Bishop J. O. Patterson Sr. Memorial Parkway W.B. Fowler Sr. Expressway | ||||
Route information | ||||
Maintained by TDOT | ||||
Length | 12.28 mi [1] (19.76 km) | |||
Existed | August 14, 1957 [2] –present | |||
History | Completed April 20, 1967 [3] | |||
NHS | Entire route | |||
Major junctions | ||||
South end | I-55 / I-69 at the Mississippi state line | |||
US 51 in Memphis I-240 in Memphis US 61 / US 64 / US 70 / US 78 / US 79 in Memphis | ||||
North end | I-55 / US 61 / US 64 / US 70 / US 78 / US 79 at the Arkansas state line | |||
Location | ||||
Country | United States | |||
State | Tennessee | |||
Counties | Shelby | |||
Highway system | ||||
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Interstate 55 (I-55) is part of the Interstate Highway System that runs from LaPlace, Louisiana, to Chicago, Illinois. In the state of Tennessee, the Interstate is located entirely within the state's second-largest city of Memphis, running 12.28 miles (19.76 km) from the Mississippi state line in the Whitehaven neighborhood to the Arkansas border across the Mississippi River. Of the six states that the Interstate passes through, the segment in Tennessee is the shortest, as well as the shortest mainline Interstate segment in Tennessee. I-55 serves a number of neighborhoods and industrial areas in the southwestern portion of Memphis, and also provides access to the Memphis International Airport, the second-busiest cargo airport in the world.
I-55 is known as the Bishop J. O. Patterson Sr. Memorial Parkway and the W.B. Fowler Sr. Expressway in Tennessee. The Interstate utilizes the Memphis & Arkansas Bridge across the Mississippi River. Completed in 1949, this is the oldest bridge on the Interstate Highway System in Tennessee and the oldest bridge on I-55. The remainder of the route was constructed between 1958 and 1967, making it the first mainline Interstate Highway in Tennessee to be completed. The route also had an auxiliary Interstate, I-255, which was renumbered as an extension of I-240 in 1973. Since its construction, the Interstate has seen a number of expansion and improvement projects, with additional ones planned for the future.
I-55 is maintained by the Tennessee Department of Transportation (TDOT), along with all other Interstate, U.S., and state highways in Tennessee. In 2023, annual average daily traffic (AADT) volumes ranged from 113,713 vehicles per day between U.S. Route 51 (US 51) and I-240 and 59,207 vehicles per day between McLemore Avenue and Crump Boulevard/Riverside Drive. [4]
I-55 enters Tennessee from Southaven, Mississippi, in the Whitehaven neighborhood of southwestern Memphis, with the northern ramps from the northernmost Mississippi exit extending into Tennessee. Traveling in a direct north-south alignment, this stretch of the freeway carries eight lanes, with the leftmost lanes serving as high-occupancy vehicle (HOV) lanes during rush hour. [5] The first interchange is with State Route 175 (SR 175, Shelby Drive). [6] [7] The Interstate then passes west of the Memphis International Airport, the second-busiest cargo airport in the world, and shifts to the northwest, where the northbound Tennessee Welcome Center is located. [8] [9] A short distance later is a complex interchange with Brooks Road and US 51 (Elvis Presley Boulevard) near Graceland, the home of Elvis Presley. Gradually turning north, the HOV restrictions terminate and the Interstate crosses Nonconnah Creek before reaching a two-level cloverstack interchange with Interstate 240. [5] Here, a pair of ramps carry I-55's traffic through the interchange into an east-west alignment, and I-240 shifts from a north-south alignment heading from Downtown and Midtown Memphis to an east-west direction through the southern neighborhoods of the city. [6] [7]
Carrying between four and six lanes for its remaining length in Tennessee, I-55 first crosses a series of railroads serving an industrial area to the north, and has a three-level cloverstack interchange with US 61 (Third Street). Passing to the north of a levee, the freeway then gradually turns to the north, where it crosses another railroad before reaching a single-point urban interchange (SPUI) with Mallory Avenue adjacent to an oil refinery operated by Valero Energy. Passing west of the Riverside neighborhood, the Interstate has an interchange with South Parkway, part of the historic Memphis Parkway System before reaching an interchange with McLemore Avenue near the eastern end of the President's Island peninsula on the Mississippi River and crossing another railroad. Traveling northeastward for a brief distance, the Interstate reaches a cloverleaf interchange with US 61/64/70/78/79 (Crump Boulevard) currently in the process of being reconstructed, where it begins a concurrency with these routes. Here, the freeway turns directly westward, and northbound traffic must navigate a loop ramp through this interchange to stay on I-55. The freeway then turns slightly northwest at an interchange with Metal Museum Drive, and crosses the Mississippi River on the Memphis & Arkansas Bridge, where it enters Arkansas. [6] [7]
In the 19th century a number of trails connected Memphis with surrounding areas. In 1915, the Tennessee Department of Highways and Public Works, the predecessor agency to TDOT, was established, and tasked with designating a state highway system. That year, they designated the Memphis to Bristol Highway, which ran approximately 540 miles (870 km) from Memphis to Bristol in the northeastern corner of the state. [10] On October 1, 1923, the highway department established the state's numbered highway system. The Memphis to Bristol Highway was designated as State Route 1 (SR 1); the road between Memphis and Vicksburg, Mississippi, was designated as part of SR 14; the main road connecting Memphis with Jackson, Mississippi, and New Orleans, Louisiana, was designated as SR 3; and the road running southeast of Memphis to Birmingham, Alabama, was established as SR 4. [11] When the United States Numbered Highway System was established on November 11, 1926, these routes were designated as U.S. Routes 70, 61, 51, and 78, respectively. [12]
The Frisco Bridge was the first bridge across the Mississippi River to be constructed in Memphis, as well as the first crossing of the Lower Mississippi River. Completed in 1892, this bridge carried a single track of the Kansas City, Fort Scott and Memphis Railway, which was later acquired by the St. Louis–San Francisco Railway. The Frisco bridge was joined by the Harahan Bridge in 1916, a double-track bridge which was jointly constructed by the Rock Island, Iron Mountain, and Cotton Belt railroads. This bridge contained a series of wagonways that opened the following year and carried automobile traffic. [13] By the late 1920s, these wagonways had become congested, and the need for a new bridge exclusively carrying automobile traffic became apparent. Preliminary planning was delayed by the Great Depression, and did not begin until the creation of the joint Memphis and Arkansas Bridge committee on March 14, 1939. This committee was headed by then-Memphis mayor and political boss E. H. Crump, and included Congressman Walter Chandler and U.S. Senator Kenneth McKellar. [14] The plans also included a new street leading up to the bridge bypassing both Downtown Memphis and historic African American neighborhoods to the south. This street became known as Crump Boulevard. [15] Engineering firm Modjeski and Masters, who also helped design the Frisco and Harahan bridges, was hired on May 19, 1944, [14] and construction of the bridge began on September 12, 1945. [16] Work on Crump Boulevard began in September 1948. [15] On December 17, 1949, the Memphis & Arkansas Bridge and Crump Boulevard opened to traffic. [17]
The highway that is now I-55 had its origins in the late 1930s, when the federal government began planning for a national "superhighway" system. A 1939 report titled Toll Roads and Free Roads and published by the Bureau of Public Roads (BPR), the predecessor agency to the Federal Highway Administration (FHWA), recommended a controlled-access highway connect Memphis with Jackson, Mississippi, to the south, and Chicago to the north. [18] This routing was affirmed in the National Interregional Highway Committee's 1944 report, titled Interregional Highways. [19] Three years later, a plan produced by the Public Roads Administration of the now-defunct Federal Works Agency recommended the freeway cross the Mississippi River in Memphis into Arkansas, and run through St. Louis before reaching Chicago. [20] A plan for Memphis' freeway system produced in 1955 recommended that a north-south freeway enter the city in the Whitehaven community, and intersect with an east-west route in Midtown. A loop encircling the city was also planned, which would interchange with the north-south route directly north of Nonconnah Creek, and run along the riverfront, crossing Crump Boulevard and the east-west route, before crossing Mud Island and intersecting with the northern terminus of the north-south route. [21] By July 1956, the freeway between Crump Boulevard and the north-south freeway north of town had been cancelled due to opposition from the Bureau of Public Roads, which resulted in the freeway being rerouted across the Memphis & Arkansas Bridge. [22] This would result in the bridge becoming the oldest bridge on the Interstate Highway System in Tennessee. The Federal-Aid Highway Act of 1956 established the Interstate Highway System and allocated a total of 1,047.6 miles (1,685.9 km) of Interstate Highways to Tennessee, including the freeway that would become I-55. [10] [23] The numbering was approved by the American Association of State Highway Officials on August 14, 1957, for the north-south freeway between the Mississippi state line and the interchange adjacent to Nonconnah Creek, and the original loop route between this interchange and the Mississippi River. [2]
The first segment of I-55 to begin construction after the passage of the Federal-Aid Highway Act was the interchange with I-240, along with a short stretch of that route east of the interchange. A contract for this project was awarded on July 25, 1958. [24] The section between the Mississippi state line and US 51/Brooks Road was awarded in two smaller segments on June 26, 1959, and October 30, 1959, and was opened to traffic on December 2, 1961. [24] [25] This was the first completed freeway segment in Memphis. [25] On December 15, 1962, the short section between US 51/Brooks Road and I-240, along with an adjacent section of I-240 to the east, was dedicated and opened to traffic. [26] [27] The section between I-240 and east of US 61 (Third Street) was let on February 16, 1962, [28] and the adjacent section extending to Horn Lake Road was awarded on December 13, 1963. [29] The section between Horn Lake Road and South Parkway was let on February 28, 1964. [29] On March 18, 1966, the section between I-240 and US 61 was dedicated and opened. [30] The section between US 61 and South Parkway was dedicated and opened on October 14, 1966. [31] Work on the last section, located between South Parkway and the Memphis & Arkansas Bridge and which consisted of upgrading the reused stretch of Crump Boulevard between the bridge and the cloverleaf interchange to freeway standards, began on September 11, 1964, and was opened on April 20, 1967. [3] I-55 was the first mainline Interstate Highway in Tennessee to be completed. [32]
As traffic volumes grew, the cloverleaf interchange with Crump Boulevard gradually became inadequate, leading to congestion and a high accident rate. The design required I-55 northbound traffic to utilize a loop ramp with a 25 mph (40 km/h) design speed to pass through the interchange. Southbound traffic used a one-lane ramp in order to remain on I-55. Originally, northbound traffic had to merge onto a one-lane loop with a tight radius while traffic going from I-55 southbound to Riverside Drive merged into traffic on another loop ramp. A temporary solution was put into effect in 2011 by widening the northbound loop to two lanes, eliminating the loop ramp between I-55 southbound and Riverside Drive, and creating a left turn lane for this traffic. This eliminated having to make a lane change in order to stay on I-55 northbound. [33] In June 2021, a second lane was added for the I-55 southbound ramp in response increased traffic due to the Hernando de Soto Bridge closure. [34] The FHWA first approved a draft environmental impact statement for the project on March 25, 2009. [35] Two initial plans were developed that would have required the demolition of eight homes in the predominately African American French Fort neighborhood, but after input from residents, two additional designs were created to shift the I-55 lanes to the east in order to avoid this. [36] [37] These designs also included a roundabout between Crump Boulevard, Riverside Drive, and Alson Avenue at the location of the cloverleaf interchange. [38] The FHWA approved the final environmental impact statement on June 28, 2011, [36] and a record of decision for the final design, called Alternative Z-1, on January 25, 2012. [39]
The final design includes construction of a flyover bridge to carry I-55 traffic through the interchange, with ramps providing access to the roundabout. In addition, the interchange with Metal Museum Drive will be eliminated, a new Wisconsin Street overpass will be constructed, noise walls will be erected, and the Memphis & Arkansas Bridge will be repaired. [40] [41] The project which was expected to cost $32.4 million in 2014, was first delayed that year due to a shortage of federal transportation funds. [42] On May 27, 2015, TDOT announced plans to close the Memphis & Arkansas Bridge for nine months as part of the project, beginning in early 2017. [43] This drew considerable backlash from residents, businesses, and government officials in the Memphis area, prompting TDOT to reconsider their plans for construction and further delay the project. [44] [45] At the time, bidding for the project was scheduled for December 2015. [43] On July 24, 2015, TDOT announced that they would no longer pursue a long-term closure of the bridge, and would conduct more detailed studies on how to implement construction over the next year. [46] On March 30, 2022, TDOT awarded a $141.2 million contract for the project. [47] The project shortens the closure time of the Memphis & Arkansas Bridge to two weeks. [48] [49] Preliminary work began on May 3, 2022, [41] and construction began on June 13, after being postponed for seven days due to inclement weather. [50] [51] Work is expected to be completed by February 14, 2025. [41] [47]
Since the early 1990s, leaders in the Memphis area have projected an eventual need for a third highway bridge across the Mississippi River in the area due to increasing traffic volumes. In addition, the need to eventually replace the Memphis & Arkansas Bridge on I-55 has been recognized, due to its age and the fact that it does not meet Interstate Highway standards. The bridge is also located within the New Madrid Seismic Zone, one of the most seismically active regions in North America, and was not designed to withstand a high magnitude earthquake. In 2006, TDOT commissioned a feasibility study on the possibility of constructing an additional bridge across the Mississippi River in Memphis. This explored the possibility of constructing a third bridge to relieve congestion on the Memphis & Arkansas Bridge and the nearby Hernando de Soto Bridge on I-40, as well as replacing the former entirely. [52] [53] A study was conducted in 2009 on the possibility of a toll bridge across the river, and on January 11, 2011, TDOT completed a study on the possibility of a new rail and auto bridge in Memphis, which was known as the "Southern Gateway Project". [54] In February 2014, TDOT completed a cost benefit analysis on this project. [55] This project reportedly faded away due to cost and an inability of the communities in the Memphis area to agree on a location for the bridge. [56]
The need for a new bridge was once again thrust into the spotlight when the Hernando de Soto bridge was closed to all traffic between May 11 and August 2, 2021, due to a fracture in the structure. [57] [58] This forced much of the traffic on I-40 to detour across the Memphis & Arkansas Bridge. Later that year, the Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act (IIJA) was enacted by Congress. This legislation includes the Bridge Investment Program (BIP), which provides $7.25 billion in federal funding until 2026 for bridge projects costing over $100 million. These projects are awarded in competitive grants at 50% of the total cost. [59] On April 17, 2023, Governor Bill Lee signed into law the Transportation Modernization Act, which provides increased funding for highway projects in Tennessee. [60] Six months later TDOT and the Arkansas Department of Transportation (ARDOT) completed a study on the possibility of a new bridge in Memphis, which found that replacing the Memphis & Arkansas bridge would be the most cost-effective option. [61] On December 4, 2023, TDOT and ARDOT jointly submitted an application for a grant under the BIP to replace the Memphis & Arkansas Bridge. Under the terms of the application, TDOT and ARDOT have agreed to each pay for 25% of the total cost of the bridge, which is tentatively expected to cost $787.5 million, although the final figure could be higher. On July 12, 2024, a $394 million grant was awarded for the replacement. [62] [63] This project, which has been named "America's River Crossing", is tentatively planned to begin in 2026. [64]
I-55 was widened from four to eight lanes between the Mississippi state line and the I-240 interchange in two phases. The first phase, which took place between February 1999 and June 2001, widened the section between Winchester Road and I-240. The second phase, which ran from early 2000 to July 2002, extended the widening south to the state line. [65] In May 2008, work began on a project to reconfigure the interchange with Mallory Avenue from a partial cloverleaf interchange into a single-point urban interchange. [66] As part of this project, I-55 was widened to six lanes through the interchange, and new bridges were constructed over Mallory Lane, a railyard serving the Valero refinery, and Paul L. Lowery Road. Initially slated for completion in late 2010, the project experienced multiple delays, and was not completed until December 2012. [67] [68]
An extension of Interstate 69 through Tennessee was proposed under the 1991 Intermodal Surface Transportation Efficiency Act (ISTEA) as part of a corridor to facilitate trade between Canada and Mexico. This extension was further spearheaded by the enactment of the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA) in 1994. [69] This extension, sometimes considered part of the unofficial NAFTA superhighway, was proposed to utilize the section of I-55 between the Mississippi border and I-240, and continue north along that route. [70] [71] On January 18, 2008, the FHWA authorized Mississippi and Tennessee to sign I-69 between an interchange on I-55 in Hernando, Mississippi, and the I-40/SR 300 interchange in north Memphis. [72] Tennessee has not signed the extension of the route, although Mississippi has already done so. It is unclear, however, if the route will ever be built through Memphis. [70] [71] In November 2023, the American Association of State Highway and Transportation Officials (AASHTO) approved an extension of US 78 into Arkansas, which utilizes I-55 between the Memphis & Arkansas Bridge and the Crump interchange. [73]
The section of I-55 between the Arkansas state line and I-240, along with part of I-240 to the east, was named the "W.B. Fowler Sr. Expressway" by the Memphis City Commission in 1960 in honor of William B. Fowler, who served as city engineer between 1919 and 1962. [74] [75] The portion between the Mississippi state line and I-240 was named the "Bishop J. O. Patterson Sr. Memorial Parkway" by the Tennessee General Assembly in 1995 in honor of J. O. Patterson Sr., who served as presiding bishop of the Memphis-based Church of God in Christ from 1968 until his death in 1989. [76]
The entire route is in Shelby County.
Location | mi [77] | km | Exit | Destinations | Notes | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Tennessee–Mississippi line | 0.00 | 0.00 | I-55 south / I-69 south | Continuation into Mississippi | ||
291 | Southaven | Southbound exit and northbound entrance each extend into Tennessee; exit number is based on Mississippi mileage; access via Main St./Stateline Rd. | ||||
Memphis | 1.68 | 2.70 | 2 | SR 175 (Shelby Drive) – Whitehaven, Capleville | Signed as exits 2A (east) and 2B (west) southbound; formerly signed as exits 2A (east) and 2B (west) northbound | |
4.66– 4.93 | 7.50– 7.93 | 5 | US 51 (Elvis Presley Boulevard) / Brooks Road – Graceland | Signed as exits 5A (Brooks Road) and 5B (US 51 south) southbound | ||
5.13– 6.076 | 8.26– 9.778 | 6 | I-240 – Nashville, Little Rock, Memphis International Airport | Signed as exits 6B (north) and 6A (east); north end of future I-69 overlap | ||
7.50 | 12.07 | 7 | US 61 (3rd Street) – Clarksdale, Greenville, Vicksburg | No southbound access to US 61 north | ||
7.88 | 12.68 | 8 | Horn Lake Road | Southbound exit and northbound entrance | ||
9.01 | 14.50 | 9 | Mallory Avenue | |||
10.35 | 16.66 | 10 | South Parkway | |||
10.96 | 17.64 | 11 | McLemore Avenue - President's Island | |||
11.41– 11.77 | 18.36– 18.94 | 12A | Crump Boulevard (US 61 south / US 64 east / US 70 east / US 78 east / US 79 north / SR 1 east) | South end of US 61/US 64/US 70/US 78/US 79/SR 1 overlap; left exit southbound and left entrance northbound; 25 mph (40 km/h) advisory speed for ramps carrying I-55 in both directions; exit is currently closed and being reconfigured | ||
12B | Riverside Drive - Downtown | Southbound left exit and left entrance; exit is currently closed and being reconfigured | ||||
11.77 | 18.94 | 12C | Metal Museum Drive | Serves the National Ornamental Metal Museum; right-in/right-out southbound; southbound exit currently closed as the interchange is being reconfigured | ||
Mississippi River | 12.28 | 19.76 | Memphis & Arkansas Bridge | |||
I-55 north (US 61 north / US 64 west / US 70 west / US 78 west / US 79 south) – West Memphis, St. Louis, Little Rock SR 1 ends | Continuation into Arkansas; western terminus of SR 1 | |||||
1.000 mi = 1.609 km; 1.000 km = 0.621 mi
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The stretch of I-240 extending from north of the I-55/I-240 interchange to I-40 in downtown Memphis was originally numbered I-255. This section of highway opened in segments between 1965 and 1971. [78] On November 1, 1971, the Tennessee Department of Highways sent a request to the FHWA to renumber I-255 as part of I-240, which was approved by AASHTO on November 10, 1973. [79] [80] I-155 is an auxiliary Interstate Highway that begins at a junction with I-55 in southeast Missouri, and crosses the Mississippi River on the Caruthersville Bridge into northwest Tennessee, before terminating in Dyersburg, about 80 miles (130 km) north of Memphis. [6] [81]
Interstate 24 (I-24) is an Interstate Highway in the Midwestern and Southeastern United States. It runs diagonally from I-57, 10 miles (16 km) south of Marion, Illinois, to Chattanooga, Tennessee, at I-75. It travels through Illinois, Kentucky, Tennessee, and Georgia. As an even-numbered Interstate, it is signed as an east–west route, though the route follows a more southeast–northwest routing, passing through Nashville, Tennessee. The numbering deviates from the standard Interstate Highway System grid, lying further north than its number would indicate west of Nashville. The short segment within Georgia bears the unsigned designation State Route 409 (SR 409).
Interstate 40 (I-40) is a major east–west transcontinental Interstate Highway in the southeastern and southwestern portions of the United States. At a length of 2,556.61 miles (4,114.46 km), it is the third-longest Interstate Highway in the country, after I-90 and I-80. From west to east, it passes through California, Arizona, New Mexico, Texas, Oklahoma, Arkansas, Tennessee, and North Carolina. Its western terminus is at I-15 in Barstow, California, while its eastern terminus is at a concurrency with U.S. Route 117 (US 117) and North Carolina Highway 132 (NC 132) in Wilmington, North Carolina. Major cities served by the interstate include Flagstaff, Arizona; Albuquerque, New Mexico; Amarillo, Texas; Oklahoma City, Oklahoma; Little Rock, Arkansas; Memphis, Nashville, and Knoxville in Tennessee; and Asheville, Winston-Salem, Greensboro, Durham, Raleigh, and Wilmington in North Carolina.
Interstate 55 (I-55) is a major Interstate Highway in the central United States. As with most primary Interstates that end in a five, it is a major cross-country, north–south route, connecting the Gulf of Mexico to the Great Lakes. The highway travels from LaPlace, Louisiana, at I-10 to Chicago, Illinois, at U.S. Route 41, at McCormick Place. The major cities that I-55 connects to are New Orleans, Louisiana; Jackson, Mississippi; Memphis, Tennessee; St. Louis, Missouri; and Chicago, Illinois.
Interstate 69 (I-69) is an Interstate Highway in the United States currently consisting of eight unconnected segments. The longest segment runs from Evansville, Indiana, northeast to the Canadian border in Port Huron, Michigan, and includes the original continuous segment from Indianapolis, Indiana, to Port Huron of 355.8 miles (572.6 km). The remaining separated segments are variously completed and posted or not posted sections of an extension southwest to the Mexican border in Texas. Of this extension—nicknamed the NAFTA Superhighway because it would help trade with Canada and Mexico spurred by the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA)—seven pieces in Laredo, Texas; Pharr, Texas; Brownsville, Texas; Corpus Christi, Texas; Houston, Texas; northwestern Mississippi; and Memphis, Tennessee, have been built or upgraded and signposted as I-69. Indiana completed the fifth segment that extends I-69 through that state in August 2024.
Interstate 240 (I-240) is a 19.27-mile-long (31.01 km) auxiliary Interstate Highway in the US state of Tennessee that forms a bypass around the southern and eastern neighborhoods of Memphis. Combined, I-240 and its parent, I-40, form a contiguous beltway around most of Memphis. I-240 runs from I-40 in Midtown Memphis to I-40 and Sam Cooper Boulevard in East Memphis. Throughout its length, it provides access to I-55, multiple U.S. and state routes, and the Memphis International Airport. The segment between the western terminus and I-55 is a north–south route, and the segment between I-55 and the eastern terminus runs east to west. Throughout its length, I-240 is designated as the Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. Expressway, the W.B. Fowler Sr. Expressway, and the Avron B. Fogelman Expressway.
Interstate 155 (I-155) is an east–west auxiliary Interstate Highway that runs 26.77 miles (43.08 km) through the Bootheel of Missouri and the northwestern corner of Tennessee. It begins south of Hayti, Missouri at Interstate 55 (I-55) and passes eastward through Caruthersville, before crossing the Mississippi River on the Caruthersville Bridge into Tennessee. The route then proceeds to Dyersburg, where it terminates at an interchange with U.S. Route 51 (US 51). I-155 is the only piece of surface transportation infrastructure that directly connects Missouri and Tennessee, and is concurrent with US 412 for its entire length.
U.S. Route 78 (US 78) is an east–west United States Numbered Highway that runs for 843.3 miles (1,357.2 km) from Cash, Arkansas, to Charleston, South Carolina. From Byhalia, Mississippi to Birmingham, Alabama, US 78 runs concurrently with Interstate 22 (I-22). The highway’s western terminus is at I-57/US 67 near Cash, and its eastern terminus is on Line Street, in Charleston. Prior to November 2023, before the western extension, the highway's former western terminus was at US 64/US 70/US 79 in Memphis, Tennessee.
Interstate 269 (I-269) is a beltway around the city of Memphis, Tennessee, and its adjacent suburban areas in southwestern Tennessee and northern Mississippi, completed in October 2018. I-269 was planned and built to serve as an outer bypass for the Memphis metropolitan area, funneling through traffic around the metro area while also functioning as a bypass of future I-69, which will run directly through the center of the metro area. I-269 currently connects to its parent route, I-69, at an interchange in Hernando, Mississippi, and will do so again in Millington, Tennessee, in the future.
State Route 385 (SR 385) is the designation for two non-contiguous segments of east–west controlled-access highway in the Memphis metropolitan area in Shelby County, Tennessee, separated by a section of Interstate 269 (I-269). The northern section, designated as Paul W. Barret Parkway runs between U.S. Route 51 in Millington and I-40 in Arlington, both of which are suburbs of Memphis. The southern segment, known as Bill Morris Parkway, runs between I-240 in southeastern Memphis, and I-269 in Collierville, and also serves the city of Germantown. The northern segment, combined with I-269, serves as a partial outer beltway around Memphis, and the southern segment serves as a spur route between the city and its southeastern suburbs, and is notable for its almost-exclusive use of single-point urban interchanges (SPUIs).
The Memphis & Arkansas Bridge, also known as the Memphis–Arkansas Bridge or inaccurately as the Memphis–Arkansas Memorial Bridge, is a cantilevered through truss bridge carrying Interstate 55 across the Mississippi River between West Memphis, Arkansas and Memphis, Tennessee. Memphians refer to this bridge as the "Old Bridge" to distinguish it from the "New Bridge", or Hernando de Soto Bridge, upstream.
The Hernando de Soto Bridge is a tied-arch bridge carrying Interstate 40 across the Mississippi River between West Memphis, Arkansas, and Memphis, Tennessee. The design is a continuous cantilevered cable-stayed steel through arch, with bedstead endposts. Memphians also call the bridge the "New Bridge", as it is newer than the Memphis & Arkansas Bridge downstream, and the "M Bridge", due to its distinctive shape. It is of similar construction to the Sherman Minton Bridge between Louisville, Kentucky, and New Albany, Indiana.
Interstate 40 (I-40) is part of the Interstate Highway System that runs 2,556.61 miles (4,114.46 km) from Barstow, California, to Wilmington, North Carolina. The highway crosses Tennessee from west to east, from the Mississippi River at the Arkansas border to the Blue Ridge Mountains at the North Carolina border. At 455.28 miles (732.70 km), the Tennessee segment of I-40 is the longest of the eight states through which it passes and the state's longest Interstate Highway.
Interstate 65 (I-65) is part of the Interstate Highway System that runs 887.30 miles (1,427.97 km) north–south from Mobile, Alabama, to Gary, Indiana. In Tennessee, I-65 traverses the middle portion of the state, running from Ardmore at the Alabama border to the Kentucky border near Portland. The route serves the state capital and largest city of Nashville, along with many of its suburbs. Outside of urban areas, the Interstate bypasses most cities and towns that it serves, instead providing access via state and U.S. Highways. The Interstate passes through the Highland Rim and Nashville Basin physiographic regions of Tennessee, and is often used as the dividing line between the eastern and western portions of the former.
Interstate 69 (I-69) is a proposed Interstate Highway that will pass through the western part of the US state of Tennessee, serving the cities of Union City, Dyersburg, and Memphis. Currently, a 21-mile (34 km) section of already-existing freeway in Memphis has been approved for the I-69 designation while another segment near Union City opened on February 21, 2024, under the temporary designation of Tennessee State Route 690. However, state officials have stated that they will not commit to finishing the interstate in their state until they receive more federal funding.
Memphis, Tennessee has developed into a major Mid-American commercial and transportation hub because of its location on the Mississippi River and a convergence of numerous rail and highway links. Four rail and highway bridges cross the Mississippi River at Memphis. In addition, Memphis International Airport has become the world's largest airfreight terminal.
Sam Cooper Boulevard is an urban highway in Memphis, Tennessee, United States. The more recent western segment of the road follows a parkway design, while the older eastern portion, which was proposed and constructed as a segment of Interstate 40 (I-40), was built as a freeway, without at-grade intersections and traffic lights. The western terminus of Sam Cooper Boulevard is at East Parkway North. At the western terminus, there is a short concurrency of East Parkway North with U.S. Route 64 (US 64), US 70, and US 79. From its western end, Sam Cooper Boulevard runs east for 5.8 miles (9.3 km) to reach its eastern terminus at the I-40/I-240 interchange.
In Tennessee, U.S. Route 64 stretches 404.1 miles (650.3 km) from the Mississippi River in Memphis to the North Carolina state line near Ducktown. The highway, along with US 72, is a major route for travel between Memphis and Chattanooga.
On December 23, 1988, a tractor-trailer tanker truck hauling liquefied propane crashed on an exit ramp at the Interstate 40/Interstate 240 (I-40/I-240) interchange in downtown Memphis, Tennessee, US. The crash ruptured the tank; the leaking gas exploded, setting multiple vehicles and structures on fire. The explosion propelled the tank 125 yards (114 m) into a residential complex and started additional fires. The accident caused nine deaths and ten injuries. The interchange where the accident occurred was considered unsafe and poorly designed, and had been the site of several previous accidents; it was completely rebuilt in the 2000s.