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==Route description==
==Route description==
The designation of the expressway begins at the state line, where the [[Kingery Expressway]] becomes the Borman. It has interchanges with 11 roads, such as [[U.S. Route 41]], [[Indiana State Road 912|Cline Avenue]], and [[Interstate 65]]. At the [[Indiana Toll Road]], [[Interstate 80]] turns eastward. The highway after the Toll Road, now designated solely as [[Interstate 94]], continues eastward towards [[Michigan City, Indiana|Michigan City]] and [[Detroit, Michigan|Detroit]].<ref name="length" /> [[Detroit, Michigan|Detroit]] is the control city going eastward on Interstate 94, from the Indiana/Illinois border all the way through Michigan. The control cities for the Borman Expressway are [[Chicago, Illinois|Chicago]] and [[Detroit, Michigan|Detroit]].
{| class="infobox" width="230px"
!style="background: #ccf;"|<big>Major cities</big><br><small>'''Bolded cities''' are officially-designated [[control city|control cities]] for signs</small><ref name="cities">{{cite web|url=http://users.adelphia.net/~pwolf/controlcities.html|title=List of Control Cities for Use in Guide Signs on Interstate Highways|publisher=[[AASHTO]]|year=2001|accessdate=2007-06-21}}</ref>
|-
|
*'''[[Chicago, Illinois]]'''
*'''[[Detroit, Michigan]]'''
|}

The designation of the expressway begins at the state line, where the [[Kingery Expressway]] becomes the Borman. It has interchanges with 11 roads, such as [[U.S. Route 41]], [[Indiana State Road 912|Cline Avenue]], and [[Interstate 65]]. At the [[Indiana Toll Road]], [[Interstate 80]] turns eastward. The highway after the Toll Road, now designated solely as [[Interstate 94]], continues eastward towards [[Michigan City, Indiana|Michigan City]] and [[Detroit, Michigan|Detroit]].<ref name="length" /> [[Detroit, Michigan|Detroit]] is the control city going eastward on Interstate 94, from the Indiana/Illinois border all the way through Michigan.


==History==
==History==

Revision as of 15:27, 9 April 2008


Route information
Maintained by INDOT
Length15.46 mi[1] (24.88 km)
Major junctions
Major intersections I-65 in Gary
Location
CountryUnited States
StateIndiana
CountiesLake
Highway system
  • Indiana State Highway System
Borman Expressway 3 Level Interchange at Cline Avenue IN SR 912

The Frank Borman Expressway is an east-west highway in northwest portion of the U.S. state of Indiana, carrying Interstate 80, Interstate 94, and U.S. Highway 6, as well as a short section of U.S. Highway 41. The designation begins from the Illinois state line east to the Lake/Porter County Line, just east of the junction with the Indiana Toll Road. The Borman Expressway has been identified in federal transportation legislation as part of High Priority Corridor 18, Segment 27, making current and future construction projects on I-94 eligible for federal funding in association with extending Interstate 69 to the Texas/Mexico border.

The Borman Expressway is a major truck thoroughfare, providing a free alternative to the Indiana Toll Road/Chicago Skyway combination (Interstate 90) to the north. Originally constructed in segments starting in the 1950s, with its Illinois counterpart, the Kingery Expressway, reconstruction of the expressway began in 2004.[2]

The Borman Expressway is named after Frank Borman, commander of the Apollo 8 space mission, who was born in Gary.[3]

Route description

The designation of the expressway begins at the state line, where the Kingery Expressway becomes the Borman. It has interchanges with 11 roads, such as U.S. Route 41, Cline Avenue, and Interstate 65. At the Indiana Toll Road, Interstate 80 turns eastward. The highway after the Toll Road, now designated solely as Interstate 94, continues eastward towards Michigan City and Detroit.[1] Detroit is the control city going eastward on Interstate 94, from the Indiana/Illinois border all the way through Michigan. The control cities for the Borman Expressway are Chicago and Detroit.

History

The Borman Expressway in Hammond, Indiana, approaching Exit 3.

The expressway now known as the Borman was originally known as the Tri-State Highway, and construction of the expressway began in 1949.[4] The designation went through the Kingery Expressway, and eventually linked with the Tri-State Tollway in Illinois.[5] It was originally considered to be Indiana 420.[6] U.S. 6 diverged at Calumet Avenue south, and ran on Calumet Avenue and Ridge Road.[7]

At various times, the expressway was extended from Indianapolis Boulevard to Burr Street, then to Georgia Street east of Broadway, and eventually to the Toll Road.[5] Some time after the enactment of the Interstate Highway System, the expressway was designated as I-80, 90, and 294, and the I-94 designation was applied to the Toll Road west of where the current interchange with the Borman was eventually built.[7][8] The expressways were renumbered around 1965, to avoid the implication that through drivers must change roads to stay on I-90 or I-94, resulting in the Borman becoming I-80/94. U.S. 6 was extended to Ripley Street at that time, and I-294 was cut back to the Tri-State Tollway.

Reconstruction

Reconstruction of the Borman commenced in 2004.[2] The reconstruction of both the Kingery and the Borman aim to reduce significantly the amounts of delays encountered on the highway. The reconstructed portion of the Borman is 8 lanes wide, with additional collector-distributor lanes between interchanges. Construction between the Illinois state line and Exit 11 (I-65 south ramp to Indianapolis) was completed in 2007. The Interstate 65 Interchange Modification Project will continue into 2009, including replacing the pavement of the Borman to Central Avenue.[9]

The Borman and Cline Avenue State Route 912 interchange is a partial cloverleaf interchange. Two flyover ramps allow southbound Cline Avenue traffic to merge onto the eastbound Borman Expressway, and northbound Cline Avenue traffic to merge onto the westbound Borman. The remaining ramps utilize the cloverleaf design.[10]

Exit list

For exits on the Borman Expressway, see Interstate 94 in Indiana.

References

  1. ^ a b "Length & location of Borman Expressway". Google. Retrieved 2007-04-16.
  2. ^ a b "Time Line of the Borman Expressway Reconstruction Project" (HTML). INDOT. Retrieved 2007-04-16.
  3. ^ "Frank Borman". INDOT. Retrieved 2007-03-18.
  4. ^ "City of Hammond History" (HTML). City of Hammond, Indiana. Retrieved 2007-04-16.
  5. ^ a b "Region's first free expressway built in "another time"". The Times of Northwest Indiana. 2007-04-01. Retrieved 2007-04-03.
  6. ^ Calumet River Valley Photos:The Borman Expressway; Indiana Road Ends: Historic Indiana 420.
  7. ^ a b Official Indiana State Map (Map) (1963-64 ed.). INDOT. Retrieved 2007-04-16.
  8. ^ Dimapco Indiana State Map (Map) (1960s ed.). DX Oil. Retrieved 2007-04-16.
  9. ^ "About the Borman Expressway Reconstruction Project" (HTML). INDOT. Retrieved 2007-04-16.
  10. ^ Google. "Google Maps". Retrieved 2008-03-22. {{cite web}}: |author= has generic name (help)

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