Lowry Hill Tunnel

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The north/west entrance of Lowry Hill Tunnel, below Hennepin and Lyndale Avenues
The north/west entrance of Lowry Hill Tunnel, below Hennepin and Lyndale Avenues
Inside the Lowry Hill Tunnel (Heading North in the Westbound lane) at night
Inside the Lowry Hill Tunnel (Heading North in the Westbound lane) at night

Lowry Hill Tunnel is a tunnel accommodating the Interstate 94 freeway near downtown Minneapolis, Minnesota that was completed in late 1971. It is placed at a near-right-angle turn in the highway, forcing the 3 lanes of traffic in each direction to slow down. The advised speed is 35 miles per hour (56 km/h).

Although constructed in the form of a tunnel, it is essentially a quarter-mile (400 m) wide bridge, taking Hennepin Avenue, Lyndale Avenue, and various ramps over I-94.

It is a bottleneck due to its dog-leg turn, and various proposals have been made for dealing with it. In May 2005, one city engineer proposed restriping it to 4 lanes each direction. This would not help the slowdown, but would theoretically allow more cars through it at a given time. The tunnel is also a leading contender for a new high-occupancy toll lane using the MnPASS electronic toll collection system.

Some believe that Interstate 335, a proposed but never built freeway north of downtown between I-94 and Interstate 35W, would have alleviated the traffic problems in the tunnel. However, others have noted that the highway would not have benefited many drivers, particularly since the nearby interchange between I-35W and I-94 is missing certain links. There is no connection to carry southbound 35W traffic to eastbound 94, or westbound 94 traffic to northbound 35W, both of which would have been important flows if I-335 were to be successful.

The South/East entrance
The South/East entrance

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