | Route Z – Centralia | ||||
Callaway | | 137 | Route DD / Route J – Millersburg | Access to Little Dixie Lake Conservation Area | ||
| 144 | Route HH / Route M – Hatton | ||||
Kingdom City | 148 | US 54 – Auxvasse, Mexico, Fulton | Access to the Lake of the Ozarks, Mark Twain Lake, and the National Churchill Museum | |||
| 155 | Route A / Route Z – Bachelor, Calwood | ||||
| 161 | Route D / Route YY – Williamsburg | Access to Whetstone Creek Conservation Area | |||
Montgomery | | 170 | Route 161 / Route J – Danville, Montgomery City | Access to Graham Cave State Park | ||
New Florence | 175 | Route 19 – New Florence, Hermann | Access to Deutschheim State Historic Site and Mark Twain Lake | |||
High Hill | 179 | Route F – High Hill | Access to Laborers-AGC Training Center | |||
Jonesburg | 183 | Route E / Route NN / Route Y – Jonesburg | ||||
Warren | | 188 | Route A / Route B – Truxton | |||
Warrenton | 192 | Route MM / West Warrenton Boulevard | Roundabouts serve as access points to collector roads that direct to Route MM and Veterans Memorial Parkway; West Warrenton Boulevard serves as the overpass | |||
Truesdale–Warrenton line | 193 | Route 47 – Warrenton, Hawk Point | ||||
Wright City | 199 | Route H – Wright City | ||||
200 | Route F / Route J / Route H – Wright City | Westbound exit and eastbound entrance; other half of interchange is via exit 199 | ||||
St. Charles | Foristell | 203 | Route T / Route W – Foristell | |||
Wentzville | 206 | David Hoekel Parkway | ||||
208 | Wentzville Parkway | Access to SSM Health St. Joseph Hospital — Wentzville | ||||
209 | Route Z / Church Street | |||||
US 61 north (Avenue of the Saints) / I-64 begins / I-70 east – Hannibal, St. Louis | Eastern end of I-70 concurrency; western end of I-64/US 61 concurrency; western terminus of I-64 | |||||
Lake St. Louis | 1C | Prospect Road | ||||
2 | Lake Saint Louis Boulevard | |||||
4A | Route N | To route N | ||||
4B | Route 364 – Dardenne Prairie | Exits 1A-B on SR 364; cloverleaf interchange | ||||
O'Fallon | 6 | Route DD (Winghaven Boulevard) | ||||
9 | Route K – O'Fallon | |||||
Weldon Spring | 10 | Route 94 – St. Charles | Eastbound exit is via exit 9 | |||
11 | Research Park Circle | No westbound entrance | ||||
Missouri River | Daniel Boone Bridge | |||||
St. Louis | Chesterfield | 14 | Chesterfield Airport Road | Eastbound exit and westbound entrance | ||
Spirit of Saint Louis Boulevard | Westbound exit and eastbound entrance | |||||
16 | Long Road / Chesterfield Airport Road | Westbound exit and eastbound entrance | ||||
17 | Boone's Crossing | |||||
19A | Chesterfield Parkway West | |||||
19B | Route 340 (Olive Boulevard / Clarkson Road) | |||||
20 | Chesterfield Parkway East | Westbound exit and eastbound entrance | ||||
21 | Timberlake Manor Parkway | |||||
Town and Country | 22 | Route 141 (Woods Mill Road) | ||||
23 | Maryville Centre Drive | No eastbound exit | ||||
24 | Mason Road | |||||
25 | I-270 – Chicago, Memphis | Exit 12 on I-270 | ||||
26 | Route JJ (Ballas Road) | Access to Mercy Hospital, Missouri Baptist Medical Center, and Covenant Seminary | ||||
Frontenac | 27 | Spoede Road | ||||
28A | US 61 south / US 67 (Lindbergh Boulevard) | Eastern terminus of concurrency with US-61; national southern terminus of the Avenue of the Saints | ||||
Ladue | 28B | Clayton Road | Westbound exit and eastbound entrance | |||
30 | McKnight Road | |||||
Richmond Heights | 31A | I-170 north – Clayton | Exit 1 on I-170; southern terminus of I-170; access to Lambert–St. Louis Airport | |||
31B | Brentwood Boulevard / Hanley Road | Roads connected via one way collector road | ||||
32 | Laclede Station Road | Former westbound exit and eastbound entrance; removed 2007[32] | ||||
33A | Big Bend Boulevard | |||||
33B | Bellevue Avenue | Eastbound exit; westbound entrance via collector road connected to exit 33A | ||||
City of St. Louis | 33C | McCausland Avenue | ||||
34A | Clayton Road / Skinker Boulevard | Westbound exit and eastbound entrance | ||||
34B | Hampton Avenue | Eastbound slip ramp exit to Oakland Avenue eastbound; access to Forest Park and the Saint Louis Zoo | ||||
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 | ||||
36B | Boyle Avenue / Tower Grove Avenue | Boyle Avenue only westbound | ||||
36C | Vandeventer Avenue | Eastbound exit and westbound entrance; access to the Missouri Botanical Garden | ||||
37A | Market Street / Bernard Street | Eastbound exit and westbound entrance | ||||
37B | Grand Boulevard | Eastbound exit and westbound entrance; access to Saint Louis University Hospital | ||||
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 | ||||
38C | Jefferson Avenue | Eastbound exit and westbound entrance | ||||
39A | 22nd Street | access to St. Louis City stadium and St. Louis Union Station | ||||
39B | 14th Street | Eastbound exit and westbound entrance; access to the Enterprise Center and the Stifel Theatre | ||||
39C | 11th Street | Eastbound exit and westbound entrance; access to Busch Stadium | ||||
40B | 6th Street | Eastbound exit and westbound entrance | ||||
40A | 9th Street / Tucker Boulevard | Westbound exit only; eastbound entrance via 6th Street; access to Busch Stadium | ||||
40C | I-55 south / I-44 west – Memphis, Tulsa | Western terminus of concurrency with I-55; westbound exit and eastbound entrance | ||||
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 | 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 c d Google (June 16, 2023). "Overview map of US 40 (MO)" (Map). Google Maps. Google. Retrieved June 16, 2023.
- ^ a b c d Rand McNally (2013). "Missouri" (Map). The Road Atlas (2013 Walmart ed.). c. 1:1,584,000. Chicago: Rand McNally. pp. 58–59. §§ E9–G18. ISBN 0-528-00626-6.
- ^ 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. Retrieved November 7, 2013 – via Wikimedia Commons.
- ^ Rand McNally (1927). "Rand McNally Junior Road Map: Missouri" (Map). Rand McNally Road Atlas. 1: 1,800,000. Chicago: Rand McNally. pp. 56–57. Retrieved June 16, 2023 – via David Rumsey Map Collection.
- ^ Missouri State Highway Commission (1926). Map of Missouri Showing State Road System, Route Numbers, Road Conditions and Points of Interest (Map) (1926 ed.). Jefferson City: Missouri State Highway Commission. Retrieved June 16, 2023.
- ^ Missouri State Highway Commission (1941). Missouri 1941 Highway Map (Map) (1941 ed.). Jefferson City: Missouri State Highway Commission. Retrieved June 17, 2023.
- ^
- ^ Naffziger, Chris (11 November 2020). "In 1951, city planners plotted out new interstates to accommodate the growing population. What St. Louis ended up with looked very different". www.stlmag.com. Retrieved June 18, 2023.
- ^ "85 years ago, the first stages of Highway 40 opened. Here's what it looked like". STLtoday.com. 20 July 2022. Retrieved June 18, 2023.
- ^ O'Neil, Tim (19 July 2022). "In 1937, motorists in St. Louis got their first superhighway". STLtoday.com. Retrieved June 18, 2023.
- ^ "St. Louis prepares for I-64 shutdown". Columbia Missourian. 20 July 2008. Retrieved June 18, 2023.
- ^ O’Neil, Tim (16 May 2023). "How the growth in St. Louis suburbs exploded after World War II". STLtoday.com. Retrieved June 18, 2023.
- ^ Missouri State Highway Commission (1965). Missouri Highway Map (Map) (1965 ed.). Jefferson City: Missouri State Highway Commission. y inset.
- ^ Missouri State Highway Commission (1966). 1966 Official Highway Map (Map) (1966 ed.). Jefferson City: Missouri State Highway Commission. y inset.
- ^ Missouri State Highway Commission (1967). 1967 Official Highway Map (Map) (1967 ed.). Jefferson City: Missouri State Highway Commission. y inset.
- ^ Missouri State Highway Commission (1968). 1968 Official Highway Map (Map) (1968 ed.). Jefferson City: Missouri State Highway Commission. y inset.
- ^ Missouri State Highway Commission (1970). 1970 Official Highway Map (Map) (1970 ed.). Jefferson City: Missouri State Highway Commission. y inset.
- ^ Missouri State Highway Commission (1971). 1971 Official Highway Map (Map) (1971 ed.). Jefferson City: Missouri State Highway Commission. y inset.
- ^ Special Committee on U.S. Route Numbering (May 25, 1987). "Route Numbering Committee Agenda" (PDF) (Report). Washington, DC: American Association of State Highway and Transportation Officials – via Wikimedia Commons.
- ^ Missouri Highway and Transportation Commission (1988). Official Highway Map (Map) (1987-1988 ed.). Jefferson City: Missouri Highway and Transportation Department. y inset.
- ^ Missouri Highway and Transportation Commission (1991). 1991-92 Official Highway Map (Map) (1991-1992 ed.). Jefferson City: Missouri Highway and Transportation Department. y inset.
- ^ Missouri Department of Transportation (2002). Official Highway Map 2001-2002 (Map) (2001-2002 ed.). Jefferson City: Missouri Department of Transportation.
- ^ Missouri Department of Transportation (2004). 2004 Official Highway Map (Map) (2004 ed.). Jefferson City: Missouri Department of Transportation.
- ^ Missouri Department of Transportation (2012). Official Highway Map 2010-2012 (Map) (2010-2012 ed.). Jefferson City: Missouri Department of Transportation.
- ^ Missouri Department of Transportation (2013). Official Highway Map 2013-2014 (Map) (2013-2014 ed.). Jefferson City: Missouri Department of Transportation.
- ^ "History of Boone Bridge & its future". ksdk.com. Retrieved June 19, 2023.
- ^ Uptergrove, Kate (17 November 2015). "Daniel Boone Bridge section to be razed after almost 80 years of service". MidRiversNewsMagazine.com. Retrieved June 19, 2023.
- ^ "I-64 Daniel Boone Bridge Replacement Project, Missouri, US - Verdict Traffic". www.roadtraffic-technology.com. Retrieved June 19, 2023.
- ^ "The New I-64". Missouri Department of Transportation. Retrieved June 17, 2023.
- ^ Hale, Tom (11 August 2010). "Reconstructing I-64 In St. Louis". Building Design + Construction. Retrieved June 17, 2023.
- ^ Missouri Department of Transportation (June 16, 2023). MoDOT HPMAPS (Map). Missouri Department of Transportation. Retrieved June 16, 2023.
- ^ "This week on Highway 40". St. Louis Post Dispatch. August 20, 2007. pp. C3. Retrieved April 22, 2021.
External links
- Media related to U.S. Route 40 in Missouri at Wikimedia Commons
- U.S. Highways in Missouri
- U.S. Route 40
- Jackson County, Missouri
- Kansas City, Missouri
- Independence, Missouri
- Blue Springs, Missouri
- Lafayette County, Missouri
- Saline County, Missouri
- Cooper County, Missouri
- Howard County, Missouri
- Callaway County, Missouri
- Montgomery County, Missouri
- Warren County, Missouri
- Columbia, Missouri
- St. Charles County, Missouri
- St. Louis County, Missouri
- St. Louis