SuperRedTan Interchange

SuperRedTan Interchange

Aerial photo of the SuperRedTan Interchange
Location
Mesa, Arizona
Coordinates: 33°23′12″N 111°38′53″W / 33.38667°N 111.64806°WCoordinates: 33°23′12″N 111°38′53″W / 33.38667°N 111.64806°W
Roads at
junction:

US 60 (Superstition Freeway)

SR 202 (Red Mountain Freeway / Santan Freeway)
Construction
Opened: 2007
Maintained by: ADOT
Map

The SuperRedTan Interchange is a symmetrical four-level freeway interchange in eastern Mesa, Arizona. Completed in 2007, the interchange provides access between U.S. Route 60 and Loop 202. It is fully directional, meaning that a motorist traveling towards the interchange in any direction can exit onto either direction of the intersecting freeway.[1] The interchange is said to be the first in the Valley of the Sun to include design icons on the support columns in addition to the retaining walls. There are no HOV connections at this time, although they are planned in the future.[2]

Etymology

The name SuperRedTan is a portmanteau of the names of three area freeways that intersect at this point. The name borrows the bolded portions of the following to form the word SuperRedTan.[3]

Construction

In order to successfully create the SuperRedTan Interchange, twelve bridges were built for a combined bridge deck area of 321,000 square feet (29,800 m2). All of the bridges were built using cast-in-place concrete, with post-tensioned box girders. There was 60,511 feet (18,444 m) of mechanically stabilized earth walls with some segments reaching up to 53 feet (16 m) tall. 162,040 feet (49,390 m) of soundwalls were also built within the project area to minimize the amount of decibels that the interchange was projected to generate the surrounding communities. The SuperRedTan Interchange project also consisted of widening the Superstition Freeway between Power and Crismon Roads, and constructing Loop 202 from scratch from the interchange north to University Drive. Phased construction lasted four years, from 2003 to 2007, and cost $116 million USD. It was funded through Proposition 300, which was passed in 1985 by Maricopa County voters.[4]

See also

References

  1. "Loop 202 (Red Mountain Freeway)". ADOT. Archived from the original on 2008-01-11. Retrieved 2008-02-01.
  2. Maricopa Association of Governments (September 2005). "2005 Annual Report on the Status of the Implementation of Proposition 400" (PDF). p. 48. Retrieved 2009-01-04.
  3. "SuperRedTan Interchange". Associated Construction Publications. Retrieved 2008-08-30.
  4. "US 60 (Superstition Freeway)". ADOT. Archived from the original on 2007-12-11. Retrieved 2008-02-01.