Interstate_19

Interstate 19

Interstate 19

Interstate Highway in southern Arizona


Interstate 19 (I-19) is a north–south Interstate Highway located entirely within the US state of Arizona. I-19 travels from Nogales, roughly 90 meters (300 ft) from the Mexican border, to Tucson, at I-10. The highway also travels through the cities of Rio Rico, Green Valley, and Sahuarita.

Quick Facts Route information, Length ...

Having a total length of just over 102 kilometers (63 mi), I-19 is the seventh-shortest primary (two-digit) Interstate Highway in the contiguous 48 states, where only I-87 (North Carolina), I-97 (Maryland), I-86 (Idaho), I-14 (Texas), I-11 (Nevada), and I-2 (Texas) are shorter.

While the highway is short, it is a very important corridor, serving as a fast route from Tucson and Phoenix (via I-10) to the Mexican border. The highway is a portion of the US section of the CANAMEX Corridor, a trade corridor that stretches north from Mexico across the US to the Canadian province of British Columbia.

Route description

I-19 becomes an at-grade divided freeway just west of its southern terminus in Nogales. The US–Mexico border is just south of the Interstate (left of image).

In Nogales, the southern terminus of I-19 is at West Crawford Street, adjacent to the international port of entry, and southbound travelers can continue into Heroica Nogales, Mexico, via state-maintained surface roads, and connect with Federal Highway 15 (Fed. 15) either to the south or west of Nogales, Sonora.[3]

Starting from the southern terminus at kilometer post 0 (not milepost 0), I-19 initially heads briefly south then west on surface streets, navigating its way through the town of Nogales for 0.32 kilometers (0.2 mi) before becoming an Interstate-grade freeway and making the turn to head north toward Tucson. It has interchanges with two other state highways near the southern end of the route, State Route 189 (SR 189) at exit 4 and SR 289 at exit 12. The interchange with SR 189 at exit 4 both serves to funnel traffic so as to bypass around Nogales and Heroica Nogales for travelers bound to or from Hermosillo or Mexico City and provides for the continuous flow of freight and truck traffic through the larger Nogales-Mariposa Port of Entry to Fed. 15, which has its northern terminus at the US–Mexico border with SR 189 and its southern terminus 2,179 kilometers (1,354 mi) away in Mexico City.[4] After exiting Nogales to the north, I-19 passes near and around a series of sparsely-populated towns and retirement communities along the banks of the Santa Cruz River, including Rio Rico, Tubac, Amado, Green Valley, and Sahuarita. For several miles near Amado and Green Valley, the eastward view from I-19 provides scenic views of Madera Canyon and the Santa Rita Mountains in the Coronado National Forest.[3]

I-19 northbound at the I-10 interchange; the downtown Tucson skyline can be seen on the left.

Just before entering Tucson, I-19 passes through the eastern section of the San Xavier Indian Reservation where it makes its only crossing of the Santa Cruz River. As I-19 enters the Tucson city limits, it has an interchange with SR 86 at exit 99 before reaching its northern terminus at an interchange with I-10.[3]

Nearly the entire route of I-19 follows, or is adjacent to, the former routing of US Route 89 (US 89) and the Santa Cruz River, which flows northward from Mexico, through Tucson and usually disperses into the desert between Marana and the Gila River, southeast of Phoenix. Most of the time, much of the river is dry, but heavy storms can cause it to overflow its banks, flooding farmland before reaching the Gila River.

Signage

Metric-unit advance guide sign on I-19, installed as part of the Valencia Road interchange renovation

I-19 is unique among US Interstates because signed distances are given in meters (hundreds or thousands as distance-to-exit indications) or kilometers (as distance-to-destination indications), and not miles. However, the speed limit signs give speeds in miles per hour. According to the Arizona Department of Transportation (ADOT), metric signs were originally placed because of the push toward the metric system in the US at the time of the original construction of the highway.[5]

I-19 had originally been signed as it was constructed, in a series of small signing contracts that used customary units.[6] In 1980, ADOT awarded a single contract to install new signs which used metric units, to overlay customary-unit expressions on some existing signs with metric-unit expressions, to install kilometer posts, and to provide bilingual signing in select locations. The signing scheme used in 1980 provided explicit units on advance guide signs, but not on interchange sequence signs or post-interchange confirmation (distance) signs.

The expressions on advance guide signs were of the form "2 km" (1.2 mi) for distances over one kilometer (0.62 mi) and "500 m" (0.31 mi) for distances under one kilometer (0.62 mi), with no provision for fractional kilometrages. On advance guide signs, the metric unit expressions "km" and "m" were placed on the baseline where "MILES" would otherwise have gone but were sized so that their lowercase loop height matched the uppercase letter height of "MILES" on customary-unit signs.

The exception was a handful of advance guide signs for the SR 86 (Ajo Way) exit, which used "KM" (in uppercase, contrary to SI nomenclature) on the same baseline and at the same letter height as "MILES". The 1980 signing plans also provided design details for speed limit and advisory speed signs using metric units, with the limit values enclosed in a red circle on the speed limit sign and a black circle on the yellow-background advisory signs. These speed signs all had explicit units, with "km/h" below the circle enclosing the limit value. However, the advisory signs were canceled by change order and not installed.

Had the metric speed limit sign been installed, the signed speed limit on I-19 would have been 88 km/h (55 mph), which is a close soft-conversion of the then-existing 55 mph (89 km/h) national maximum speed limit. As Arizona's current maximum speed limit is 75 mph (121 km/h), the metric equivalent would most likely read 120 km/h (75 mph). Information signs, to three distinct designs, were also placed at various locations on or near I-19 to advise motorists that the highway was signed in metric. Notwithstanding the metric legends, the signing plans were dimensioned entirely in feet and inches.[7]

In 1999, ADOT awarded two contracts (administered as a single construction project) to renew the signs along the full length of I-19. The general approach toward metric signing differed from that taken in 1980. Explicit units were given not just on advance guide signs, but also on interchange sequence signs, post-interchange confirmation signs, and community interchange signs (the last-listed had not been used in 1980). On the distance signs, "km" appeared after each kilometer measurement except when one or more of the distances was a fractional kilometer.

In such cases, all the distances were given in meters with "meters" (written out in full, not "m") after each distance value. On distance signs in general, "km" or "meters" appeared on the same baseline and with the same letter height as the distance values, while advance guide signs were formatted as in 1980. Since a typical ADOT freeway guide sign rehabilitation contract also replaces surface road signing near those roads' interchanges with the freeway, metric-unit signs also appeared on local roads near I-19, giving distances in kilometers to tourist attractions such as Mission San Xavier del Bac.

As was the case in 1980, the signing plans were dimensioned in feet and inches.[8] However, a number of signs near the Valencia Road interchange were replaced or amended when it was converted from a partial cloverleaf interchange to a single-point urban interchange in 2000. One of these signs has a fractional kilometrage greater than one kilometer (0.62 mi), rendered as "1500 m" (0.93 mi), while others use "m" rather than "meters" as the unit expression. Metric-unit expressions on the advance guide signs installed or modified as part of this contract appear on the same baseline as the metric values, rather than on a raised baseline as on other I-19 advance guide signs. Again, the plans were dimensioned in feet and inches.[9]

Citing motorist confusion arising from the metric signs on I-19, ADOT's Tucson district announced that new signs on I-19 would use US customary units. To avoid the cost of replacing the metric signs all at once, signs would be replaced in specific areas of the freeway during construction projects in those areas.[10] New signs were put into place between exit 99 (Ajo Way) and exit 101 (I-10) in 2004 after the completion of the new I-10/I-19 interchange.

As of 2010, the remainder of the project has been stalled due to local opposition, particularly from businesses that would have to change their directions.[11]

A reconstruction project at the Interstate's northern terminus with I-10 in Tucson (at the interchange commonly called the Crossing) began in 2002 and was completed in August 2004.[12]

History

The first sections of I-19 to be opened to traffic were a 4.8-kilometer (3 mi) stub from I-10 to Valencia Road, in 1962 and a 3.2-kilometer (2 mi) stretch in Green Valley in 1963. The freeway between Rio Rico and Nogales was completed in 1974. The major section between Green Valley and Rio Rico was finished in 1978. The official completion date of the I-19 segment between Tucson (km 100) and Green Valley (actually Helmet Peak Road at km 75) was February 12, 1972. A 1978 project report for ADOT lists the entire I-19 project as "completed", which includes segments between Green Valley and Nogales.

Future

I-19 is a very heavily traveled corridor in the Tucson metro area. The freeway is currently two lanes in both directions for most of its length, with the exception of the interchange with I-10 up until Irvington Road, where it transitions to four lanes. Current plans call for widening from Irvington Road to Valencia Road, bringing the freeway to three lanes in each direction.[13] Future plans include expansion to up to five lanes in each direction by 2030 from the crossing with I-10 to San Xavier Road.[14]

I-19 is also part of the proposed I-11 corridor between Nogales and Sahuarita.[15]

Exit list

More information County, Location ...

Business routes

Historically, I-19 has had two business loops, both of which are former sections of US 89, SR 93, and SR 789. One is currently active while the other is decommissioned. Both business loops are currently and formerly recognized under the unsigned designation Arizona State Route 19 Business (also known as State Business Route 19).

Nogales loop

Quick Facts Location, Length ...
A map of the Nogales business loop. The route is highlighted in red.
I-19 Bus. (Grand Avenue) junction with SR 82 in Nogales

Interstate 19 Business (I-19 Bus.) begins at the Mexican border in Nogales near the southern end of the Interstate. I-19 Bus. follows Grand Avenue in Nogales and has intersections with SR 82 and SR 189 before terminating at I-19 just north of Nogales.[1] The route follows the former alignment of US 89, SR 93, and SR 789, back when all three highways traversed through southern Arizona.[18] The route has been commissioned as I-19 Bus. since US 89 was decommissioned from southern Arizona in 1992.[17]

Major intersections
The entire route is in Santa Cruz County.

More information Location, mi ...

Sahuarita–Tucson loop

Quick Facts Location, Length ...
A map of the Tucson business loop. The route is highlighted in red.

Interstate 19 Business (I-19 Bus.) began at I-19 exit 69 in Green Valley at West Duval Mine Road and South Nogales Highway. I-19 Bus. followed Nogales Highway north through unincorporated Pima County and Sahuarita into Tucson. In Tucson, I-19 Bus. curved from Nogales Highway onto South 6th Avenue where it served as the eastern terminus of SR 86 at West Ajo Way, before terminating at I-10 exit 261 and South 6th Avenue in South Tucson.[1] The route follows the former alignment of US 89, SR 93, and SR 789, back when all three highways traversed through southern Arizona.[18] The route was commissioned as I-19 Bus. since US 89 was decommissioned from southern Arizona in 1992.[19] In 2002, the state handed maintenance of I-19 Bus. between Los Reales Road and I-10 to the city of Tucson.[21] The rest of the route was handed over to Pima County and the city of Sahuarita in 2004. This also meant the designation was retired from the state highway system completely.[20]

Major intersections
The entire route was in Pima County.

More information Location, mi ...

See also


References

  1. "2009 State Highway System Log" (PDF). Arizona Department of Transportation. December 31, 2009. pp. 137–145. Retrieved January 13, 2010.
  2. Transportation Planning Division, Data Bureau (December 15, 1998). "1998 State Highway System Log" (PDF). Arizona Department of Transportation. Retrieved June 10, 2019.
  3. Google (February 15, 2008). "Overview Map of I-19" (Map). Google Maps. Google. Retrieved February 15, 2008.
  4. Calculate your route (Map). Michelin. Retrieved August 11, 2010.
  5. Holley, Denise (May 14, 2009). "ADOT Defends Replacing Metric Signs along I-19". Nogales International. Retrieved April 23, 2014.
  6. One example of such a contract was Arizona federal-aid project I-19-1(65), covering I-19 between its Nogales terminus and the Otero TI (title sheet signed August 7, 1970).
  7. Construction plans for Arizona federal-aid project I-19-1(81) (title sheet signed January 17, 1980).
  8. Construction plans for Arizona federal-aid projects NH-19-1(110) (ADOT TRACS H260701C) and NH-19-1(116) (TRACS H260702C) (most sheets sealed March 1997).
  9. Construction plans for Arizona federal-aid project ACNH-19-1(127) (TRACS H260901C) (most sheets sealed June 1999).
  10. Cañizo, Susanna (January 19, 2004). "Some I-19 Metric Signs Going". Arizona Daily Star. Tucson. Archived from the original on February 23, 2005. Retrieved June 13, 2012.
  11. Lacey, Mark (September 14, 2010). "Metric Interstate Divides Arizonans". The New York Times. Retrieved September 14, 2010.
  12. Staff. "Home Page". The Crossing: I-10/I-19 Interchange. Arizona Department of Transportation. Archived from the original on February 7, 2005. Retrieved November 27, 2011.
  13. Arizona Department of Transportation. "Interstate 19: Ajo Way Traffic Interchange". Arizona Department of Transportation. Retrieved September 25, 2014.
  14. "Search | ADOT". Arizona Department of Transportation.
  15. ADOT Media Relations (December 4, 2015). "Interstate 11 receives designation in federal transportation funding bill" (Press release). Arizona Department of Transportation. Retrieved December 7, 2015. The Fixing America's Surface Transportation Act, or FAST Act, formally designates Interstate 11 throughout Arizona. It states that the I-11 corridor will generally follow Interstate 19 from Nogales to Tucson, Interstate 10 from Tucson to Phoenix, and US 93 from Wickenburg to the Nevada state line. From there, the Interstate 11 corridor extends north through Nevada, and is designated as an interstate highway north of Las Vegas, through Reno, connecting to Interstate 80.
  16. Transportation Planning Division, Data Bureau (January 1, 1981). "1981 State Highway System Log" (PDF). Arizona Department of Transportation. pp. 113–121. Retrieved November 5, 2019 via Arizona Memory Project.
  17. Arizona Department of Transportation. "ADOT Right-of-Way Resolution 1992-08-A-056". Retrieved October 15, 2019 via Arizona Highway Data. Renumber U.S. 89 from Mexico border to jct of I-19 north of Nogales
  18. Rand McNally & Co. (1963). State Highway Department Road Map of Arizona (Map). 1:1,584,640. Arizona State Highway Department. Retrieved August 24, 2018 via AARoads.
  19. Arizona Department of Transportation (August 21, 1992). "ADOT Right-of-Way Resolution 1992-08-A-056". Retrieved October 16, 2019 via Arizona Highway Data. Renumber U.S. 89 from jct with I-19 near Green Valley to I-10 in Tucson
  20. Arizona Department of Transportation (March 19, 2004). "ADOT Right-of-Way Resolution 2004-03-A-09". Retrieved October 16, 2019 via Arizona Highway Data. Abandon B-19 (old 89) from Duval Mine Road going north to Los Reales Road; Portion goes to Pima County, portion goes to the Town of Sahuarita; PR: 9-9-27, p. 26; + various; and 92-08-A-56.
  21. Arizona Department of Transportation (October 18, 2002). "ADOT Right-of-Way Resolution 2002-10-A-049". Retrieved October 16, 2019 via Arizona Highway Data. Abandon to City of Tucson B19 from I-10 south to Los Reales Rd.
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  • I-19 at Arizona Roads
  • I-19 at AARoad's Interstate Guide

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