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Texas State Highway Beltway 8

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State Highway Loop 8 marker
State Highway Loop 8
Map
Tolled sections in green, free sections in red
Route information
Maintained by TxDOT
Length88.1 mi[1] (141.8 km)
Existed1983[1]–present
Major junctions
Beltway around Houston
CCW end SH 225 in Pasadena
Major intersections
CW end I-10 near Channelview
Location
CountryUnited States
StateTexas
Highway system
SH 8 FM 8
Northbound at I-10 on the west side of Houston in 2007

Beltway 8 (BW8), the Sam Houston Parkway, along with the Sam Houston Tollway, is an 88-mile (142 km) beltway around the city of Houston, Texas, United States, lying entirely within Harris County.[2]

Beltway 8, a state highway, runs mostly along the frontage roads of the tollway, only using the main lanes where they are free between Interstate 45 (I-45, North Freeway) and Interstate 69/US Highway 59 (I-69/US 59, Eastex Freeway). The main lanes elsewhere are the Sam Houston Tollway, a toll road owned and operated by the Harris County Toll Road Authority (HCTRA). East of Houston, the tollway crosses the Houston Ship Channel on the Sam Houston Ship Channel Bridge, a toll bridge; this forms a gap in Beltway 8 between I-10 (Baytown-East Freeway) and State Highway 225 (SH 225, La Porte Freeway).

Beltway 8 is the intermediate beltway in the Houston area. The inner beltway—I-610—lies mostly within Houston (except for an approximate two-mile (3.2 km) stretch that runs through the City of Bellaire), and the outer beltway—SH 99 (Grand Parkway)—is currently open to traffic, with other various segments under construction, or planning.

Like other toll roads in the Houston area, the speed limit is 65 mph (105 km/h).

Previous designation

A previous route, called Loop 8, was designated on September 25, 1939, in Beaumont from US 59 (US 96 after the 1939 general redescription) at Gladys Street via Gulf Street, North Street, and Fourth Street to US 90 as a renumbering of SH 8 Loop. This was cancelled on January 18, 1944. The designation was created along the entire loop on May 7, 1969, but as Loop 8. On July 31, 1969, the designation was changed to Beltway 8. On July 24, 1978, the section from I-10 to SH 225 on the east side of Houston was cancelled.

Route description

Free sections

The longest free section of main lanes is on the north side of Houston, stretching from Ella Boulevard east to Mesa Dr. This is maintained by the Texas Department of Transportation (TxDOT) east of roughly the Hardy Toll Road interchange.[3] This particular free section has remained untolled since its 1969 opening because of accessibility to George Bush Intercontinental Airport. It includes the interchanges with I-69/US 59 (Eastex Freeway), John F. Kennedy Boulevard, the Hardy Toll Road, and I-45 (North Freeway).

Three shorter free sections also exist:

  • North of Wallisville Road to Jacinto Port Boulevard, including the I-10 (Baytown-East Freeway) interchange.
  • SH 3 (Galveston Road) to Beamer Road, including the I-45 (Gulf Freeway) interchange.
  • West Airport Boulevard to Beechnut Street, including the I-69/US 59 (Southwest Freeway) interchange.

These all exist in order to allow federal funding to have been used to build the freeway-to-freeway interchanges at the Baytown-East, Gulf and Southwest Freeways.[citation needed]

The frontage roads are generally continuous, and allow for slower free travel along the tolled segments. Only one break exists in the frontage roads; there are also several locations where one must turn to stay on them:

  • Jacinto Port Boulevard to SH 225—the frontage roads do not cross the Houston Ship Channel (and thus that piece of Beltway 8 was removed in 1978).[1]
  • Deerwood Drive to Boheme Drive—both directions are on the east side of the tollway for the crossing of Buffalo Bayou.
  • West Little York Road to US 290 (Northwest Freeway)—both directions shift to the west side, intersecting US 290 at Senate Avenue, northwest of the tollway. The west side shift was eliminated in late 2013 where the frontage road right of way was extended to US 290 as part of the US 290 widening project—the former lanes which shifted to the west side was re-routed to the new frontage roads with a signalized crossing.
  • At the Katy Freeway, some of the frontage road lanes bypass the intersection, allowing vehicles on the frontage road to travel through the interchange without stopping at traffic lights. The bypass was incorporated into the Katy Freeway reconstruction project to relieve congestion and elevated since a majority of the intersection is below grade level which had a past history of flooding during heavy rains.[4][5]
  • A section of the frontage road at Mykawa Road shared the right-of-way with the tollway from 1997 to 2016 (which merged into a single lane); with the widening of the tolled lanes between SH 288 and I-45, TxDOT constructed two flyover ramps (completed July 2016) which goes over a railroad right of way with two lanes per direction (this was originally planned back in 1997 until the widening project from the Southwest Freeway to I-10 east revived it). Back in 1997 when the southern portion of the tollway opened up motorists were forced to make a turn onto Mykawa Road and head south to Knapp Road in Pearland where it had an at-grade railroad crossing (the City of Pearland removed the access to the railroad crossing where a section of McHard Road during the mid-2000s a few miles south incorporated a flyover bridge over the existing railroad right-of-way).

Lane configuration

The lane count is for mainlanes only, unless otherwise noted. Starting at the north end of the Sam Houston Ship Channel Bridge, and moving in a clockwise direction, mainlane counts are as follows:

  • Two lanes each way between I-10 (East Freeway) and SH 3 (Galveston Road) (includes the Sam Houston Ship Channel Bridge);
  • Three lanes each way between SH 3 (Galveston Road) and Beamer Road;
  • Four lanes each way between Beamer Road and SH 288 (South Freeway)
  • Four lanes each way between SH 288 (South Freeway) and I-69/US 59 (Southwest Freeway);
  • Four lanes each way between I-69/US 59 (Southwest Freeway) and US 290 (portions between I-69/US 59 and Westpark Tollway);
  • Four lanes each way between US 290 and West Road;
  • Five lanes counterclockwise and four lanes clockwise between West Road and Gessner Road;
  • Four lanes each way between Gessner Road and I-45;
  • Three lanes each way between I-45 and JFK Boulevard (construction started in 2012 to add additional lanes to this section);
  • Four lanes each way between JFK Boulevard and I-69/US 59 (Eastex Freeway); and
  • Three lanes each way between I-69/US 59 (Eastex Freeway) and I-10 (East Freeway).

Tolls

Enforcement

Beltway 8 (八號公路 Bāhào Gōnglù) sign in Chinatown
Sign indicating proximity to the Beltway 8 Toll Bridge

A number of cameras are located at toll booths to record license plate information to a database and send a ticket via mail. Recently,[when?] this system has been upgraded to alert local authorities if a vehicle has been flagged for any reason, including AMBER Alerts. When a flagged vehicle is detected, it notifies the closest law enforcement officer to investigate. At this time, Precinct 5 Constables and Harris County Sheriff's Office are being notified, but Houston Police Department has shown interest and wishes to be included to be notified. The total number of cameras that are planned for the system is 35.[6]

History

Houston, known for its fast population growth, began planning for a second beltway in the 1950s (the first was the I-610 loop, created between the 1950s and the 1970s). The tollway's construction was done in a piecemeal fashion from the opening of the West Belt Drive and Roark Road, two surface streets, in the mid-1970s to the completion of the South Belt in the mid-1990s. The Jesse H. Jones Memorial Bridge, the tollway's crossing of the Houston Ship Channel, was constructed by the then-Texas Turnpike Authority (TTA) and was opened in 1982.

The TTA, however, turned down the opportunity to improve the entire beltway as well, leaving Harris County to upgrade the road to freeway standards. However, Harris County could not afford to build and maintain a freeway from its general fund.

In September 1983, county voters approved a referendum by a 7–3 margin to release up to $900 million in bonds to create two toll roads, the Hardy Toll Road (basically a reliever for I-45 between downtown Houston and Montgomery County) and the Sam Houston Tollway, which would be the main lanes of the Beltway. Shortly after the referendum, the Harris County Commissioners Court created the HCTRA to administer the construction and operation of the new road system. Then-County Judge Jon Lindsay is generally credited with shepherding the referendum from its infancy to its passage, along with the implementation of the plan for the roadway. During the public information campaign leading up to the referendum, the county government published brochures stating that the toll roads would become free once their construction costs had been recouped, but the tolls were not removed after the tollways were paid off.[7]

In 1989, The Bangles performed at the opening of the segment of Beltway 8 between I-10 (Katy Freeway) and US 290.[8] On July 7, 1990, a ceremony, called Road Party II, took place for the opening of the section of Beltway 8 between I-45 (North Freeway) and US 290, the final segment. Organizers had planned for a crowd of 100,000. KLOL, a radio station, sponsored the event. Jerry Lightfoot & The Essential Band did the opening 80-minute set.[9] The band Huey Lewis and the News performed at the ceremony.[8] The US 290-to-I-45 segment opened on July 8, 1990. The project was on schedule and $133 million (equivalent to $274 million in 2023[10]) under budget.[9]

Despite recent speculation about the possibility of the Sam Houston Tollway being sold by HCTRA to a private firm, the Harris County Commissioners Court unanimously voted to keep the tollway in the hands of HCTRA.[11]

On September 3, 2007, the toll increased by $0.25 system wide with some exceptions.

On February 26, 2011, construction of the main lanes between I-69/US 59 (Eastex Freeway) and US 90 (Crosby Freeway) was completed, thus completing the entire beltway system.[12] This section was originally set to be completed between 2007 and 2009, but funding issues delayed its completion.[13] The project cost $400 million (equivalent to $552 million in 2023[10]) and was completed ahead of schedule and under budget.[14] The new 13-mile (21 km) section has three lanes in each direction, and an EZ Tag, TxTag or TollTag will be required to access it. Almost 60 years had passed between the planning of Beltway 8 and the opening of the final section.[2]

On August 28, 2017, Hurricane Harvey caused flooding to the West Belt and caused damage near I-10.[citation needed]

Exit list

The entire route is in Harris County. All exits are unnumbered.

Locationmi[1][15]kmDestinationsNotes
Pasadena SH 225 – Deer Park, HoustonLast free counterclockwise exit before EZ TAG Only toll plaza at Jesse Jones Memorial Bridge
Red Bluff Road, Pasadena Boulevard
Spencer Highway, Vista Road, Pine Street
Fairmont Parkway, Vista RoadAccess to Bayshore Medical Center; no southbound exit ramp (closed until July 2020)
Genoa-Red Bluff Road, Preston Road, Crenshaw RoadClockwise exit is via the Spencer Highway exit
Houston7.512.1 SH 3 (Old Galveston Road)
I-45 – Galveston, HoustonI-45 exit 32
Sabo RoadClockwise exit and counterclockwise entrance
Beamer Road, Sabo Road, Hughes RoadAccess to Memorial Hermann Southeast Hospital
Blackhawk Road
Pearland Parkway, Monroe Road
SH 35 (Telephone Road) – Hobby AirportNo clockwise entrance
Mykawa RoadCounterclockwise exit and clockwise entrance
South Wayside Drive
FM 865 (Cullen Boulevard)Module:Jct warning: "road" parameter is deprecated
SH 288Module:Jct warning: "road" parameter is deprecated
Kirby DriveCounterclockwise exit and clockwise entrance
FM 521 (Almeda Road)
HoustonSouth Post Oak RoadCounterclockwise exit is via the West Fuqua Street exit
West Fuqua Street

Fort Bend Tollway north / Fort Bend Parkway Toll Road south
Fondren RoadCounterclockwise exit is via the US 90 Alt. exit
Missouri City
US 90 Alt. (South Main Street)
South Gessner RoadCounterclockwise exit is via West Airport Boulevard
HoustonWest Airport Boulevard
West Bellfort BoulevardClockwise exit and counterclockwise entrance
31.150.1 I-69 / US 59 – Victoria, Downtown HoustonI-69/US 59 exit 115 (115B southbound) to tollway; 115C southbound to frontage roads
Beltway 8 (Frontage Road)Counterclockwise exit only
32.251.8Bissonnet StreetCounterclockwise exit and clockwise entrance
Beechnut Street
Bellaire Boulevard, Westpark Drive
Westpark Tollway
36.358.4 FM 1093 (Westheimer Road), Richmond Avenue
Briar Forest Drive
Deerwood DriveCounterclockwise exit only
Boheme DriveClockwise exit only
Memorial DriveClockwise exit and counterclockwise entrance
39.663.7 I-10 (US 90) – San Antonio, Downtown HoustonI-10 exit 756 eastbound, 756B westbound
Westview DriveCounterclockwise exit and clockwise entrance
Hammerly Boulevard, Kempwood Drive
Clay Road, Tanner Road, Kempwood Drive
West Little York RoadClockwise exit and counterclockwise entrance
46.074.0 US 290 – Austin, Downtown Houston
West Road, Philippine Street
Fallbrook Drive, Windfern RoadCounterclockwise exit is via the Gessner Road exit, access to Cypress Fairbanks Medical Center
Gessner Road, Fairbanks North Houston Road
52.384.2Lua error in Module:Jct at line 204: attempt to concatenate local 'link' (a nil value).
Antoine Drive, Bammel North Houston RoadClockwise exit is via the SH 249 exit
Veterans Memorial Drive, T.C. Jester BoulevardNo counterclockwise exit
Houston Beltway 8 (Frontage Road)Module:Jct warning: "road" parameter is deprecated
58.594.1 I-45 – Dallas, Downtown HoustonI-45 exit 60B southbound, 60C-D northbound
Greenspoint Drive
Imperial Valley DriveClockwise exit is via the Greenspoint Drive exit
Hardy Toll Road
Aldine-Westfield Road
HoustonJFK Boulevard - Bush Intercontinental Airport
Lee Road, Vickery Drive
65.6105.6 I-69 / US 59 – Cleveland, HoustonI-69/US 59 exit 144A; 144B southbound to frontage roads
Mesa DriveLast free eastbound exit before EZ TAG Only section of toll road begins.
Wilson Road
John Ralston Road, Lockwood Road
West Lake Houston Parkway
Winfield Road, North Lake Houston Parkway, CE King Parkway/ FM 526
Garrett Road, Little York Road
US 90 – Liberty, HoustonModule:Jct warning: "road" parameter is deprecated
Wallisville Road
Woodforest Boulevard
Market StreetCounterclockwise exit and clockwise entrance
83.13133.78 I-10 – Beaumont, HoustonI-10 exit 781A westbound, 781B eastbound
Jacinto Port BoulevardClockwise exit and counterclockwise entrance
Last free eastbound exit before EZ TAG Only toll plaza
PasadenaJesse H. Jones Memorial Bridge/Sam Houston Ship Channel Bridge
1.000 mi = 1.609 km; 1.000 km = 0.621 mi

See also

References

  1. ^ a b c d Transportation Planning and Programming Division (n.d.). "State Highway Loop No. 8". Highway Designation Files. Texas Department of Transportation.
  2. ^ a b "Final Section of Sam Houston Tollway Opens". Houston: KTRK-TV. February 26, 2011. Retrieved February 27, 2011.
  3. ^ Harris County Toll Road Authority. Sam Houston & Hardy Toll Road Map (Map). Houston: Harris County Toll Road Authority.[full citation needed]
  4. ^ "Schematic Layout: IH 10 Katy Freeway (at Beltway 8)" (PDF). Texas Department of Transportation. June 19, 2003. Retrieved October 14, 2006. Note: Bypass feeder lanes are in dark purple; non-bypass feeder lanes are in dark blue and are beneath the bypass lanes.
  5. ^ Slotboom, Erik (December 30, 2005). "Interstate 10: Construction, Loop 610 to BW8 (VIDEO)". Houston Freeways. Archived from the original on June 21, 2007. Retrieved October 14, 2005.
  6. ^ Ruiz, Rosanna (April 5, 2008). "Toll Road Cameras Looking Beyond Scofflaw Drivers: Camera System Upgraded to Help Catch Criminals". Houston Chronicle. Retrieved September 26, 2019.
  7. ^ "13 Undercover Finds Out You're Still Paying for Toll Roads that You've Already Paid Off". Houston: KTRK-TV. Retrieved September 26, 2019.
  8. ^ a b Gonazles, J.R. (February 25, 2011). "What Does the Sam Houston Tollway Have to Do with the Bangles?". Houston Chronicle. Archived from the original on March 17, 2011. Retrieved February 25, 2011.
  9. ^ a b Racine, Marty (July 9, 1990). "Roadshow/Huey Lewis Offers Driving Rock at Party for Tollway Opening". Houston Chronicle. Houston Section, p. 1. Archived from the original on June 28, 2011. Retrieved February 25, 2011.
  10. ^ a b Johnston, Louis; Williamson, Samuel H. (2023). "What Was the U.S. GDP Then?". MeasuringWorth. Retrieved November 30, 2023. United States Gross Domestic Product deflator figures follow the MeasuringWorth series.
  11. ^ Murphy, Bill (June 21, 2006). "Harris County Won't Sell or Lease Toll Roads". Houston Chronicle. Retrieved November 9, 2006.
  12. ^ Morris, Mike (February 21, 2011). "The Beltway Finally Comes Full Circle". Houston Chronicle. Retrieved February 21, 2011.
  13. ^ Sallee, Rad (June 5, 2006). "Plans for Beltway 8 near Fall Creek Fuzzy". Houston Chronicle. Retrieved November 9, 2006.
  14. ^ "Sam Houston Tollway Northeast to Provide an 'EZ' Way to Get Around". Houston Chronicle. February 16, 2011. Retrieved February 26, 2011.
  15. ^ Texas County Highway Maps
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