Interstate 440 (North Carolina)

Interstate 440 (I-440), also known as the Raleigh Beltline, the Cliff Benson Beltline, or locally as The Beltline, is an Interstate Highway in the US state of North Carolina. I-440 is a 16.4-mile-long (26.4 km) partial beltway that nearly encircles central Raleigh. I-440 begins in west Raleigh at an interchange with I-40 as a continuation of U.S. Highway 64 (US 64)/US 1 and traverses a primarily residential area in west Raleigh. The freeway makes a turn toward the east, crossing US 70, Six Forks Road, and Wake Forest Road. US 1 branches north off I-440 at US 401 (Capital Boulevard), becoming US 401/US 1. I-440 turns toward the southeast and follows a brief concurrency with U.S. Highway 64 Business (US 64 Bus.) before intersecting I-87/US 64/US 264. US 64 and I-87 are concurrent with I-440 along the remainder of the road's southwesterly routing. Exit 16 is the last exit on I-440, where I-440 splits to join either I-40 eastbound or I-40 westbound.

Interstate 440

Cliff Benson Beltline
Raleigh Beltline
I-440 highlighted in red
Route information
Auxiliary route of I-40
Maintained by NCDOT
Length16.40 mi (26.39 km)
Existed1991–present
NHSEntire route
Major junctions
West end I-40 / US 1 / US 64 near Cary
Major intersections
  • US 70 / NC 50 near Raleigh
  • US 1 / US 401 near Raleigh
  • I-87 / US 64 / US 264 near Raleigh
East end I-40 / US 64 near Raleigh
Location
CountryUnited States
StateNorth Carolina
CountiesWake
Highway system
  • Main
  • Auxiliary
  • Suffixed
  • Business
  • Future
  • North Carolina Highway System
  • Interstate
  • US
  • State
  • Scenic
US 421 US 441

The Raleigh Beltline was formed from a number of highway segments, the earliest of which had been in place since 1959. The loop was completed in 1984 under multiple route designations. To avoid confusion along the beltline, I-440 was routed along the entirety of the beltline and shared a concurrency with its parent, I-40, along the loop's southern segment (Tom Bradshaw Freeway). In 2008, the I-440 designation was removed from the section of I-40/US 64 in southeast Raleigh. The highway's original "inner" and "outer" designations were also removed and replaced with compass directions (e.g., east/west). The easternmost two miles (3.2 km) of the I-440 was rebuilt in 2015 as part of the larger widening project along I-40 in South Raleigh, while the westernmost four miles (6.4 km), the oldest segment and one which is not up to Interstate standards, is currently undergoing widening and upgrading and is scheduled to be complete by 2023.

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.