Audubon Parkway

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Audubon Parkway
Length: 23.441 mi[1] (37.725 km)
West end: Pennyrile Pkwy in Henderson
East end:
US 60 BYP in Owensboro
Counties: Henderson, Daviess
Major cities: Henderson, Owensboro
Numbered highways in Kentucky
Interstates - U.S. Highways - State Highways

The Audubon Parkway is a four-lane controlled-access freeway (formerly a toll road) connecting the cities of Henderson and Owensboro, Kentucky.

Named for John James Audubon, an early American naturalist, the Audubon's western terminus is the Edward T. Breathitt Pennyrile Parkway; the eastern terminus is the U.S. 60 bypass. The road opened on December 18, 1970 at a cost of $23.5 million and, at 23.36 miles, is the shortest of the nine roads in the state's parkway system. It is also the only road in the parkway system that has not had the name of a Kentucky politician attached to it.

The road carries the unsigned designation of Kentucky Route 9005 (AU 9005).

A white and gold shield was used along the Audubon Parkway until 2006, when a new, standardized blue-on-white marker was introduced for all of Kentucky's parkways.

Contents

[edit] History

[edit] Toll removal

The last two tolled parkways left in Kentucky, the Audubon and the nearby William H. Natcher Parkway, which opened in 1972, had their tolls removed on Tuesday, November 21, 2006. Kentucky Governor Ernie Fletcher announced the removal of the tolls at the Natcher Parkway's Hartford toll plaza on September 27, 2006. Fletcher himself manned the end loader which demolished one of the Audubon's Hebbardsville toll booths during a press conference and ceremony which heralded the end of toll collections.

The Hebbardsville (KY 416) interchange has been modified slightly since the removal of tolls. The islands where the toll booths were mounted has been removed and the pavement smoothed to eliminate most evidence that the booths had ever been there. As of early 2008, the former toll road office still stands, but is likely to be removed at some point in the future. These buildings are normally demolished once they are no longer used.

[edit] Future

[edit] Interstate 369

Daviess County officials proposed in 2005 that the Audubon be upgraded to an Interstate highway, specifically suggesting the number Interstate 369. This would, according to the proposal, take place when and if Interstate 69 is extended southward from Indianapolis, Indiana through Evansville and across the Ohio River near Henderson, Kentucky. The I-369 "spur" would connect Owensboro, Kentucky to I-69, which is to be routed along the following parkways (a new bridge will be built between Henderson and Evansville):

It is a widely held belief that the Audubon would have to be significantly upgraded in order for it to be approved as an Interstate highway; specifically, the shoulders would need to be widened and the median would have to either be widened or have a safety barrier constructed along its entire 24-mile length. Any of these changes would be very expensive.

However, it would not be unheard of for the Audubon, or any of the other parkways proposed as Interstates above, to be "grandfathered" into the Interstate system by the issuance of a waiver; it has been done before, with such roads as the Kansas Turnpike, Pennsylvania Turnpike and others which do not (or did not at the time) meet the minimum Interstate standards.

[edit] Exit list

There are three interchanges along the parkway, each serving small communities in Henderson and Daviess counties. When the parkway first opened, the sole interchange was exit 10, but exits 5 and 18 were constructed in 1986.

County Location Mile[1] # Destinations Notes
Henderson Henderson 0.000 0A-B Pennyrile Parkway - Henderson Westbound only.
5.389 5 KY 1078 - Zion
Hebbardsville 10.175 10 KY 416 - Niagara, Hebbardsville
Daviess 18.043 18 KY 1554 - Stanley, Sorgho
Owensboro 23.441 24A-B
US 60 BYP - Owensboro
Eastbound only.

[edit] References

[edit] External links