Interstate 10 in Florida
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Interstate 10 |
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Maintained by FDOT | |||||||||
Length: | 326.26 mi[1] (525.06 km) | ||||||||
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Formed: | 1958 | ||||||||
West end: | I-10 near Robertsdale, AL | ||||||||
Major junctions: |
I-110 in Pensacola I-75 near Lake City I-295 in Jacksonville |
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East end: | I-95 in Jacksonville | ||||||||
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Interstate 10, the major east-west Interstate Highway in the Southern United States, runs east from Pensacola, Florida, on the Alabama border, through Pensacola and Tallahassee to Jacksonville. I-10 carries the hidden Florida Department of Transportation designation of State Road 8.
Contents |
[edit] Major cities
Bolded cities are officially-designated control cities for signs.
[edit] Route description
[edit] History
[edit] Construction
The first section of I-10 in Florida was completed between Sanderson and Jacksonville in 1961. Construction on points westward continued in 1962. The route between Sanderson and Winfield was completed in 1963. By 1967, construction had been completed from the Alabama State Line to State Road 87, and under construction from Falmouth to I-75. New construction extending I-10 east from SR 87 to Mossy Head began in 1968. The Falmouth to I-75 segment opened in 1969. Construction began in 1970 further expanding I-10 westward from Mossy Head to De Funiak Springs. New construction began in 1973 from De Funiak Springs to Caryville and from Drifton to Capitola; the segment between Drifton and Falmouth opened that year. The Capitola to Drifton segment was completed the following year. Construction began between Caryville and Chipley in 1974, and from Chipley to Midway in 1975. The segment between Chipley and Midway was completed in 1977 except for a small portion between Kynesville and Oakdale. In 1978, the entire length of I-10 across the state opened along its original planned route. [2]
[edit] Hurricane Ivan
On September 16 2004, Hurricane Ivan made landfall near Pensacola, causing heavy damage to the Interstate 10 bridge across Escambia Bay. As much as a quarter mile (400 m) of the bridge collapsed into the bay. The causeway that carries U.S. Highway 90 across the northern part of the same bay was also heavily damaged. A $26.5 million project was awarded the following day to Gilbert Southern/Massman and to the Parsons Corporation to make emergency repairs to the bridge. Work was completed on October 4 on the westbound bridge, restoring two-way traffic seven days ahead of schedule. The more heavily damaged eastbound bridge was completely repaired on November 20, just 66 days after Hurricane Ivan made landfall. Overall, the project was completed 27 days ahead of schedule.
[edit] Exit list
[edit] References
[edit] External links
Preceded by Alabama |
Interstate 10 Florida |
Succeeded by terminus |