travis mason-bushman
railpax @ irc.zuh.net -- #roadgeek
I've driven I-180 once while taking the long way home from Chicago to St. Louis.
It's merely a highway in the middle of nowhere that connects to Rt. 23(?).
--
Sycamore: "If ignorance is bliss,
then wipe the smile off my face."--RATM
Sycamoreland--http://www.sycamoreland.com
ICQ--7810696
The Cellar--Because you could use some smart talk and
humor during these crazy times
http://www.cellar.org
> I've driven I-180 once while taking the long way home from Chicago to St. Louis.
> It's merely a highway in the middle of nowhere that connects to Rt. 23(?).
My bad...isn't it Rt. 29?
Now, Mac does not exist anymore (eaten up by Boeing) and Boeing shut
down the St. Charles facility. However, MO 370 does provide a little
bit of rush hour relief for the I-70 Blanchette Bridge, albeit not as
much as when the Page Avenue Extension opens.
--Anthony Boor
Phoenix, AZ
It also provides a decent bypass for I-70 thru traffic using I-270.
Unfortunately, it's merge back into I-70 is a huge bottleneck -- at
least it was in August 2000, when I drove it.
IMO, Mo-370 should have been continued west of US-61 before merging
back into I-70.
Guy Olsen, PE
"My way IS the highway!!!"
--
Craig Holl
Mechanical Engineer
Waukesha, WI
http://wisconsincruise.tripod.com
It was two lanes each way when I last drove it in 1998 (before the
repaving), except on the approaches to the 'directional-Y' interchange
near the Illinois River Bridge.
--
____________________________________________________________________________
Regards,
Michael G. Koerner
Appleton, WI
***NOTICE*** SPAMfilter in use, please remove ALL 'i's from the return
address to reply. ***NOTICE***
____________________________________________________________________________
1) When did Boeing close the missile manufacturing buildings on S.R.
94 off of S.R. 370? I've been in those buildings in the past year or
so. Trust me they are well and open. In fact here is a link to a
Boeing press release regarding one of the programs that is being done
in St. Charles: http://www.boeing.com/news/releases/2001/q2/news_release_010508n.htm
Also, here is a link to the map of the St. Charles campus(select the
St. Charles (tract V) map):
http://www.boeing.com/companyoffices/aboutus/location/maps/index.html
2) MoDOT has in its most recent press release(s) of continuing work in
St. Louis county that the (past and) next couple days they are having
periodic lane closures on S.R. 370 to install the exit tabs on the
overhead signage:
http://www.modot.state.mo.us/local/d6/pressreleases/PR01011.html
http://www.modot.state.mo.us/local/d6/pressreleases/PR01010.html
I get the impression that Missouri is really not after interstate
designation for S.R. 370 but is simply making the road MUTCD compliant
by installing exit numbers on the road. The MUTCD seems to imply that
all freeways with exits need so have the exits numbered.
cc...@yahoo.com (Anthony Boor) wrote in message news:<b47697fa.01121...@posting.google.com>...
I would have preferred that S.R. 370 merged into I-70 past O'Fallon.
I would have had S.R. 370 cross over Route C (TO Mid Rivers Mall
Drive) and S.R. 79 and Possibly Route P before easing back to I-70.
I-70 is also in dire need of extra lanes east of the U.S. 40/61
interchange.
Hennepin is a steel processing facility & no steel is actually melted there.
Slabs are (were) cast & rolled into hot bands at Cleveland or Indiana Harbor &
shipped to Hennepin for pickling (acid bath to remove oxidation), cold rolling
to finished gauge & galvanizing. Almost all the steel processed there comes
from Indiana Harbor (East Chicago IN).
I think Hennepin was originally built by Youngstown Sheet & Tube, which also
owned Indiana Harbor. YS&T was folded into LTV through a series of mergers in
the '70s & early '80s. I have heard YS&T's original plan had been to make
Hennepin a fully integrated mill
(steel would have been melted & hot rolled there as well as finished).
However, after all the mergers more steel making capacity would have been
redundant so those plans were scrapped after the finishing end of Hennepin had
already been built. Had Hennepin been fully integrated it would have been a
much larger facility and I suppose it got its own Interstate in anticipation
that it would be a larger mill . . .
100 km/hr? Who do you think you are, Michael Koerner? Anyway the
reason WB 70 traffic is hell at that point is because the traffic from
wb 370 to wb 70 is trying to squeeze in. Three wb 70 lanes plus three
wb 370 lanes make six lanes, the two right ones exit off for Rte C,
then the remaining right fourth lane ends and traffic must merge left.
So all six lanes, sans the exiting traffic at Mid Rivers, has to
squeeze back down to three.
>
> I would have preferred that S.R. 370 merged into I-70 past O'Fallon.
> I would have had S.R. 370 cross over Route C (TO Mid Rivers Mall
> Drive) and S.R. 79 and Possibly Route P before easing back to I-70.
> I-70 is also in dire need of extra lanes east of the U.S. 40/61
> interchange.
>
> > It also provides a decent bypass for I-70 thru traffic using I-270.
> > Unfortunately, it's merge back into I-70 is a huge bottleneck -- at
> > least it was in August 2000, when I drove it.
> >
> > IMO, Mo-370 should have been continued west of US-61 before merging
> > back into I-70.
> >
> > Guy Olsen, PE
> >
You both are probably right; however, the Page Avenue Extension's full
completion will probably take enough traffic off of 70. But still,
even with that, 70 needs more lanes.
--Anthony Boor
Phoenix, AZ
Well I was told my someone that the St. Charles facilities were
closed, but I'll take your word for it. Still, I think the road was
built more to pander to MAC than as a bypass.
>
> 2) MoDOT has in its most recent press release(s) of continuing work in
> St. Louis county that the (past and) next couple days they are having
> periodic lane closures on S.R. 370 to install the exit tabs on the
> overhead signage:
> http://www.modot.state.mo.us/local/d6/pressreleases/PR01011.html
> http://www.modot.state.mo.us/local/d6/pressreleases/PR01010.html
>
> I get the impression that Missouri is really not after interstate
> designation for S.R. 370 but is simply making the road MUTCD compliant
> by installing exit numbers on the road. The MUTCD seems to imply that
> all freeways with exits need so have the exits numbered.
True, as long as AASHTO wants to make them use I-870 instead of I-370
for it.
--Anthony Boor
Phoenix, AZ