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・ Interstate 229 (Missouri)
・ Interstate 229 (South Dakota)
・ Interstate 235
・ Interstate 235 (Iowa)
・ Interstate 235 (Kansas)
・ Interstate 235 (Oklahoma)
・ Interstate 238
・ Interstate 24
・ Interstate 24 Bridge
・ Interstate 24 in Illinois
・ Interstate 24 in Kentucky
・ Interstate 24 in Tennessee and Georgia
・ Interstate 240
・ Interstate 240 (North Carolina)
・ Interstate 240 (Oklahoma)
Interstate 240 (Tennessee)
・ Interstate 244
・ Interstate 25
・ Interstate 25 in Colorado
・ Interstate 25 in New Mexico
・ Interstate 25 in Wyoming
・ Interstate 255
・ Interstate 26
・ Interstate 26 in North Carolina
・ Interstate 26 in South Carolina
・ Interstate 264
・ Interstate 264 (Kentucky)
・ Interstate 264 (Virginia)
・ Interstate 265
・ Interstate 269


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Interstate 240 (Tennessee) : ウィキペディア英語版
Interstate 240 (Tennessee)

Interstate 240 (I-240) is an Interstate Highway in the U.S. state of Tennessee. Running , it loops southward from Interstate 40 in east Memphis, then turning west at TN 385 (Bill Morris Parkway). At I-55, the highway turns north and runs through midtown to end at I-40. The section in East Memphis around Walnut Grove Road is the busiest interstate in Tennessee, with an AADT of just under 200,000 vehicles.
==History==
I-240 was first planned circa 1955, but it was to have been a beltway to completely encircle midtown Memphis, with the exception of the segment between Interstates 40 and 55, which was proposed as Interstate 255. Later, that number was decommissioned in favor of I-240 running in a full loop, with I-40 running from downtown to east Memphis. However, in 1957 citizens collected 10,000 signatures protesting the route, which cut through Overton Park in midtown. The controversy lasted until the 1970s, when the Supreme Court ruled in favor of the citizens. This effectively cancelled the Overton Park routing, shifting I-40 onto the northern leg of I-240. Part of the proposed I-40 route was already built from N. Highland St. east to the I-40/240 junction. The road is now called Sam Cooper Boulevard, and is owned by the city.
In 2000, the City of Memphis built an extension to the former I-40 section of Sam Cooper Blvd. This extension runs west from N. Tillman St. (the former entry/end point for Sam Cooper Boulevard) as a limited access ''parkway'' to East Parkway N. (a former exit for the proposed "Overton Park route").
The interstates overlapped around the northern bypass of Memphis for many years, but the northern leg eventually came to be known only as I-40, eliminating the concurrency and turning I-240 into a semi-beltway. Exits were not renumbered.
On January 18, 2008, the Federal Highway Administration authorized the states of Mississippi and Tennessee to extend I-69 from the I-40/TN 300 interchange in north Memphis to the I-55/I-69 interchange in Hernando; however, Tennessee has signed the extension of the route, although Mississippi has already done so.
On March 24, 2010, a sinkhole formed in the two leftmost northbound lanes north of the Walnut Grove interchange. It was initially thought to have been a smaller pothole and had been paved over the day before. It formed around 3:00 in the afternoon and damaged several cars, although no injuries were reported. These two lanes were shut down until March 28 while the sinkhole was filled.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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