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Why Rebuild?  
Looking to the Future


The goals of I-235 reconstruction are to improve safety, update the facility to current roadway design standards, reduce congestion, and improve mobility.

Constructed in the 1960s, I-235 is seriously outdated. It reflects 40-year-old design standards, and is wearing out.

  • The pavement is beyond its 30-to 40-year life expectancy and rapidly deteriorating.
  • Because of their low clearance, bridges are frequently hit by high-profile vehicles.
  • Interchanges are too closely spaced.
  • The limited number of traffic lanes causes congestion during peak travel periods.
  • The highway fails to meet present traffic demands, and those predicted for the future.
  • Even with improvements to city streets and other state highways, the area can't handle the projected traffic over the next 20 years.
As the major transportation corridor through the Des Moines metropolitan and state capitol areas, the 14-mile freeway carries significantly more traffic than any other corridor in the state, and is critical to the economic development and growth of the area.

I-235 also has a higher-than-average vehicle crash rate. The crash toll continues to rise, averaging 850 collisions per year along the entire length, including the 21 interchanges. The new freeway could save lives and head off serious crashes.

Planned Improvements

  • The rebuilding project will reconstruct I-235 to current design standards.
  • At least six through travel lanes (three in each direction) will be built the entire length of the freeway.
  • In some sections there will be an additional lane, or four lanes in each direction.
  • The entrance and exit ramps will be lengthened.
  • Bridges with low clearances will be rebuilt.
  • The appearance of the corridor will be enhanced with lighting, plants and color variations on the bridges.
   

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