Minnesota State Highway 280

Trunk Highway 280 marker

Trunk Highway 280
Route information
Defined by MS § 161.115(211)
Maintained by Mn/DOT
Length: 3.710 mi[1] (5.971 km)
Existed: 1959 – present
Major junctions
South end: I-94 in Saint Paul
North end: I-35W in Roseville
Location
Counties: Ramsey
Highway system
  • Minnesota Trunk Highways
MN 277MN 282

Minnesota State Highway 280 (MN 280) is a highway in the Twin Cities region of Minnesota that runs from its interchange with Interstate 94 in Saint Paul to its interchange with Interstate 35W in Roseville. The route is about 4 miles (6.4 km) long.

Highway 280 is an important connector route because the junction of Interstate 94 and Interstate 35W in nearby downtown Minneapolis is not a complete interchange.

Route description

Highway 280 serves as a northsouth route along the western edge of Ramsey County, between the city of Saint Paul and suburban Roseville. The highway passes through the small city of Lauderdale between Saint Paul and Roseville. Highway 280 is largely built on a slope, providing an excellent view of downtown Minneapolis to the west, particularly for southbound vehicles.

The route has a 55 MPH posted speed limit over its entire length.

Highway 280 is built to freeway standards from its interchange with Interstate 94 to its interchange with East Hennepin Avenue/Larpenteur Avenue, although the entrance/exit ramps at Como Avenue are rather tight. This section of the route has auxiliary lanes between University Avenue and the Kasota Avenue/Energy Park Drive exit. There is a signal-controlled intersection at Broadway Street NE on southbound 280 only. The 280/35W interchange in Roseville is incomplete, so traffic from 280 northbound cannot reach 35W southbound without using intersecting surface streets, and the same is true for northbound 35W traffic attempting to reach southbound 280.[2]

History

Highway 280 was authorized on July 1, 1949,[3] but did not begin construction until 1955. It was completed between Highway 36 and Kasota Avenue in 1959[4][5] and to University Avenue (at that time, highways 12, 52, 56, and 218) in 1961.[6][7] The highway was linked to Interstate 94 in 1968 upon the freeway's completion between Minneapolis and St. Paul.[8][9]

South of Como Avenue, 280 was widened and its ramps improved in the mid-1990s. The Larpenteur Avenue/East Hennepin Avenue interchange in Lauderdale was reconstructed in 2009 to eliminate the tight, no-acceleration-lane ramps. The intersection at County Road B was also closed permanently in 2009, as were the unsignaled intersections at Roselawn Avenue and Walnut Street. With construction completed in December 2009, the signal at Broadway Street was modified to allow left turns from northbound 280, thus maintaining a stoplight for southbound 280 only, but Broadway Street traffic can now only turn right (south). Thus, 280 is now in a sense a northbound freeway only, with a single stoplight for southbound traffic.

The 2009 construction project also rehabilitated the concrete pavement between Interstate 94 and Territorial Road. The project also included replacement of the BNSF Railroad bridge on Larpenteur Avenue west of 280; placement of a new median on 280 from south of Como Avenue to Larpenteur Avenue; and noise walls along 280's east side.

Highway 280 was originally proposed (in the 1960s) to continue farther, turning westward south of its Interstate 94 junction in Saint Paul, and then continuing west into Minneapolis as a freeway running roughly along 28th Street. The route would have continued westbound to about France Avenue South. That freeway was never built, and the ramp stubs at Saint Paul's 94/280 junction were removed in the early 1980s.

Highway 280 as detour route for I-35W

Because of the I-35W Mississippi River Bridge Collapse in nearby Minneapolis on August 1, 2007, Highway 280 was designated by Mn/DOT as the official detour route for I-35W, resulting in its temporary conversion into a full freeway by closing the intersections at County Road B, Broadway Street, Walnut Street, and Roselawn Avenue. Despite the replacement I-35W bridge's opening on September 18, 2008, many of 280's at-grade intersections were not reopened.[10]

Plans for a permanent 280 reconfiguration, per information provided by Mn/DOT officials at the open house meeting on October 21, 2008, involved the following:

Construction began in the Spring of 2009, along with the replacement for the Larpenteur Avenue/East Hennepin Avenue interchange along 280. The construction project was completed in December 2009.

Exit list

The entire route is in Ramsey County.

Locationmi[1]kmDestinationsNotes
St. Paul0.0000.000 I-94I-94 exit 236.
0.000–
0.794
0.000–
1.278
CR 34 (University Avenue), Territorial Road
1.176–
1.231
1.893–
1.981
Kasota Avenue, CR 32 (Energy Park Drive)
1.771–
1.858
2.850–
2.990
Como Avenue
Lauderdale2.193–
2.428
3.529–
3.907
CR 30 (Larpenteur Avenue), CR 52 (Hennepin Avenue)
2.9204.699Broadway StreetSignalized at-grade intersection,
no access from Broadway to northbound 280
RosevilleTerminal Road
3.648–
3.710
5.871–
5.971
I-35W north / MN 36 eastI-35W exit 23A; northbound exit & southbound entrance.
1.000 mi = 1.609 km; 1.000 km = 0.621 mi

References

Route map: Google

KML is from Wikidata
  1. 1 2 "Trunk Highway Log Point Listing - Construction District 5" (PDF). Minnesota Department of Transportation. August 20, 2010. Retrieved January 23, 2010.
  2. "Review of Freeway Planning at Downtown Minneapolis". Twin Cities Highways by Adam Froehlig - ajfroggie.com. Retrieved April 6, 2006.
  3. "Chapter 663-H.F. No. 1792", Session Laws of Minnesota for 1949, Earl L. Berg, Commissioner of Administration, pp. 1177–1185
  4. 1959 Official Road Map of Minnesota (Map). Cartography by The H.M. Gousha Company. Minnesota Department of Highways. 1959. Metropolitan St. Paul-Minneapolis inset. Retrieved January 23, 2011.
  5. (Map). Minnesota Department of Highways. 1960. Metropolitan St. Paul-Minneapolis inset http://reflections.mndigital.org/cdm4/document.php?CISOROOT=/mdt&CISOPTR=1198&REC=19. Retrieved January 23, 2011. Missing or empty |title= (help)
  6. 1961 Official Road Map of Minnesota (Map). Cartography by The H.M. Gousha Company. Minnesota Department of Highways. 1961. Metropolitan St. Paul-Minneapolis inset. Retrieved January 23, 2011.
  7. 1962 Official Road Map of Minnesota (Map). Cartography by The H.M. Gousha Company. Minnesota Department of Highways. 1962. Metropolitan St. Paul-Minneapolis inset. Retrieved January 23, 2011.
  8. 1968-1969 Official Highway Map of Minnesota (Map). Minnesota Department of Highways. 1968. Metropolitan St. Paul-Minneapolis inset. Retrieved January 23, 2011.
  9. 1969 Official Highway Map of Minnesota (Map). Minnesota Department of Highways. 1969. Metropolitan St. Paul-Minneapolis inset. Retrieved January 23, 2011.
  10. "Mn/DOT News Release - October 10, 2008". Retrieved November 12, 2008.

*Mn/DOT. Ramsey County General Highway Map. Accessed May 7, 2010. *Mn/DOT. Highway 280 Construction Project Page. Year 2009. Accessed May 7, 2010. *Steve Riner Details of Routes 219 to 287. Unofficial Minnesota Highways Page. Retrieved April 6, 2006.

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