Transportation in Memphis, Tennessee

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Memphis trolley on the Riverfront loop (2006) Memphis trolley.jpg
Memphis trolley on the Riverfront loop (2006)

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.

Contents

Travel and shipment of freight are facilitated by two major Interstate highways, I-40 and I-55, that intersect at Memphis. I-240 is a highway spur that carries traffic around the city. A large volume of railroad freight traffic moves through Memphis, thanks to two Mississippi River railroad crossings and the convergence at Memphis of east–west with north–south rail routes. In addition, Memphis is the second busiest cargo port on the Mississippi River.

Local public transportation in the Memphis area is provided by the Memphis Area Transit Authority.

Highways

Interstates

US 64 / US 70 / US 79 travel concurrently in Memphis (2008) US64 US70 US79 Memphis.jpg
US 64 / US 70 / US 79 travel concurrently in Memphis (2008)

Interstate 40 (I-40), its spur highway I-240 and I-55 are the main freeways in the Memphis area. I-40 and I-55 (along with rail lines) cross the Mississippi at Memphis from the state of Arkansas.

I-22 connects the southeast part of Memphis with Mississippi. I-269 is an outer beltway around the city, partially in Mississippi.

Future I-69 is planned for the Memphis area.

U.S. Highways

Memphis is served by seven primary U.S. highways, more than any other city in the Southeastern United States.

Railroad

Central Station, a stop of the City of New Orleans (2005) CityOfNewOrleansInMephis.jpg
Central Station, a stop of the City of New Orleans (2005)

A large volume of railroad freight traffic moves through Memphis, thanks to two Mississippi River railroad crossings and the convergence of east–west rail routes with north–south routes.

Memphis had two major rail passenger stations, Memphis Union Station, razed in early 1969, and Memphis Central Station, which has been renovated. The Central Station renovation was completed in November 1999. [2]

City of New Orleans

Central Station serves Amtrak's City of New Orleans route between Chicago and New Orleans.

Amtrak Train 59, the southbound City of New Orleans, is scheduled to depart Memphis at 6:50am daily with service to Greenwood, Yazoo City, Jackson, Hazlehurst, Brookhaven, McComb, Hammond, and New Orleans.

Amtrak Train 58, the northbound City of New Orleans, is scheduled to depart Memphis at 10:40pm daily with service to Newbern-Dyersburg, Fulton, Carbondale, Centralia, Effingham, Mattoon, Champaign-Urbana, Kankakee, Homewood, and Chicago. [3]

Freight

Five Class I railroads operate in Memphis: Union Pacific (UP), Norfolk Southern (NS), Burlington Northern Santa Fe (BNSF), CSX Transportation (CSXT), and Canadian National (CN). Short-line railroad RJ Corman also owns track branching off of BNSF's Memphis Intermodal Facility. Memphis Intermodal Facility - Tennessee Yard is one of ten freight rail facilities located in Memphis. The others are Leewood Yard (CSXT), Sargent Yard (UP), Forrest Yard (NS), Yale Yard (BNSF), Harrison (Johnson) Yard (CN), CN supply chain solutions, Port of Memphis (CN), and Intermodal Gateway (CN, CSXT). Of these facilities, the only ones capable of loading and unloading containers are Forrest Yard, Intermodal Gateway, and Memphis Intermodal Facility. [4]

Public transportation

Local transit

Map of Lines of the Memphis Street Railway c 1907 Map of Lines of the Memphis Street Railway c 1907.png
Map of Lines of the Memphis Street Railway c 1907
MATA bus in Memphis, December 2004. Memphis MATA bus.jpg
MATA bus in Memphis, December 2004.

The Memphis Area Transit Authority (MATA) provides the area with scheduled city bus service and with paratransit service for persons with disabilities. Three express bus lines were added in 2008 to provide service into Downtown Memphis from outer suburbs.

MATA also operates a heritage trolley system in Downtown Memphis with 24 stations along three lines. The trolley system is in the process of expanding into a regional system.

There is also a monorail known as the Memphis Suspension Railway, which connects the city to Mud Island.

Intercity transit

Intercity bus service to the city is provided by Flixbus, Greyhound Lines, and Jefferson Lines. [5] [6]

Airports

Memphis International Airport, which handled more cargo than any other airport in the world until 2010, is Memphis's sole commercial airport. It remains the busiest cargo airport in the United States as of 2018. The airport is the international cargo hub for FedEx and was a passenger hub for Delta Air Lines after their merger with Northwest Airlines in 2008. [7] Other passenger airlines providing service to the airport are Allegiant Air, American Airlines, Frontier Airlines, Southwest Airlines, and United Airlines. [8]

The Tennessee Air National Guard operates the 164th Airlift Wing at the airport.

Memphis is also served by multiple general aviation (GA) airports. General Dewitt Spain Airport, located about 4 miles from Downtown Memphis, is the only one within city limits. The other GA airports are West Memphis Municipal Airport (about 10 mi from Downtown), Charles W. Baker Airport (about 11 mi from Downtown), Millington-Memphis Airport (about 17 mi from Downtown), and Olive Branch Airport (about 18 mi from Downtown).

Mississippi River port

The International Port of Memphis is the 2nd biggest cargo port on the Mississippi River (the 4th biggest inland port in the United States). [9] The International Port of Memphis covers the Tennessee and Arkansas sides of the Mississippi River from river mile  725 (km 1167) to mile 740 (km 1191). At 15 mi (24 km) long, it has 68 water fronted facilities, 37 of which are terminal facilities for moving products from shore to ship or vice versa. It is 400 mi (644 km) downriver from St. Louis, Missouri and 600 mi (966 km) upriver from New Orleans. [10]

Mississippi River bridges

Memphis & Arkansas, Frisco and Harahan bridges (1985) Memphis, Harahan, and Hernando de Soto Bridges.jpg
Memphis & Arkansas, Frisco and Harahan bridges (1985)

Four rail and highway bridges cross the Mississippi River at Memphis. They are, in order of their opening: the Frisco Bridge, the Harahan Bridge, the Memphis & Arkansas Bridge and the Hernando de Soto Bridge. The piers of the first three bridges had to be lined up for river navigation as they were built side by side at a narrow point in the river.

Frisco Bridge

The Frisco Bridge (May 12, 1892) was the longest bridge in North America when it opened and was originally called the Great Bridge at Memphis. This cantilever truss steel railroad bridge was built between 1888–1892. It was designed by George S. Morison, who also designed the Taft Bridge in Washington, D.C.

Harahan Bridge

The Harahan Bridge (July 14, 1916) is a trestle railroad bridge originally built with narrow, one-way wooden cantilevered roadways along the outsides so it could be used for cars. In 1928, sparks from a train ignited and set fire to one of the wooden plank roads. At present only trains use the Harahan Bridge, but a pedestrian walkway and bike path was completed in fall 2016.

Memphis & Arkansas Bridge

Hernando de Soto Bridge (2007) Desoto bridge memphis.JPG
Hernando de Soto Bridge (2007)

The Memphis & Arkansas Bridge (December 17, 1949), carries Interstate 55 and has a pedestrian walkway. The bridge was built between 1945–1949 and is the longest Warren truss- style bridge in the United States. It is listed on the National Historic Register.

Hernando de Soto Bridge

The Hernando de Soto Bridge (August 2, 1973) with its steel arches carries Interstate 40. In 1986, M-shaped lights became part of the bridge and a Memphis landmark.

The Guinness Book of World Records lists the de Soto bridge for its unique structural "letter" shape. In 2001 the mysterious disappearance and death of Harvard University biophysicist Don Wiley, whose abandoned car was found on the bridge, brought the Hernando de Soto Bridge national headlines. [11]

The de Soto bridge once again made national headlines in May 2021, when a crack developed in one of the bridge trusses. The bridge was closed for 3.5 months as repairs were made and fully reopened on August 3, 2021. [12] [13] [14]

Bridges overview

NameNicknameTotal lengthOpening date
Frisco Bridge 4,887  ft (1,490  m )12 May 1892
Harahan Bridge 4,973 ft (1,516 m)14 July 1916
Memphis & Arkansas Bridge "Old Bridge"5,222 ft (1,592 m)17 Dec. 1949
Hernando de Soto Bridge "New Bridge"; "Dolly Parton Bridge"; "M Bridge"19,535 ft (5,954 m)2 Aug. 1973

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References

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  4. "Greater Memphis Regional Freight Plan" (PDF). Memphis MPO: 123–135.
  5. "Jefferson Lines Tennessee Bus Stops" . Retrieved July 20, 2023.
  6. "Greyhound Bus Routes" . Retrieved July 20, 2023.
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  8. "Airlines at MEM". Memphis International Airport - MEM. Retrieved 2021-11-23.
  9. Top US Inland Ports for 2003 Archived 2009-03-25 at the Wayback Machine
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  12. Amir Vera and Paul Murphy. "Vital Memphis bridge shut down after officials find structural crack". CNN. Retrieved 2021-11-23.
  13. Watts, Micaela A. "All lanes of I-40 Hernando de Soto bridge are now open". The Commercial Appeal. Retrieved 2021-11-23.
  14. "I-40 Hernando DeSoto Bridge Shut Down for Repairs". www.tn.gov. Retrieved 2021-11-23.