Originally Posted by
SoonerDave
This is a glaring omission in our highway system. Needs to be done.
Interestingly enough, I've noted quite incidentally that there is a conspicuous absence of these NW/SE-oriented interstates throughout the southeast. I personally speculate that's more a reflection of how the population migrated across the area over the decades more than anything.
As an example, only now in the last few years is US-78 being rebuilt into what's now designated as "Future I-22" going southeast from Memphis into Birmingham. There's a similar glaring interstate omission going from Birmingham to the SE toward southern Georgia. The part that's been rebuilt, which I drove en route to Florida two years ago, was one of the nicest stretches of Interstate I've driven anywhere, but once you hit Birmingham, you're back to state roads or old US highway that goes through every small town (and corresponding speed trap) you can imagine. As highway congestion through Atlanta worsens seemingly by the day, the conventional route from Birmingham to Atlanta via I-20 is increasingly in need of an alternative.
I've roughly mapped out some other routes in the region in light of previous vacation plans, and it just became apparent that the NW/SE routes are, in many cases, conspicuous by their absence. The OKC-Denver path is merely one on the list, and I think George Nigh was, in this regard, very smart for having at least tried to get this route established, even if it never happened.
As much as I think this route would make great sense, frankly, I think it'll never happen - at least not in my lifetime. When projects like the I-35/I-240 interchange are, themselves, on the order of a decade away, and the I-40 Crosstown rebuild was a bit of a struggle to get funded, the notion of an entirely new interstate seems decidedly unlikely. Not meaning to be a wet blanket, just realizing that's probably where things stand...
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