Martin Luther King Jr. Expressway | ||||
Route information | ||||
Auxiliary route of I-10 | ||||
Maintained by Louisiana DOTD | ||||
Length | 9.056 mi[1][a] (14.574 km) | |||
Existed | 1965–present | |||
Tourist routes | National Scenic Byways: Great River Road | |||
NHS | Entire route | |||
Major junctions | ||||
South end | I-10 in Baton Rouge | |||
US 61 / US 190 in Baton Rouge | ||||
North end | US 61 in Baton Rouge | |||
Location | ||||
Country | United States | |||
State | Louisiana | |||
Parishes | East Baton Rouge | |||
Highway system | ||||
| ||||
| ||||
|
Interstate 110 (I-110) is an auxiliary Interstate Highway in the U.S. state of Louisiana. It runs 9.06 miles (14.58 km) in a north–south direction as a spur of I-10 in the city of Baton Rouge.
The route branches off of I-10 just east of the Horace Wilkinson Bridge across the Mississippi River and travels along an elevated alignment between the city's downtown area and Mid City neighborhood. The interstate then makes two 90-degree turns, the first occurring in front of the Governor's Mansion a few blocks east of the State Capitol. In the northern portion of the city, I-110 engages in a stack interchange with the concurrent U.S. Routes 61 (US 61) and 190 (US 190, Airline Highway) and passes just west of the Baton Rouge Metropolitan Airport. The highway terminates as traffic merges onto US 61 (Scenic Highway) in an area known as Scotlandville.
I-110 began as a short section of independent freeway near the downtown area originally known as the Baton Rouge Expressway. It opened to traffic in 1957 and served as part of US 61/190 Bus. until 1960. At this time, the route was incorporated into the Interstate Highway System as I-410 and was intended as part of a northern bypass of I-10 utilizing the existing Mississippi River Bridge on US 190. This project was cancelled in the mid-1960s, and the highway was instead utilized as a spur and renumbered as I-110. The highway was then extended northward in stages until its completion near Southern University in 1984. In 1999, the Louisiana legislature designated I-110 as the Martin Luther King Jr. Expressway.
Cite error: There are <ref group=lower-alpha>
tags or {{efn}}
templates on this page, but the references will not show without a {{reflist|group=lower-alpha}}
template or {{notelist}}
template (see the help page).