I-90 is the only Interstate to cross the state from west to east, and the only one to connect the state's two largest cities, Seattle and Spokane. It incorporates two of the longest floating bridges in the world, the Lacey V. Murrow Memorial Bridge and the Homer M. Hadley Memorial Bridge, which cross Lake Washington from Seattle to Mercer Island. I-90 crosses the Cascades at Snoqualmie Pass, one of the busiest mountain pass highways in the United States, and uses a series of viaducts and structures to navigate the terrain. The freeway travels across suburban bedroom communities in the Seattle metropolitan area, the forests of the Cascade Range, and the high plains of the Columbia Plateau.
The crossing at Snoqualmie Pass was established as a wagon road in 1867 and incorporated into a cross-state auto trail, known as the Sunset Highway, in the early 1910s. The Sunset Highway was incorporated into the national highway system in 1926 as part of US 10, which I-90 replaced when it was designated in 1957. The first segments of the freeway, located in Spokane and Spokane Valley, opened at around the same time and the state government completed upgrades of US 10 to Interstate standards for most of the route by the late 1970s.
The section of I-90 between Seattle and I-405 in Bellevue was delayed for decades because of environmental concerns and lawsuits by local groups over the freeway's potential impact on nearby neighborhoods. A compromise agreement was reached by the federal, state, and local governments in 1976 to build a second floating bridge across Lake Washington and include extensive parks above tunneled sections of I-90, which were completed in the early 1990s. The new floating bridge opened in 1989 and carried bi-directional traffic while the original floating bridge was renovated. The old bridge's center pontoons sank during a November 1990 windstorm due to a contractor error and were rebuilt over the following three years, reopening to traffic on September 12, 1993, marking the completion of the transcontinental highway.
Route description
Interstate 90 is the longest freeway in Washington state, at nearly 298 miles (480 km) in length,[1] and is the only Interstate to traverse the state from west to east across the Cascade Mountains.[3][4] It is listed as part of the National Highway System, classifying important to the national economy, defense, and mobility, and the state's Highway of Statewide Significance program, recognizing its connection to major communities.[5][6] The Washington State Legislature designated the highway as the "American Veterans Memorial Highway" in 1991 to honor U.S. soldiers.[7] A 100-mile (160 km) section of I-90 between Seattle and Thorp named the Mountains to Sound Greenway was designated in 1998 as a National Scenic Byway, in recognition of its scenic views.[8][9]
I-90 is maintained by the Washington State Department of Transportation (WSDOT), who conduct an annual survey of traffic volume that is expressed in terms of annual average daily traffic (AADT), a measure of traffic volume for any average day of the year. A section of I-90 in Bellevue's Eastgate neighborhood carries a daily average of 150,000 vehicles, making it the highway's busiest. The highway's least busiest section, near SR 21 west of Ritzville, carried 11,000 vehicles in 2016.[10] The freeway has a maximum speed limit of 60 miles per hour (97 km/h) in urban areas, 65 mph (105 km/h) in mountainous areas, and 70 mph (110 km/h) in rural areas.[1][11] Several proposals to raise the speed limit of the rural section between Vantage and Spokane to 75 mph (121 km/h) have been submitted and denied by the state government due to safety concerns.[12]
At the south end of Lake Sammamish and northwest of downtown Issaquah, I-90 passes through Lake Sammamish State Park and intersects SR 900. The freeway travels along the north edge of downtown Issaquah, zig-zagging to the south and north to avoid the ridge of Issaquah Highlands and western Tiger Mountain. I-90 leaves Issaquah and enters the heavily forested Issaquah Alps, skirting the north edge of the Tiger Mountain State Forest as it passes Preston. Northeast of Tiger Mountain, the freeway intersects SR 18 and an arterial street connecting to Snoqualmie and Snoqualmie Ridge. I-90 continues southeast past the Snoqualmie Casino to North Bend, where it intersects SR 202. The freeway travels around the southern edge of North Bend and neighboring Tanner in the foothills of Rattlesnake Ridge. I-90 continues southeasterly along the South Fork of the Snoqualmie River into the Snoqualmie National Forest, which also hosts several state parks and campgrounds.[3][17]
I-90 continues in a southern arc around several mountains in the Alpine Lakes Wilderness while following the South Fork of the Snoqualmie River. At the east end of the arc near the Asahel Curtis Picnic Area, the freeway's westbound and eastbound lanes are split by a wide median that includes the Denny Creek Campground.[32] I-90 continues northeast on two high viaducts and ascends to Snoqualmie Pass, the lowest of the state's three major Cascades passes at an elevation of 3,022 feet (921 m).[33][34] The pass handles 28,000 vehicles (including 6,500 trucks) on an average weekday, making it one of the busiest mountain highways in the United States.[35][36] I-90 intersects the Pacific Crest Trail and SR 906 at the pass, providing access to the adjacent Snoqualmie ski resort. The freeway travels south into Kittitas County and intersects SR 906 Spur at Hyak.[17][32] I-90 continues south through the Wenatchee National Forest along the eastern shore of Keechelus Lake, under steep cliffs that were cut using controlled blasting.[37] At the south end of the lake, the freeway passes under a 66-foot-long (20 m) arched wildlife bridge, which is the first to be built in Washington state.[38][39]
While Snoqualmie Pass does not have an annual closure like other passes in the Cascades, it does suffer from vehicle restrictions and occasional days-long shutdowns during the wintertime for avalanche control and clearing collisions.[40][41] I-90 has several chain-on and chain-off areas on the highway shoulders between North Bend and Cle Elum, including variable-message signage to inform drivers of road conditions.[42][43] WSDOT estimates that it costs $2–3 million annually to keep Snoqualmie Pass open in the wintertime, which sees an average snowfall of 233 inches (590 cm) and about 120 hours of closures per year.[44][45][46]
I-90 continues southeast along the Yakima River to Easton, where it leaves the national forest and is joined by the Palouse to Cascades State Park Trail, part of Iron Horse State Park.[3] The freeway passes several ranches and resort communities, including Suncadia, before reaching Cle Elum. I-90 runs to the south of downtown along the Yakima River and intersects SR 10 east of the city before crossing the river. SR 10 follows the former route of US 10 on the north side of the Yakima River, connecting to SR 903 and SR 970. The two highways continue southeast along the Yakima River and enter the Kittitas Valley near Thorp. I-90 begins a concurrency with US 97 west of Ellensburg, which continues as the freeway travels around the outskirts of the city to an interchange with I-82, which travels south with US 97 along the Yakima River towards Yakima.[17]
I-90 and US 395 continue along the south side of Spokane International Airport and enter the city of Spokane, adding US 2 to the concurrency at an interchange near Sunset Hill. The three highways continue along Garden Springs Creek and the John A. Finch Arboretum to an interchange with US 195, located under several railroad overpasses. The freeway continues across Latah Creek into Downtown Spokane, where it travels on an elevated viaduct along 4th Avenue on the south side of downtown. The freeway passes the city's two hospitals (Deaconess and Sacred Heart) before intersecting Browne and Division streets, which carry US 2 and US 395 north through Spokane. I-90 then intersects SR 290 at the eastern edge of downtown, providing a connection across the Spokane River to the Gonzaga University campus.[17]
The freeway continues east through Spokane's suburban neighborhoods, flanked by a pair of frontage roads that funnel traffic towards local streets at interchanges, and passes the future terminus of the North Spokane Corridor, a major freeway that will carry US 395 when completed.[3] I-90 then enters Spokane Valley near Avista Stadium and the Interstate Fairgrounds. The freeway travels on the north side of the suburban city and intersects SR 27 near the Spokane Valley Mall. I-90 follows the Spokane River and Centennial Trail through Liberty Lake and to the Idaho state line.[17] The freeway then continues across the Spokane River towards Post Falls and Coeur d'Alene.[52]
History
Early state roads
Snoqualmie Pass was historically used by the indigenous inhabitants of the Puget Sound and Columbia Plateau regions for trade and socializing in the summertime, as it was the lowest pass in the Cascades. The early trails from the pass were used by fur traders and settlers beginning in the 1850s, as it was the only route equipped to handle wagons and livestock.[53][54] Snoqualmie Pass was later chosen for the region's first major cross-mountain road in the 1860s, having beaten the federal government's favored route over Naches Pass, and a rough wagon road was completed in October 1867 by a group of Seattle businessmen.[53][55][56]
The wagon road was popular with settlers and cattle drivers from eastern Washington and was planned to be extended west to the Black River and east to the Yakima Valley using a $2,500 appropriation from the territorial government, but the funds proved insufficient and the project was shelved.[57] The Snoqualmie wagon road was bought out in 1883 by the Seattle and Walla Walla Trail and Wagon Road Company and converted into a toll road to fund maintenance after the federal government declined to fund improvements to the road. The toll scheme was ultimately unsuccessful, as it failed to compete with the Northern Pacific Railway after it built its railroad across Stampede Pass to the south.[53] The toll road was abandoned in 1893 and transferred to King and Klickitat counties,[58] who contracted Denny to maintain and repair the road in 1899 with state money;[59] by that time, sections of the road had deteriorated considerably, but approximately 200 wagons and 1,148 used the Snoqualmie Pass road that summer.[53]
The rise of automobiles after the turn of the 20th century led to the state government funding and supporting new highways across Washington state. Snoqualmie Pass saw its first automobile crossing in 1905, the same year that the state government designated the route as part of State Road 7.[53][60] State Road 7 began construction between North Bend and Easton in 1907 and became Washington's first trans-Cascades highway.[53] Later that year, state highway commissioner Joseph M. Snow announced plans to extend the Snoqualmie Pass road west to Seattle and east to Spokane and the Idaho state line, using a road through Wenatchee.[61][62][63] The cross-state extension was approved by the state legislature in 1909 and commemorated by a 23-day automobile race from New York City to Seattle for that year's Alaska–Yukon–Pacific Exposition; in total, 105 automobiles crossed Snoqualmie Pass in 1909.[53][64] The racers and a group of Spokane motorists who drove across two years later described the road near Snoqualmie Pass as "impassible" with "treacherous" conditions, leaving much to be improved.[65]
Sunset Highway and national routes
In 1912, the state good roads association endorsed the construction of three trunk highways across the state, including a 400-mile (640 km) route from the Puget Sound to Idaho over Snoqualmie Pass.[66] The state legislature passed an appropriations bill in March 1913 that funded construction of the trunk routes, including a total of $506,834 for the cross-state road, dubbed the "Sunset Highway".[67] Construction of the Sunset Highway through Snoqualmie Pass began in February 1914, with the goal of lowering the crossing of the pass by 117 feet (36 m) under the old wagon road.[68] To extend the highway from Ellensburg to Spokane, the state highway board chose to route the Sunset Highway over a ferry crossing of the Columbia River at Vantage, then north to Wenatchee and Waterville along modern US 2.[69] In Spokane, the Sunset Highway met the Central Washington Highway (State Road 11), which ran southwest through Cheney and Ritzville towards the Tri-Cities.[70] The road across Snoqualmie Pass was mostly complete by September 1914, leading to plans for a formal dedication, but heavy rainfall delayed earthwork along the highway and postponed its use by motorists.[71]
The completed Sunset Highway was briefly opened for traffic on October 1, 1914, before closing for the winter season.[72] It reopened to traffic on June 20, 1915,[73] and the highway was formally dedicated at the summit of Snoqualmie Pass on July 1, 1915, by a party of 400 motorists led by Governor Ernest Lister and Seattle Mayor Hiram Gill.[74] Lister compared the highway's opening to the arrival of the transcontinental railroads and called the completion of the Sunset Highway the more important achievement for the state.[53][75] In 1919, the state government rerouted the Sunset Highway between Ellensburg and Wenatchee, proposing a new branch through Blewett Pass in lieu of the ferry crossing at Vantage, which became part of the North Central Highway.[76][77][78] The Blewett Pass highway was completed in May 1922, replacing a more dangerous wagon road across the pass.[79][80] Portions of the Sunset Highway remained graded but unpaved until funds from the Federal Aid Road Act of 1916 were used to pave a gravel surface; some sections in King County were also upgraded with concrete pavement.[53][81]
The Sunset Highway was renumbered to State Road 2, as part of a statewide reorganization of the highway system in 1923; the Vantage segment was retained as part of North Central Highway, renumbered as State Road 7, and the Ritzville–Spokane highway became part of State Road 11.[82][83] The Sunset Highway became part of two transcontinental auto trails in the late 1920s: the National Park to Park Highway and the Yellowstone Trail, which was rerouted away from the Inland Empire Highway in 1925.[84][85] The federal government established its own national highway system in 1926, designating the Sunset Highway as part of U.S. Route 10 (US 10), a transcontinental highway between Seattle and Detroit, Michigan.[86] At the time, the 348-mile-long (560 km) Sunset Highway had 256 miles (412 km) with gravel paving, 70 miles (110 km) with cement pavement, 7 miles (11 km) with macadam, 6 miles (9.7 km) with bricks, and 4 miles (6.4 km) with asphalt concrete; only 3 miles (4.8 km) of the highway remained without any sort of pavement beyond graded dirt.[87]
The state highway department continued work near the Snoqualmie and Blewett passes, including the staging of snow removal vehicles to allow for all-winter travel beginning in 1930–31 and a 12.4-mile-long (20.0 km) segment near Snoqualmie Pass being completely paved in 1933.[88][89] The year-round access to Snoqualmie Pass led to a rise in local skiing, especially at the ski area operated by the Seattle city government.[53][90] By the end of the decade, the entire Sunset Highway was paved with either asphalt or concrete.[91] The state highway system was restructured once again in 1937, leading to the creation of primary and secondary highway designations. State Road 2 became Primary State Highway 2 (PSH 2), still retaining its concurrency with US 10; similar carryovers followed for State Road 7 and State Road 11, which became PSH 7 and PSH 11, respectively.[92] A new highway, PSH 18, was created and ran from PSH 7 at Burke near Quincy and through Moses Lake to PSH 11 and US 395 in Ritzville.[91][92] US 10 was rerouted onto the new Burke–Ritzville highway and a section of PSH 7 between Thorp and Burke, incorporating the original Vantage Bridge, in the early 1940s.[year needed][93] The old alignment through Wenatchee, Coulee City, and Davenport, along with a new segment across Stevens Pass to Everett, was designated as US 10 Alternate in 1940.[94][93] US 10 Alternate itself was usurped by the extension of US 2 from Sandpoint, Idaho, to Everett in 1946.[95][96]
A second alternate route was established in the 1940s[year needed] after the opening of the Lake Washington Floating Bridge between Seattle and Mercer Island.[96] US 10 previously traveled between Seattle and Issaquah via the south side of the lake, passing through Renton and crossing the Issaquah Alps.[91] The terminus of US 10 remained at the intersection of Airport Way and 4th Avenue South (carrying US 99) between King Street and Union stations, the city's main railroad terminals.[97] The floating bridge was conceived by engineers in the 1930s as a replacement for the automobile ferries on the lake and was opened on July 2, 1940, after one year of construction.[98] The bridge, which initially had a toll of 25 cents, reduced the drive to the pass by 14 miles (23 km) and encouraged new suburban development on the Eastside that grew in the following decades.[99] A new section of US 10 between Issaquah and North Bend was also constructed the following year, bypassing the towns of Fall City and Snoqualmie.[100][101] Upgrades to the Snoqualmie Pass section of the highway began in 1950, expanding the road to four lanes and constructing two snowsheds to protect motorists from avalanches.[74][102] The $8.25 million project was completed in 1958.[103][104]
Interstate designation and early construction
The federal government endorsed proposals for a transcontinental system of "superhighways" that were transmitted by the Roosevelt administration and the Bureau of Public Roads (BPR) to Congress in the late 1930s.[105][106] In its 1939 report, the BPR proposed that one of the country's main toll highways run from Seattle across the northern Great Plains to Minneapolis and Chicago.[107] Similar bills introduced by congressmen of the time proposed a transcontinental route across the northern U.S. originating in Seattle, with its eastern terminus as far as New York City or Boston.[108][109] The toll roads concept was rejected, but the idea of transcontinental "superhighways" was further developed by an appointed committee into the 1944 Interregional Highways system plan, which included a route following the Sunset Highway from Seattle to Spokane and continuing along US 10 through to the Great Lakes region.[105][110]
The Federal-Aid Highway Act of 1956, signed into law by President Dwight D. Eisenhower on June 29, 1956, formally authorized the creation and funding of the Interstate Highway System.[105][111] The Seattle–Spokane corridor was designated as part of "Interstate 90", which continued east to Chicago and Boston, superseding US 10 through the northwestern United States.[112][113] The first section to be completed under Interstate standards was a five-mile (8 km) section through Spokane Valley from Havana Street to Pines Road, which opened on November 16, 1956, and was credited with reducing the city's rate of collisions and had no fatal collisions until late 1958.[114][115] The state government received $59.5 million in federal appropriations for 1957 to construct its first Interstate sections, including freeway bypasses of cities along US 10.[116]
The Spokane Valley segment was extended east to Greenacres in November 1957 and west to Spokane in September 1958,[117] terminating near the end of a proposed elevated freeway.[114][118][119] It was extended 3.2 miles (5.1 km) further east to Liberty Lake in October 1964, stopping near the Idaho state line.[120] The $5 million section from Burke Junction (near present-day George) to Moses Lake was opened in June 1958, connecting with a bypass of the city that required two new bridges.[121][122] The freeway was later extended 25 miles (40 km) to the Vantage Bridge, which was reconstructed in 1962 due to the reservoir created by the Wanapum Dam.[123][124] A 7-mile (11 km) section from Ritzville to Tokio opened in November 1959 and cost $3.8 million to construct.[125] In October 1959, the state government completed construction of a divided highway spanning 22 miles (35 km) across Snoqualmie Pass to Easton, finishing the last section of four-lane highway between Seattle and Snoqualmie Pass.[126] A 4-mile (6.4 km) extension from Easton to Cle Elum was dedicated by Governor Albert Rosellini on September 30, 1964.[127]
Spokane freeway planning and construction
Planning for the east–west freeway through Downtown Spokane began in the mid-1940s, with city leaders undecided on a specific route but generally favoring a corridor on the south side of the central business district.[128] Among the options were a replacement of Riverside Avenue on the north side of downtown and an alignment along the edge of South Hill or through the hill via a tunnel.[129] The public debate over the routing of the freeway in the late 1950s attracted opinions from various local organizations and members of the public, with one public hearing at the Spokane Coliseum attended by almost 500 people.[130]
In March 1958, the state highway commission chose a southerly route that would be elevated above 4th and 5th avenues with six to eight lanes. The 3.88-mile (6.24 km) freeway would include major interchanges near Hangman Creek to connect with US 195 and at Liberty Park for the proposed north–south freeway, along with three downtown interchanges.[131] The southerly route was deemed the most practical and cost $33 million, the lowest of the options, and was given preliminary approval by the Spokane City Council before being sent to the Bureau of Public Roads.[132] The proposal was criticized for its proximity to the Deaconess Hospital, which was located 70 feet (21 m) from the route, and the campus of Lewis and Clark High School.[133][134]
Officials from Deaconess Hospital lobbied the state government for a freeway noise study that would determine the effects of various routing options and asked the city council to delay its approval.[135][136] The hospital also announced plans in July 1959 to expand its existing building in direct opposition to the state government's preferred freeway routing.[137] Governor Rosellini endorsed a new study on the freeway's routing at the behest of Deaconess Hospital and other Spokane organizations, including an architect who proposed a route along the city's railroad viaduct.[138][139] The state highway commissioned announced in September 1960 that it would continue to pursue the 3rd–4th alignment that had been originally chosen, with enhancements to prevent unnecessary noise next to the hospital, at the recommendation of the Bureau of Public Roads.[140]
Construction of the Spokane Freeway began in 1961 with a section over Sunset Hill and the Hangman Creek bridges, which were completed in June 1963 at a cost of $2.2 million but remained closed to traffic.[141] Deaconess Hospital's opposition delayed planning of the Spokane Freeway for several years, including a lawsuit it filed in 1963 to halt construction of the central section.[142][143] An injunction was granted to halt construction in February 1964,[144] but the case was overturned by the Washington Supreme Court in 1965.[114][145][146] Contracts to construct the elevated freeway were divided into two-block segments, beginning with Maple and Cedar streets in September 1965.[147]
The 9-mile (14 km) western section from Four Lakes near Cheney to Maple Street in Spokane was opened to traffic on December 7, 1965, along with expressways for US 2 and US 195.[148] The freeway was extended 16.7 miles (26.9 km) southwest from Four Lakes to Tyler on November 18, 1966, following a dedication by Governor Daniel J. Evans, whose plane landed on the unopened lanes.[149] The Spokane freeway was linked to the existing Ritzville bypass with the opening of the 23-mile (37 km) Tokio–Fishtrap section of I-90 on November 22, 1968, ahead of an Apple Cup game played at Joe Albi Stadium in Spokane.[150] The elevated section through Downtown Spokane, spanning 6,600 feet (2,000 m) from Maple Street to Pine Street, opened on September 25, 1969, and cost a total of $15.3 million.[151][152] The remaining 1.2 miles (1.9 km) from Pine Street to Helena Street, connecting with the Spokane Valley section, began construction in May 1969 and opened in August 1971.[153]
A major interchange was constructed adjacent to Liberty Park east of downtown Spokane in 1974 to serve as the terminus of a north–south freeway that was later cancelled.[154][155] The interchange was instead repurposed to carry a spur route of SR 290 after construction of a new bridge over the Spokane River was completed in 1984.[156][157]
Later upgrades
In 1966, the state government completed an expansion of US 10 near Moses Lake to meet Interstate standards.[158] A 24-mile (39 km) section of I-90 opened in August 1967, bypassing Cle Elum and the old Yakima River Highway to Ellensburg. It cost $17.7 million to construct and included 31 bridges, three crossings of the Yakima River, a high fence for elk, and several gravel pits that were converted into fishing ponds.[159][160] The section was one of four runner-ups in a 1968 contest of the most beautiful highways in the United States organized by Parade magazine.[161] The Vantage Highway, connecting Ellensburg to the Vantage Bridge, was replaced by a new alignment for I-90 that opened on November 20, 1968.[162] The section included an interchange with I-82 in Ellensburg that would fully open to traffic in 1971.[163][164]
On June 23, 1969, the Seattle–Spokane section of US 10 was removed from the national highway system, while the Spokane–Idaho segment remained until 1975.[165][166] Later that year, the state highway commission unsuccessfully proposed a 92-mile (148 km) westward extension of I-90 from Seattle to Bremerton via a bridge over Puget Sound and continuing on to Aberdeen on the Pacific Ocean.[167]
Expansion of the last two-lane section of I-90 in Eastern Washington, spanning 26 miles (42 km) from Schrag to Ritzville, began in August 1971 and was completed two years later at a cost of $16 million.[168] A section of I-90 crossing the Washington–Idaho state line was upgraded to Interstate standards with the opening of the Post Falls bypass in July 1977.[169] The final traffic signal on I-90 and what remained of US 10 was removed on October 13, 1978, with the opening of a bypass around North Bend.[170] The section west of Snoqualmie Pass was widened in 1981 with the completion of a westbound viaduct over Denny Creek.[171] The project also included demolition of the western snowshed near the summit.[172]
Seattle construction and recent years
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Initial planning for I-90 in Seattle included a proposed viaduct along Connecticut Street (later renamed Royal Brougham Way) from the interchange with I-5 westward to the Alaskan Way Viaduct as part of greater plans to build a ring road around Downtown Seattle.[173][174] Approved with the whole concept by the Seattle City Council in 1963, the Connecticut Street Viaduct was never built as projected costs ballooned from $20 million to $33 million by 1973 despite the Federal Highway Administration agreeing to cover $12 million in designating a section of it as an Interstate Highway.[175][176]
During the construction of the freeway between Seattle and Bellevue, lawsuits were filed on May 28, 1970, and stopped construction of I-90 for over a decade.[177] In lieu of the incomplete connection to I-5, I-90 was temporarily routed on I-5 at Dearborn Street eastward onto Corwin Place South, a four-lane undivided road that transitioned into a controlled-access highway at its intersection with 17th Avenue South and South Lake Way before continuing towards the Mount Baker Tunnel.[178][179] A reversible lane commencing eastward from Rainier Avenue South had been installed in 1960 to handle rush hour traffic,[179] but it increased such that the lane's western terminus was extended to South Dearborn Street in 1981 to provide an exclusive high-occupancy vehicle lane during rush hour.[180][181]
Today, I-90 crosses Lake Washington between Seattle and Bellevue on a pair of floating bridges that are two of the world's longest floating bridges. The westbound lanes travel on the Homer M. Hadley Memorial Bridge, the fifth longest floating bridge, and the eastbound lanes travel on the Lacey V. Murrow Memorial Bridge, the second longest floating bridge. The Lacey V. Murrow Memorial Bridge, originally called the Lake Washington Floating Bridge, opened on July 2, 1940.[182] The bridge sank during construction on November 25, 1990. It was later rebuilt and the new bridge opened later in 1993. The second bridge, the Homer M. Hadley Memorial Bridge, opened on June 4, 1989, and carried bidirectional traffic until 1993, when it was convereted for westbound and reversible use only.[177][183] The final section of Interstate 90 was opened in September 1993, costing $1.56 billion to complete the Seattle–Bellevue stretch.[177] The final section's construction was described by local politicians as "the end of an era" and a "dinosaur" due to its conflicts with Seattle's long-term plans for transit and reducing driving.[184]
Before 2003, Interstate 90 used to end at a signalled intersection with 4th Avenue S. However, increasing traffic from Downtown Seattle, Colman Dock, T-Mobile Park, and CenturyLink Field forced city, county, and state officials to look for improvements to the area. The first stage of the improvements, the SR 519 South Seattle Intermodal Access Project, included the construction of a new on-ramp to Interstate 90 via a new interchange with 4th Avenue S. and Edgar Martínez Drive S. (formerly S. Atlantic Street). Other projects are currently ongoing and have been completed in the recent years on I-90.[187]
The Snoqualmie Pass section was also home to one of the Interstate Highway System's few snowsheds, which had protected two westbound lanes along Keechelus Lake from avalanches and other debris.[190] The 500-foot (150 m) snowshed was removed in 2014 and replaced with elevated bridges as part of a project to expand the freeway to six lanes along Keechelus Lake;[191] an earlier plan to build a wider and longer snowshed in its place was scrapped due to additional costs associated with meeting ventilation and fire safety standards.[192][193]
Other sections of the 15-mile (24 km) Snoqualmie Pass corridor were rebuilt in the 2010s and 2020s as part of a $1.3 billion megaproject.[192] The second phase from Hyak to Stampede Pass included construction of the first wildlife crossing over a Washington highway.[194] The third phase from Hyak to Easton began construction in 2022 and is scheduled to be completed in 2028 due to limited construction seasons.[195] The project includes rock blasting and bridge replacements to accommodate the new lanes.[196]
Seattle–Bellevue express lanes
From 1992 to 2017,[197] Interstate 90 had a 7.45-mile (11.99 km)[1] network of express lanes from Downtown Seattle to Mercer Island and I-405 in Bellevue, including a set of reversible lanes on the Hadley floating bridge controlled by gates.[197][198][199] Prior to their closure, the express lanes carried an annual average of 15,000 vehicles per day.[10] The I-90 reversible express lanes were permanently closed on June 4, 2017, and were replaced by high-occupancy vehicle lanes on the outer lanes of the floating bridge.[200] The right of way will be used for the 2 Line, a light rail line between Seattle and Redmond that is scheduled to open in 2025.[201][202]
The west end of the network was at the intersection of 5th Avenue, Airport Way, and Dearborn Street in the International District, adjacent to the Union Station complex and Lumen Field.[197][203] The bi-directional, two-lane highway was joined by ramps from the Downtown Seattle Transit Tunnel, which carried Eastside bus routes through downtown until 2019,[204][205] and continued along the north side of I-90 across its interchange with I-5.[198][206] The express lanes crossed under the freeway's westbound lanes on the north side of Beacon Hill, continuing east in the median.[198] The express lanes crossed Rainier Avenue on three overpasses, with the outer two serving as the bus-only approach and platform for the Rainier Freeway Station.[207][208][209]
Through the Mount Baker Tunnel and on the Homer M. Hadley Memorial Bridge, the express lanes changed into a uni-directional reversible layout with three lanes, while a cross-weave interchange allowed buses to re-enter the mainline lanes and high-occupancy vehicles and single-occupant Mercer Island traffic into the express lanes.[209][210] On Mercer Island, the express lanes had exits to 77th Avenue Southeast, 80th Avenue Southeast, and Island Crest Way, as well as a westbound entrance from the mainline HOV lanes.[207][211] The 80th Avenue Southeast ramp was converted to a HOV-only westbound offramp for the mainline lanes in 2012.[212][213] The eastbound-only express lanes then crossed the East Channel Bridge and merged back into the mainline HOV lanes, with ramps that served Bellevue Way and I-405.[198][214]
During the last years of operation, the reversible portion of the express lanes carried westbound traffic from 6 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. and eastbound traffic from 2 p.m. to 5 a.m. on weekdays. The express lanes remained opened to eastbound from Friday afternoon to 5 a.m. on Monday, except for special weekend events.[215] The express lanes changed direction at midnight prior to 2012, when the I-5 express lanes were automated, allowing for a single crew to be used for both systems.[216]
This table reflects the final configuration of the express lanes in 2012, prior to its reconfiguration and closure.[198] The entire route was in King County.
^Jackson, Kritsin (July 22, 1998). "Northwest Notebook: Two Washington highways honored for their scenery". The Seattle Times. p. F8.
^ ab"2016 Annual Traffic Report"(PDF). Washington State Department of Transportation. pp. 116–120. Archived from the original(PDF) on August 12, 2017. Retrieved June 15, 2018.
^Nelson, Dan A. (November 25, 2004). "High-desert hikes: Burn off holiday calories in decidedly different Eastern Washington". The Seattle Times. p. G6.
^"Chapter LVII: Snoqualmie Pass Wagon Road"(PDF). Session Laws of the State of Washington, 1899. Washington State Legislature. March 13, 1899. pp. 99–100. Retrieved June 16, 2018.
^ abHighways of the State of Washington (Map). Cartography by Rand McNally. Washington State Department of Highways. 1944. OCLC5673231. Retrieved June 17, 2018 – via David Rumsey Historical Map Collection.
^Executive Committee (June 3, 1940). "Addenda to Minutes of Executive Committee"(PDF) (Report). Washington, DC: American Association of State Highway Officials. p. 40. Retrieved February 27, 2023 – via Wikimedia Commons.
^ abState of Washington Highway Map (Map). Cartography by Rand McNally. Washington State Department of Highways. 1950. OCLC5673231. Retrieved June 17, 2018 – via Washington State Archives.
^"Freeway Section Is Open". The Spokesman-Review. October 24, 1964. p. 6. Retrieved December 1, 2019 – via Newspapers.com.
^"Opening of Bypass Set For Monday Afternoon". Columbia Basin Herald. June 20, 1958. p. 1.
^"Interstate Highway Works Pas Moses Lake". Washington Highway News. Vol. 8, no. 2. Washington State Department of Highways. October 1958. p. 15. OCLC29654162. Retrieved November 9, 2021 – via WSDOT Library Digital Collections.
^"New Freeway Opened Near Ritzville". Washington Highway News. Vol. 8, no. 11. Washington State Department of Highways. April 1960. p. 37. OCLC29654162. Retrieved November 9, 2021 – via WSDOT Library Digital Collections.
^"State Dedicates Vantage Bridge". The Seattle Times. Associated Press. November 9, 1962. p. 5.
^"Road is Open". The Spokesman-Review. November 25, 1959. p. 6. Retrieved December 1, 2019 – via Newspapers.com.
^Reddin, John J. (October 26, 1959). "New Sunset Highway Four-Lane Link Opened". The Seattle Times. p. 10.
^"Freeway Link To Cle Elum Is Dedicated". The Seattle Times. Associated Press. September 30, 1964. p. 23.
^"Fishtrap Freeway 90 Link Open". The Spokesman-Review. November 23, 1968. p. 5. Retrieved November 7, 2021 – via Google News Archive.
^"Newest Freeway Section Opens". Spokane Daily Chronicle. September 25, 1969. p. 1. Retrieved November 7, 2021 – via Newspapers.com.
^"Spokane Freeway—Interstate 90". Washington Highway News. Vol. 20, no. 4. Washington State Department of Highways. September 1969. p. 5. OCLC29654162. Retrieved November 7, 2021 – via WSDOT Library Digital Collections.
^Lemon, John J. (August 10, 1971). "Freeway Dedicated". Spokane Chronicle. p. 5. Retrieved November 7, 2021 – via Newspapers.com.
^"New Interstate Section To Open Tuesday". Tri-City Herald. August 6, 1967. p. 1.
^"An American Prize Winner". Washington Highway News. Vol. 18, no. 3. Washington State Department of Highways. May 1968. p. 3. OCLC29654162. Retrieved November 7, 2021 – via WSDOT Library Digital Collections.
^Washington State Department of Highways (August 31, 1972). "Notice of Draft Environmental Statement Availability: SR 90, SR 5 to the West Shore of Mercer Island". The Seattle Times. p. D14.
^Lane, Bob (March 13, 1980). "I-90 to get incentives for transit, car pools". The Seattle Times. p. B4.
^"Work to begin on extension of I-90 reversible lane west of tunnel". The Seattle Times. May 29, 1981. p. A17.
^Washington State Department of Transportation. "History of WSDOT (1921–1940)". Washington State Department of Transportation. Archived from the original on October 11, 2008. Retrieved August 11, 2008.
^Bailey, Gil (June 5, 1989). "Sirens, flashing lights and a cloud of dust: the new I-90 section opens". Seattle Post-Intelligencer. p. C1.
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