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Highway in Iowa and Nebraska From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Interstate 680 (I-680) in Nebraska and Iowa is the northern bypass of the Omaha–Council Bluffs metropolitan area. I-680 spans 16.49 miles (26.54 km) from its southern end in western Omaha, Nebraska, to its eastern end near Crescent, Iowa. The freeway passes through a diverse range of scenes and terrains—the urban setting of Omaha, the Missouri River and its valley, the rugged Loess Hills, and the farmland of Pottawattamie County, Iowa.
Route information | |||||||
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Auxiliary route of I-80 | |||||||
Maintained by NDOT and Iowa DOT | |||||||
Length | 16.49 mi[1] (26.54 km) | ||||||
Existed | December 13, 1966[4]–present | ||||||
NHS | Entire route | ||||||
Major junctions | |||||||
South end | I-80 in Omaha, NE | ||||||
East end | I-29 near Crescent, IA | ||||||
Location | |||||||
Country | United States | ||||||
States | |||||||
Counties |
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Highway system | |||||||
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From 1973 until 2019, I-680 extended much farther into Iowa. It followed I-29 for 10 miles (16 km) between Crescent and Loveland. It then headed east along what is now known as I-880 until it met I-80 again near Neola. The I-880 section was originally known as I-80N from 1966 until it was absorbed into I-680 in 1973. I-680 in Omaha was originally designated Interstate 280 (I-280). Maps from the early and mid-1960s showed I-280 in Omaha. Since this highway would extend into Iowa and I-280 was already planned for the Quad Cities area, this route was redesignated I-680.
I-680 begins at a complex interchange with I-80 in Omaha. Due to the proximity of the West Center Road interchange on I-680 and the I, L, and Q street interchanges on I-80, all the exit and entrance ramps which connect I-80 to I-680 also connect to West Center Road and I, L, and Q streets. The freeway heads north through the heart of West Omaha; it serves as a dividing line of several residential neighborhoods.[5][6] Two miles (3.2 km) north of West Center Road, which, prior to 2003, was Nebraska Highway 38 (N-38),[7] is a new interchange with US Route 6 (US 6), known as Dodge Street in Omaha.[2] Another mile (1.6 km) north of Dodge Street is N-64, known as Maple Street.[2]
At N-133, I-680 turns to the east toward Iowa. South of this interchange, I-680 travels through residential neighborhoods, but, to the east, the population thins and the Interstate passes through farmland for 4.5 miles (7.2 km).[8] I-680 crosses over N-36, which is accessed via the US 75 interchange 0.5 miles (0.80 km) later. US 75 runs adjacent to I-680 for one mile (1.6 km) before turning south at 30th Street.[2] The Interstate crosses the Missouri River to Iowa via the Mormon Bridge.[9] In Iowa, I-680 is markedly less urban than in Nebraska. The first three miles (4.8 km) of I-680 travel through the flat bottoms of the Missouri River valley.[10] I-680 ends at an interchange with I-29 just west of Crescent.
Location | Omaha, Nebraska |
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Existed | 1958–1965 |
In Nebraska, plans for I-280 to bypass Omaha to the north to I-29 were drawn up in the late 1950s. At the same time, plans were being drawn up for an I-280 to bypass the Quad Cities. Since two Interstates cannot have the same designation in the same state, one of the I-280s had to be renumbered. The Omaha I-280 was redesignated as I-680 around 1965.[11] In Iowa, I-80N opened to traffic on December 13, 1966.[4] I-80N extended from the current northern interchange with I-29 near Loveland to the I-80 interchange near Neola.
In the early 1970s, the American Association of State Highway and Transportation Officials (AASHTO) decided that Interstates with a directional suffix, such as I-80N, would have to be renumbered.[12] By 1974, I-80N had been redesignated to I-680 to match Nebraska.[13] The last piece of I-680 to be completed in Nebraska was the westbound bridge across the Missouri River.[14] Paving in Iowa wrapped up in the years to come and the entire route was open to traffic by April 21, 1979.[4]
Over the course of several months in 2011, I-680 was severely damaged by flood waters from the Missouri River. The first sections of both I-680 and I-29 closed on June 10. I-29 was closed from North 25th Street to the northern I-680 interchange near Loveland. I-680 was closed from US 75 in Omaha to the southern interchange with I-29.[15] A week later, water was diverted and drained from the area around the northern I-29 interchange to allow traffic to use the roads. I-680 was opened from the interchange to the Beebeetown exit and I-29 was reopened from the interchange to the US 30 exit at Missouri Valley. I-29 traffic was routed around the flooded area by using I-680 eastbound to I-80 westbound to Council Bluffs.[16]
After floodwaters receded and the damage was assessed, sections of I-680 were reopened to traffic. However, the section west of I-29 was the most heavily damaged and it remained closed. Contract bids were let on September 23, and reconstruction began on September 28.[17] Construction crews worked at "an accelerated pace" to complete the road in 34 days.[18] The road was officially reopened on November 2 during a ceremony in Crescent hosted by Governor Terry Branstad.[19]
Iowa DOT closed I-680 for three separate periods during the 2019 floods:
Due to I-29 and I-680 being subjected to flooding from the adjacent Missouri River, Iowa DOT officials sought to reduce confusion among drivers who were forced to use I-680 and I-80 as a detour around floodwaters. They proposed to AASHTO to rename the section of I-680 from Loveland to Neola, Iowa as I-880. The plan was approved on October 5, 2019.[24] I-880 would follow the same routing that I-80N had 50 years earlier. Iowa DOT updated its online maps and announced that the signage would be changed just weeks after the official approval by AASHTO.[25]
Due to excessive rainfall in the Siouxland area upstream of Omaha/Council Bluffs, flooding of the Missouri River caused Iowa DOT to close I-29 and I-680, starting at 1am on Wednesday, June 26, 2024. [26] Iowa DOT re-opened I-29 and I-680 with limited lanes at 6pm on Wednesday, July 3. [27] All lanes and all ramps opened at 7:30am on Friday, July 12.
State | County | Location | mi[2][3] | km | Exit | Destinations | Notes |
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Nebraska | Douglas | Omaha | 0.00 | 0.00 | 446 | I-80 – Downtown, Lincoln | Counterclockwise terminus; I-80 exit 446; exit number is for I-80 westbound; exit number based on I-80 mileage |
0.72 | 1.16 | 1 | West Center Road / I Street / US 275 / N-92 (L Street) / Q Street | No southbound entrance; southbound exit uses C/D lanes; I-80 exit 445; West Center Road is former N-38; northbound exit signed as West Center Road only | |||
1.73 | 2.78 | 2 | Pacific Street | ||||
2.91 | 4.68 | 3 | US 6 (West Dodge Road) – Downtown, Boys Town | There are direct exit and entrance ramps to/from Old Mill, 114th Street, and 120th Street | |||
4.48 | 7.21 | 4 | N-64 (Maple Street) | ||||
5.93 | 9.54 | 5 | Fort Street | ||||
7.03 | 11.31 | 6 | N-133 (Blair High Road) – Blair, Irvington | ||||
9.75 | 15.69 | 9 | 72nd Street | ||||
11.99 | 19.30 | 12 | US 75 (48th Street) to N-36 | Former US 73 | |||
12.94 | 20.82 | 13 | 30th Street (L-28H) – Eppley Airfield | L-28H unsigned | |||
Missouri River | 13.32 0.000 | 21.44 0.000 | Mormon Bridge | ||||
Iowa | Pottawattamie | Crescent Township | 1.099 | 1.769 | 1 | County Road | [28] |
Crescent | 3.169 | 5.100 | 3 | I-29 / CR G37 east – Council Bluffs, Crescent, Sioux City | Clockwise terminus; signed as 3A (south) and 3B (east); I-29 exit 61B | ||
1.000 mi = 1.609 km; 1.000 km = 0.621 mi |
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