Wisconsin Highway 16
State Trunk Highway 16 | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|
Route information | ||||
Maintained by WisDOT | ||||
Length: | 193.2 mi[1] (310.9 km) | |||
Major junctions | ||||
West end: | US 14 / US 61 in La Crosse | |||
East end: | I-94 in Waukesha | |||
Location | ||||
Counties: | La Crosse, Monroe, Juneau, Sauk, Columbia, Dodge, Jefferson, Waukesha | |||
Highway system | ||||
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State Trunk Highway 16 (often called Highway 16, STH 16 or WIS 16) is a Wisconsin state highway running from Pewaukee across the state to La Crosse. Much of its route in the state parallels the former mainline of the Chicago, Milwaukee, St. Paul and Pacific Railroad (Milwaukee Road). The route parallels I-90 or I-94 for most of its length in the state. It serves local traffic in nearby cities including La Crosse, Tomah, Wisconsin Dells, Portage, Columbus, Watertown, Oconomowoc and Waukesha. The highway is mainly two-lane surface road or urban multilane expressway from La Crosse to Oconomowoc, and is a freeway east of Oconomowoc.
Route description
WIS 16 enters from Minnesota via a connection with Trunk Highway 16 on the Mississippi River, concurrent with US 14 and US 61. After the two US routes turn south to follow 3rd Street in downtown La Crosse, WIS 16 passes through La Crosse via Cass and 7th St and West Ave, crossing Wisconsin Highway 35 at Lang Drive. WIS 16 passes the northern edge of the University of Wisconsin–La Crosse campus, then turns north at Losey Boulevard North.[2]
The route then turns northeastward and junctions with I-90 six miles (10 km) northeast of the city. WIS 16 becomes a parallel route to I-90 and passes through West Salem where it connects with WIS 108. Wisconsin Highway 162 junctions just north of Bangor. WIS 16 crosses into Monroe County in Rockland.[3] WIS 16 enters Sparta and junctions with WIS 21, WIS 27, and WIS 71. WIS 16 provides access to the Elroy-Sparta State Bike Trail.
The route then follows I-90 very closely as a frontage road to Tomah where it junctions with WIS 131 and joins US 12. The highways continue paralleling I-90 and I-94 southeast and pass through Oakdale and into Juneau County[4]
WIS 16 and US 12 pass through Camp Douglas and cross WIS 80 in New Lisbon. The highways then junction with WIS 58 and WIS 82 in Mauston as they continue southeast. The routes slowly trek eastward and pass through Lyndon Station where Rocky Arbor State Park is located. The highways turn southeast again and crossing the Interstates and into Sauk County and Wisconsin Dells.[5]
WIS 16 turns east off of US 12 onto WIS 13 north and passes through downtown Wisconsin Dells and into Columbia County. WIS 23 East also joins the highways at the same point.[6] WIS 16 turns off from WIS 13 and WIS 23 and junctions with WIS 127 one mile (1.6 km) southeast. WIS 16 follows the Wisconsin River into Portage, meeting the other terminus of WIS 127 at the interchange with I-39.
The highway then passes through Portage, crossing WIS 33 and joining US 51 south for five miles (8 km). WIS 16 turns east off the US route and crosses WIS 22 in Wyocena and passes through Rio, Doylestown and Fall River. WIS 60 joins WIS 16 and together, they cross US 151, WIS 73 and junction with WIS 89 in Columbus as they enter Dodge County[7]
WIS 16 and WIS 60 turn east and pass through the unincorporated town of Astico and Lowell. WIS 16 leaves WIS 60 and joins WIS 26 at the junction of the two highways in Clyman. WIS 16 leaves WIS 26 and bypasses Watertown to the north and east and into Jefferson County.[8] WIS 19 terminates on WIS 16 east of Watertown.
WIS 16 passes around Ixonia, becomes an expressway, and enters Waukesha County along a bypass of Oconomowoc.[9] WIS 67 joins the expressway north of Oconomowoc. WIS 16 turns east onto the freeway segment and passes into Hartland, crossing WIS 83 there. WIS 190, also known as Capitol Drive, terminates at WIS 16 as the freeway turns south in Pewaukee WIS 16 ends at a flyover Interchange and its traffic merges onto I-94 east near Waukesha[10]
History
In 1918, today's alignment of WIS 16 was WIS 21 from La Crosse to New Lisbon, along with WIS 12 east of Tomah. The route from Kilbourn (Wisconsin Dells) to Clyman was WIS 29. WIS 26 followed its current alignent to Watertown and the route from Watertown to Waukesha was WIS 19.[11] WIS 29 was extended westward to La Crosse when WIS 21 was truncated back to north of New Lisbon. When the U.S. Routes debuted in 1926, WIS 29 was removed from the books as the entire alignment was replaced by US 16.[12] WIS 19 was truncated back to its current terminus.
The current eastern terminus of WIS 16 was the site of the dedication ceremonies for the first completed segment of Interstate 94 in Wisconsin. The segment was opened on September 4, 1958. The first major interchange on the new Interstate was originally where US 16 turned north towards Pewaukee and WIS 30 continued west with I-94. The section of US 16 between the interchange outside of Waukesha and downtown Milwaukee was truncated at the interchange in the 1960s. US 16's designation was removed from the route and replaced with the current WIS 16 in 1978.[13]
The origninal WIS 16 followed present day WIS 29 from Chippewa Falls to Green Bay via Wausau and Shawano. The route then followed a route that would become US 141 to Manitowoc where it ended at then WIS 17 (present day WIS 42).[1]
Oconomowoc bypass
The alignment of the eastern section of Highway 16 changed in late 2006 when the rest of the Oconomowoc bypass was opened to traffic. The four-lane, limited access divided highway routes Highway 16 around Lac La Belle on the west side of the city, meeting up with Highway 67 north of downtown. Eventually, the bypass will result in the removal of the state highway designation from Wisconsin Avenue through downtown Oconomowoc.
The signs for Highway 16 through downtown Oconomowoc have not yet been changed, due to the reconstruction of Wisconsin Avenue through the downtown area during the summer of 2008. [14] As of November 2008, Oconomowoc officials and WISDOT had not yet set a firm date for the jurisdictional transfer, though it is likely that it will be done by the summer of 2009.[15]
Currently, the limited-access highway around Oconomowoc is designated as Wisconsin Highway 16 on signage. Some signage, especially the signs located at the end of the freeway segment on West Highway 16 when a right turn must be made to continue on the bypass, say Bypass West Wisconsin Highway 16. [16]
Major intersections
County | Location | mi | km | Exit[17] | Destinations | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
La Crosse | La Crosse | 0 | 0 | US 14 west / US 61 north / MN 16 west – La Crescent | Continuation into Minnesota | |
Mississippi River Bridge | ||||||
US 14 east / US 61 south (3rd Street South) / US 53 north (4th Street South) | Eastern terminus of US 14 / US 61 concurrency; national end of US 53 | |||||
WIS 35 (West Avenue North) | ||||||
WIS 157 | ||||||
Onalaska | I-90 | Exit 5 along I-90 | ||||
West Salem | WIS 108 north | |||||
Town of Burns | WIS 162 north | Western terminus of WIS 162 concurrency | ||||
WIS 162 south | Eastern terminus of WIS 162 concurrency | |||||
Monroe | Sparta | WIS 27 west (S. Blackwater Street) / WIS 71 | Western terminus of WIS 71 concurrency | |||
WIS 21 east (S. Water Street) | ||||||
WIS 71 east | Eastern terminus of WIS 71 concurrency | |||||
I-90 | Exit 28 along I-90 | |||||
Tomah | US 12 west / WIS 131 south (Gasoline Alley) | Western terminus of US 12 concurrency | ||||
I-90 | Exit 43 along I-90 | |||||
Juneau | New Lisbon | WIS 80 north (E. Bridge Street) | Western terminus of WIS 80 concurrency | |||
WIS 80 south (S. Monroe Street) | Eastern terminus of WIS 80 concurrency | |||||
Mauston | WIS 58 south / WIS 82 west (Division Street) | Western terminus of WIS 58 / WIS 82 concurrency | ||||
WIS 58 north / WIS 82 east (N. Union Street) | Eastern terminus of WIS 58 / WIS 82 concurrency | |||||
Wisconsin Dells | I-90 / I-94 | Exit 85 along I-90 / I-94 | ||||
Sauk | US 12 east / WIS 23 south (Wisconsin Dells Parkway) / WIS 13 west | Eastern terminus of US 12 concurrency; western terminus of WIS 13 / WIS 23 concurrency | ||||
Columbia | WIS 13 north / WIS 23 east | WWIS 16 West / WIS 23 West follow WIS 13 South | ||||
WIS 127 | ||||||
Portage | I-39 / WIS 127 | |||||
US 51 / WIS 33 | WIS 16 East follow US 51 South | |||||
US 51 south | WIS 16 West follow US 51 North | |||||
Wyocena | WIS 22 | Interchange | ||||
Rio | CTH-B / CTH-C | |||||
Doylestown | CTH-A | |||||
Fall River | WIS 146 | |||||
Columbus | WIS 60 west | WIS 60 East follow WIS 16 East | ||||
US 151 | ||||||
WIS 73 / WIS 89 | ||||||
Dodge | Astico | CTH-T | ||||
Lowell | CTH-G | |||||
Clyman | WIS 26 north / WIS 60 east | WIS 60 West follow WIS 16 West WIS 26 South follow WIS 16 East | ||||
Watertown | WIS 26 south | WIS 26 North follow WIS 16 West | ||||
Jefferson | WIS 19 | Eastbound Entrance; Westbound Exit | ||||
Ixonia | CTH-F | expressway begins | ||||
Waukesha | Oconomowoc | WIS 67 north | WIS 67 South follow WIS 16 East | |||
WIS 67 south | WIS 67 North follow WIS 16 West | |||||
176 | CTH-P – Brown St (North), Gifford Rd (South) | CTH P runs North on Brown Street | ||||
Oconomowoc Lake | 178 | CTH-P – Sawyer Rd | CTH P runs South on Sawyer Rd; Sawyer Rd ends North of exit | |||
Nashotah | 179 | CTH-C – Lakeland Dr (Nashotah, Delafield) | ||||
Hartland | 181 | WIS 83 – Hartland, Delafield, Chenequa | ||||
182 | CTH-E – North Ave (Hartland, Merton) | Eastbound exit only; Westbound entrance only; Hartbrook Dr runs parallel on North side | ||||
183 | CTH-KC – Merton Ave (Hartland, Merton) | Eastbound entrance only; Westbound exit only; Hartbrook Dr runs parallel on North side | ||||
184 | CTH-JK / CTH-KE – Jungbluth Rd (North), North Shore Dr (South) | |||||
Pewaukee | 186 | CTH-KF – Ryan St | ||||
187 | WIS 190 – Capitol Dr | |||||
188 | CTH-JJ – Main St | |||||
— | I-94 – Milwaukee | Eastbound exit, no access to westbound 94 | ||||
1.000 mi = 1.609 km; 1.000 km = 0.621 mi
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References
- 1 2 Bessert, Chris. "Wisconsin Highways: Highways 10-19 (Highway 16)". Wisconsin Highways. Retrieved 2007-03-30.
- ↑ Google (2008-01-16). "La Crosse, WI, United States of America" (Map). Google Maps. Google. Retrieved 2008-01-16.
- ↑ La Crosse Co (pdf) (Map). Wisconsin Department of Transportation. Retrieved 2008-01-16.
- ↑ Monroe Co (pdf) (Map). Wisconsin Department of Transportation. Retrieved 2008-01-16.
- ↑ juneau Co (pdf) (Map). Wisconsin Department of Transportation. Retrieved 2008-01-16.
- ↑ Sauk Co (pdf) (Map). Wisconsin Department of Transportation. Retrieved 2008-01-16.
- ↑ Columbia Co (pdf) (Map). Wisconsin Department of Transportation. Retrieved 2008-01-16.
- ↑ Dodge Co (pdf) (Map). Wisconsin Department of Transportation. Retrieved 2008-01-16.
- ↑ Jefferson Co (pdf) (Map). Wisconsin Department of Transportation. Retrieved 2008-01-16.
- ↑ Waukesha Co (pdf) (Map). Wisconsin Department of Transportation. Retrieved 2008-01-16.
- ↑ "Original State Trunk Highway System in Wisconsin". Southeast Wisconsin Regional Planning Commission. 1918. Retrieved 2008-01-16.
- ↑ "Rand McNally Auto Road Atlas". Rand McNally. 1926. Retrieved 2007-01-16.
- ↑ Special Committee on U.S. Route Numbering (June 29, 1978). "Route Numbering Committee Agenda Showing Action Taken by the Executive Committee" (PDF) (Report). Coeur d'Alene, ID: American Association of State Highway and Transportation Officials. p. 3. Retrieved 2015-09-02 – via Wikimedia Commons.
- ↑ Amy Rinard. "Oconomowoc road work near; Highway 16 affected through downtown; merchants prepared". Retrieved 2008-03-17.
- ↑ Matthew Inda. "Highway 16 transfer date uncertain; might be Jan. 1 - Touchups, roadside plantings to be completed". Retrieved 2008-11-19.
- ↑ Wisconsin Department of Transportation. "Oconomowoc Bypass Project page". Retrieved 2007-03-30.
- ↑ Wisconsin Department of Transportation. "Highway 16 exit numbers". Retrieved 2007-03-30.
External links
- Media related to Wisconsin Highway 16 at Wikimedia Commons