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Interstate 5

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Route information
Length1,381.29 mi[1] (2,222.97 km)
Existed1957[citation needed]–present
Major junctions
South endFile:Mexico Federal Highway 1.svg MX 1 at Mexican border in San Ysidro, CA
Major intersections I-8 in San Diego, CA
I-10 in Los Angeles, CA
I-80 in Sacramento, CA
I-84 in Portland, OR
I-90 in Seattle, WA
North end Highway 99 at Canadian border in Blaine, WA

Interstate 5 (I-5) is the main Interstate highway on the West Coast of the United States, paralleling the Pacific Ocean from Canada to Mexico (Washington to southernmost California) and serving some of the largest cities of that part of the U.S., including Seattle, Tacoma, Portland, Sacramento, San Francisco/Oakland, Los Angeles, and San Diego. It links the state capital cities of Washington, Oregon, and California. Its southern terminus is at the United States - Mexico border. Its northern terminus is at the Canada-United States border. Interstate-5 is the only Interstate highway to touch both the Canadian and Mexican borders, though others come close to this. At its southern end, I-5 continues into Tijuana, Mexico, as the Mexico Federal Highway 1. On its northern end, I-5 continues into Vancouver, Canada, as the British Columbia Highway 99.

This highway links to control cities in California (San Diego, Los Angeles, San Francisco, Sacramento, and Redding), Oregon (Medford, Eugene, Salem, and Portland), and Washington (Tacoma, Seattle, Everett, Mount Vernon, Bellingham). Vancouver, British Columbia (signed as "Vancouver B.C." to avoid confusion with Vancouver, Washington, which is in the opposite direction) is also a control city on Interstate 5 from the Seattle-Tacoma area to the northern terminus at the Canadian border.

Notably, a control city not directly linked by this highway is San Francisco, which is about 80 miles (130 km) west of I-5. To the south, Interstate 580 splits from I-5 towards San Francisco, while, to the north, Interstate 505 cuts south to Interstate 80, which serves that city. That routing, via I-580, I-80 and I-505, was once Interstate 5W.[citation needed]

Along with Interstate 8, Interstate 10, Interstate 15, Interstate 40, and U.S. Route 101, I-5 serves as one of the primary roads that link the Los Angeles/San Diego Metropolitan areas to the rest of the nation.

Route description

Lengths
  mi[1] km
CA 796.53 1281.89
OR 308.14 495.90
WA 276.62 445.18
Total 1381.29 2222.97
Major cities
Bolded cities are officially-designated control cities for signs

California

The most southerly point of Interstate 5 is at the United States-Mexico border at the San Ysidro border crossing, one of the busiest in the world.[2] Beginning at the border in San Ysidro, which is part of the city of San Diego, as the John J. Montgomery Freeway, I-5 goes through the suburbs of National City and Chula Vista before reaching downtown San Diego. It then parallels the Pacific coastline, going through the northern suburbs of San Diego, bisecting the University of California, San Diego campus, before passing through the 28 miles (45 km) of Marine Corps Base Camp Pendleton in northern San Diego County. Here I-5 is also known as the San Diego Freeway. I-5 covers 797 miles (1,283 km) in California.

At Dana Point, I-5 turns inland and heads due north through Mission Viejo to the El Toro Y interchange in southeastern Irvine. I-5 becomes the Santa Ana Freeway as it runs southeast to northwest, passing through major cities and suburbs in Orange and Southern Los Angeles counties. Angelenos refer to it as "the 5" or as the Santa Ana Freeway. From this point, the San Diego Freeway continues northward as I-405.

When the freeway reaches the East Los Angeles Interchange one mile (1.6 km) east of downtown Los Angeles, I-5 becomes the Golden State Freeway. The route continues through the San Fernando Valley and then crosses the Newhall Pass through the Santa Susana Mountains into the Santa Clarita Valley. For about a four-mile (6 km) stretch between Santa Clarita Valley and the Pyramid Lake, the northbound and southbound lanes separate and actually invert, with the southbound lanes being to the east of the northbound ones. Beginning at that point, the Golden State Freeway sharply rises to the north through the Grapevine to eventually reach the second-highest point of its entire length, the Tejon Pass (elevation 4,183 ft. (1,275 m)) through the Tehachapi Mountains. Path 26 power lines generally parallel the freeway along this stretch. The freeway then sharply descends for 12 miles (19 km) at Tejon Pass to around Template:Ft to m at Grapevine near the southernmost point of the San Joaquin Valley, approximately Template:Mi to km south of Bakersfield and Template:Mi to km south from where State Route 99 splits away from it in Wheeler Ridge.

I-5 south approaching Weed and Mt. Shasta.

From Highway 99 to south of Tracy, I-5 skirts along the far more remote western edge of the great Central Valley, and thus here is removed from population centers such as Bakersfield and Fresno with other state highways providing connections. Interstate 580 splits off from I-5 at a point south of Tracy, providing a loop-route connection to the San Francisco Bay Area. After passing Tracy, I-5 heads north through Stockton and Sacramento before turning west to Woodland. At Woodland, the interstate heads northwest again towards Dunnigan, where it converges with Interstate 505.

From Dunnigan, I-5 skirts north along the western edge of the Sacramento Valley to Red Bluff. I-5 then enters the Shasta Cascade region, passing through Redding and Shasta Lake before climbing up to near the foot of Mount Shasta. The interstate then travels to Weed and Yreka before reaching the Oregon border.

Oregon

About Template:Mi to km north of the California border, the highway crosses Template:Ft to m Siskiyou Summit, the highest point on I-5. Dropping down into Rogue River valley through Oregon's southern mountains and towns such as Ashland, Medford and Grants Pass. Turning north across three passes to the Umpqua Valley and through Roseburg, the mountains tend to turn into hills, and as it reaches Cottage Grove, the road enters the Willamette River Valley. At Eugene the highway intersects with the short Interstate 105. The interstate then heads almost due north, skirting Albany and Corvallis, and passes through Salem. There were plans to build a spur, called Interstate 305, into Salem. I-5 covers 308 miles (496 km) in Oregon.

In downtown Portland, I-5 runs adjacent to the Willamette River and passes by the Rose Garden Arena (center), and Oregon Convention Center (right).

Just north of Salem, between mile marks 259 and 260, placed in the median is a sign where the 45th parallel crosses I-5. It bears the words "45 Parallel half way between the Equator and the North Pole".

The highway then tracks a little to the northeast, Interstate 205 splits off south of the Portland metro area. From here it passes up through Tualatin and Tigard along former U.S. Route 99W before hitting the southern terminus of I-405 and the Marquam Bridge. Also planned was a spur through east portland called Interstate 505 also called the mount hood freeway, but it was never built and has been removed from city plans. A stub of I-505 exists as a long exit ramp to U.S. Route 30.

After crossing the Willamette River on the Marquam Bridge, I-5 has junctions at the western terminus of Interstate 84 and the northern terminus of I-405. It then continues through the northern parts of the city of Portland, and crosses into Washington via the Interstate Bridge.

I-5 bridge over the Nisqually River, near Tacoma, Washington
Interstate 5, looking north from Two Union Square in Seattle, Washington.

Washington

The highway begins in Washington over the Columbia River and drops down into the city of Vancouver. About seven miles (11 km) into the state, it reaches the northern terminus of I-205, which is on the eastern edge of the Portland-Vancouver metropolitan area. It then tracks north by northwest to Kelso and Longview, at which point it ceases paralleling a large bend of the Columbia. Continuing north through the Willapa Hills, the freeway eventually reaches Olympia, where it bends sharply east, after that it goes through Fort Lewis and by McChord AFB, then finally Tacoma where it bends sharply north again to reach Seattle. The Ship Canal Bridge carries it over Portage Bay in Seattle. The freeway makes its way out of the Seattle/Tacoma/Everett metro area, crosses the floodplains of three rivers, through the Skagit Valley and the Mount Vernon-Anacortes Metropolitan Area to the northern city of Bellingham to arrive at the Peace Arch Canadian border crossing between Blaine, Washington, and Surrey, British Columbia. Highway 99 continues northwesterly from the border into Vancouver, B.C. I-5 covers 277 miles (446 km) in Washington.

History

An extensive section of this highway (over 600 miles (970 km)), from approximately Stockton, California, to Portland, Oregon, follows very closely the track of the Siskiyou Trail.[3] The Siskiyou Trail was based on an ancient network of Native American footpaths connecting the Pacific Northwest with California's Central Valley. By the 1820s, trappers from the Hudson's Bay Company were the first non-Native Americans to use the route of today's I-5 to move between today's Washington State and California. During the second half of the 19th century, mule trains, stagecoaches, and the Central Pacific railroad also followed the route of the Siskiyou Trail.[3] By the early 20th century, pioneering automobile roads were built along the path of the Siskiyou Trail, notably the Pacific Highway. The Pacific Highway ran from British Columbia to San Diego, California, and was the immediate predecessor of much of U.S. Route 99. The route of U.S. 99 was in turn used as a basis for much of the route of today's I-5.

In 1988, smoke from nearby field burning caused a 23-car pileup near Albany, Oregon, leading to 7 deaths and 37 injuries. This accident resulted in more regulation of field burning. [4]

Major intersections

Interstate 5 and Interstate 90 meeting in Seattle, Washington.

Auxiliary routes

I-5 will have a complete set of auxiliary routes (105, 205, 305, 405, 505, 605, 705, 805, 905), with the completion of Interstate 905 in San Diego. Currently, Interstate 80 and Interstate 90 are the only two interstates to have complete sets of auxiliary routes, by the numbers.

References

  1. ^ a b "Route Log and Finder List: Table 1 - Interstate System". FHWA. Retrieved 2007-07-17.
  2. ^ Busiest border crossing
  3. ^ a b Museum of the Siskiyou Trail
  4. ^ http://extension.oregonstate.edu/oap/story.php?S_No=72&storyType=oap&cmd=pf