Interstate 575
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| Interstate 575 Auxiliary route of the Interstate Highway System |
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| Phillip M. Landrum Memorial Highway Maintained by Georgia DOT |
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| Length: | 30.97 mi[1] (49.84 km) | ||||||||
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| Formed: | 1979; 1985 | ||||||||
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| North end: | |||||||||
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Interstate 575 (I-575) is an Interstate Highway spur route in the United States, which branches off Interstate 75 in Kennesaw and connects the metro Atlanta area with the north Georgia mountains. I-575 is also the unsigned State Route 417 and is cosigned as SR 5. I-575 begins in northern Cobb County near Kennesaw and goes mostly through Cherokee County, ending at its northern border with Pickens County, where it continues as SR 515. It is officially 31 miles (49.85 km) long, though this extends it past a surface intersection.
It is also the Phillip M. Landrum Memorial Highway in honor of Phillip M. Landrum, who was a U.S. Representative from Georgia and died in 1990.
The exit from I-75 to I-575 was formerly exit #115 and it is now mile #268. This change was made when Georgia DOT went from numbering exits consecutively to numbering them by the closest mile marker.
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[edit] Route description
For almost all of its length, I-575 has two lanes in each direction, with a road median of grass, along with crepe myrtle (a locally-common landscaping tree) or wildflowers, both of which are summer-flowering. Each direction has one truck lane for climbing uphill (mile 12 to 13 northbound, mile 10 to 9 southbound), two extended acceleration lanes (north from Towne Lake Parkway and south from Marietta Highway), and two originally two auxiliary lanes (connecting Bells Ferry and Chastain Roads).
The city of Holly Springs recently annexed land to Sixes Road. Other cities that have annexed I-575 include Canton and Ball Ground.
I-575 crosses the Little River between Woodstock and Holly Springs, and has four bridges over the Etowah River in northeastern Canton, as it flows under the southern half of the Riverstone Parkway (former SR 5) exit. It also crosses Noonday Creek between Barrett Parkway and Chastain Road, at the northeast corner of Town Center at Cobb regional mall. That stream roughly follows the freeway northward on the east side of the road, passing alongside the northbound ramp to SR 92, and then crossing back under to the northwest just before Towne Lake Parkway.
At the Canton and Holly Springs exit, the two city limits meet. Here the road (old SR 5) was realigned to cross 575 at a more perpendicular angle when I-575 was constructed. This left two dead-end streets: Hiram Way in Holly Springs, and Travis Tritt Lane in Canton. Just north of here, I-575 crosses Univeter Road.
[edit] History
Like I-985, I-575 was mostly constructed as a suburban spur highway, intended to serve an undeveloped area for future settlement, rather than as one to relive traffic, or to link I-75 to an existing city or large town. It has since accelerated land development and population growth in the area far beyond what GDOT predicted, essentially causing its own traffic. (After just 20 years, it carried as many cars per day as it was expected to in 40 years.)
The first stage of I-575 was constructed in 1979 from I-75 to SR 92 near Woodstock and was opened to traffic on October 16, 1980. The next section to Georgia 20 began construction in 1981, and was opened on March 29, 1985 as far north as exit 11 (now mile 20). The section between the original exit 8 (now 16A) and exit 10 (now 19) was originally part of the Canton Bypass (SR 20), which was constructed in 1978. The final portion of I-575 to past Howell Bridge Road and SR 372 opened later, and that extended the highway to its present length of 31 miles (50 km), although the northernmost one mile (1.6 km) given in this length was not constructed up to Interstate Highway standards, since it extends past a surface ("at-grade") intersection. This final portion north of Canton was constructed of concrete rather than asphalt, and narrow black lines run on either side of the white lane markings.
The road was last repaved in summer 2009, with funds from the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act. In 2008, GDOT added a guard rail of sorts, with cables streched taut across metal posts down the median. While apparently intended to prevent head-on collisions, this choice of barriers creates a strobe light effect from the headlights of oncoming traffic, which is annoying for drivers and possibly deadly for epileptic ones.
[edit] Auxiliary lanes
In February 2006, GDOT let two bids to add auxiliary lanes in both directions on the road shoulder, in between two pairs of short-spaced exits. The larger project was in Woodstock between Georgia 92 and Towne Lake Parkway, where nearly two million dollars were spent. This was in a mainly grassy area next to an RV dealership on the east (northbound) side. On the opposite side, it required a noise barrier wall north of Dupree Road because of its proximity to existing homes. The other bid was for a much shorter distance of just a few yards or meters on the northeast side of Canton, between SR 20 (Cumming Highway) and SR 5 Business (Riverstone Parkway).
[edit] Relocation of State Route 5
I-575 is now co-signed throughout its length with SR 5, which was completely removed from its former alignment in 1985–86 over a nearly 70-mile (110 km) stretch from Marietta all the way to north of Ellijay—far beyond the I-575 terminal point. SR 205 was also deleted when I-575 opened in Cherokee County in 1985, returning what is now the northernmost part of Bells Ferry Road to local responsibility. Part of its old route was briefly designated by a state project route number that appeared on maps as SR 754. This mostly consisted of a widening project planned on the route. The counties along the way did not want to fund it since the route had been state-maintained, and then returned to county maintenance in 1986. When Woodstock, Georgia rejected that widening project (as it would have destroyed its downtown area), SR 754 was truncated south of SR 92, and it was fully turned back in 2001 when the entire project was completed. State route 754 was not signed, however it still continues to appear on Google Maps and other web mapping services as of 2009[update].
Most of the former SR 5 did not get such treatment, and all of it was originally deleted except a portion in Canton, Georgia designated as SR 5 Business and another part that joined SR 372 to the new route using part of the old route. Another such SR 5 Business was added from old Georgia 5 in Ball Ground in 1989, completing a business loop through Ball Ground that is still largely covered by Georgia 372. Georgia 5 continues northward co-signed with SR 515, Corridor A of the Appalachian Development Highway System. Along this route, SR 5 and SR 5 Alternate have been abandoned by the state and left to the counties and cities to maintain. The Georgia Northeastern Railroad still follows much of the old route.
[edit] SR 20 exit
| This section requires expansion. |
[edit] Future
[edit] Widening
The southern part of I-575 was slated to be widened to a total of six through lanes in the next few years, as part of the Northwest Corridor HOV/BRT plan from the GRTA. The extra lane in each direction would extend up to Sixes Road, and was planned to be an HOV/HOT lane, with special exits at smaller roads that currently do not have any direct access. GRTA proposes bus rapid transit along the route.
There would also be separate new HOV ramps built to southbound and from northbound I-75. That highway was proposed to have eight lanes added to it, with one pair going straight to I-575. All widening on I-575 would be done in the median.
In 2009, the plan was scaled-back to include two reversible lanes on I-75, with one extending up I-575.
[edit] Rope Mill Road
A new exit has also been approved in October 2005 by the GDOT at Rope Mill Road (Ashland Parkway to the west, Woodstock Parkway to the east and south), between Towne Lake Parkway and Sixes Road. This is planned to be a full diamond interchange, rather than an HOV/HOT exit. Crossing at mile 9.6, it could be given mile number 9 or 10, and would have been 5A under the actual exit numbers used until 2000. The project will cost 22 million dollars[2]. However, the project is part of a greater plan to create a northern by-pass of Woodstock, connecting north of the downtown to Arnold Mill Road, helping to relieve some of the congestion in the traffic-prone downtown. The intent to create a new area of development around the exit, however, is clear.
The background on Rope Mill Road was that the overpass presently there originally was built to provide access to private property and the now-defunct Little River Wildlife Management Area west of I-575. The overpass was actually part of an old alignment of Rope Mill Road that was relocated onto a frontage road east of I-575, so the bridge was basically a connection to a severed alignment of the road west of I-575. Rope Mill Road itself originally extended from Woodstock to Lebanon (locally known as Toonigh) before the bridge over the Little River was removed in the early 1990s.
Federal Highway Administration officials had earlier rejected the plan due to its proximity to two other exits. There had also been a plan to put only a half-diamond exit on the north side of the road, using Woodstock Parkway on the east side and a new access road on the west side to connect it to Towne Lake, which would then have its ramps on the north side removed. Woodstock Parkway would have become northbound-only, with the new road being southbound only. This was objected to by residents who would have been up against the new road. [3]
[edit] Others
Sixes Road was widened from a two-lane road to a four-lane divided highway west of I-575 to Bells Ferry Road, where it continues into the BridgeMill development. The short section east of I-575, to where it ends at old highway 5, is also slated for widening. Dates for this section are not yet firm.
[edit] Exit list
| This section contains a table that is missing mileposts for one or more junctions. Please help by adding the missing mileposts. |
The following exits are listed south to north with mile-log numbering, which replaced the old sequential exit numbers in 2000.
| County | Location | Mile | # | old | Destinations | Notes |
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| Cobb | Southbound exit and northbound entrance | |||||
| 1 | 1 | |||||
| 3 | 2 | Chastain Road | access from I-575 south to I-75 north, I-75 south to I-575 north | |||
| 4 | 3 | |||||
| Cherokee | 7 | 4 | ||||
| 8 | 5 | Towne Lake Parkway – Woodstock | ||||
| 11 | 6 | Sixes Road – Holly Springs | ||||
| 14 | 7 | Old SR 5 (Canton Road) – Holly Springs | Road is named "Marietta Highway" north of the interchange and is generally referred to still as "Highway 5", which appears on most street name signs. | |||
| 16A | 8 | South end of SR 20/SR 140 overlap; exit is southernmost extent of the old Canton By-Pass, which opened prior to the completion of I-575 as a new alignment of SR 20 and forms a short freeway stretch to Marietta Highway; former SR 5 | ||||
| 16B | 9 | North end of SR 140 overlap | ||||
| 19 | 10 | North end of SR 20 overlap | ||||
| 20 | 11 | |||||
| 24 | 12 | Airport Drive - Cherokee County Airport, Ball Ground | ||||
| 27 | 13 | |||||
| Northbound exit and southbound entrance |
[edit] References
- Georgia Department of Transportation, Office of Transportation Data (2003). Interstate Mileage Report (438 Report). http://www.dot.state.ga.us/DOT/plan-prog/transportation_data/400reports/2003/dpp438_2003.pdf.
- ^ "Route Log and Finder List - Interstate System: Table 2". FHWA. http://www.fhwa.dot.gov/reports/routefinder/table2.cfm. Retrieved 2007-10-08.
- ^ Dixon, Crystal (January 1), "Banner Year", Cherokee Tribune, http://cherokeetribune.com/pages/full_story/push?article-Banner+year%20&id=5407248, retrieved January 3, 2010
- ^ [1]
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