I-85
Interstate 85 is an interstate highway in the southeastern United States. Its southern terminus is at an intersection with Interstate 65 in Montgomery, Alabama; its northern terminus is at an intersection with Interstate 95 in Petersburg, Virginia, near Richmond.
Length
Major Cities Along the Route
Intersections with other Interstates
Spur Routes
- I-185 - Spur to Columbus, Georgia
- I-285 - Atlanta, Georgia
- I-985 - Spur to Gainesville, Georgia
- I-185 - Greenville, South Carolina
- I-385 - Spur to Clinton, South Carolina, 42 miles (6 km)
- I-385 stretches from Clinton at Interstate 26 to Greenville, South Carolina at U.S. Highway 29. After exit 42, Interstate 385 turns into a Business Spur that then promptly ends at U.S. 29 near the Bi-Lo Center in Downtown Greenville.
- I-585] - Spartanburg, South Carolina, 2.25 miles
- I-585 stretches from the I-85 Business Loop to U.S. Highway 221. I-585 is co-signed the entire length with U.S. Highway 176 and uses its exit number system instead of its own. Between exits 23 and 24 the Interstate is considered "at-grade" before its exit with U.S. 221 and then quickly ends at the stoplight. The spur was once connected to Interstate 85 from 1957 till 1997. That year, I-85 was moved north to by-pass Spartanburg, leaving I-585 an orphan. There are plans in the future to extend I-585 along U.S. 176 to I-85's new location.
- I-485 - Charlotte, North Carolina
Notes
- Interstate 85 has two business routes, one in Spartanburg, South Carolina and the other in Lexington to Greensboro, North Carolina.
- Interstate 85 has also been rerouted on three different occasions: in northeastern Atlanta, north of Spartanburg, and around Greensboro. The former I-85 in Atlanta is now part of GA 13, and the other two reroutings have produced the aforementioned business routes. Additionally, a section of I-85 ended in Charlotte as a new extension to the northeast was being built.
- Future Interstate 785 is currently planned from Greensboro, North Carolina to Danville, Virginia; along the current U.S. Highway 29 route.
- In North Carolina, I-85 merges with I-40 from Greensboro to Hillsborough, just west of Durham. In Alamance County, the highway is also known as the Sam Hunt Freeway. Because I-85 was recently rerouted around Greensboro, it splits with I-40 eight miles east of the original departure point.
- Through downtown Atlanta, I-85 merges with I-75 for a short time. This strip of highway, called the Downtown Connector, is infamous for its bad traffic, and rather confusing split at the north end.
- Interstate 485 was supposed to be an east-west connector route in the Atlanta area, but it was erased due to community opposition. Part of what would've been I-485 is now GA 10, and the I-485 designation itself has been assigned to a new beltway around Charlotte.
- There is currently a plan to extend I-85 across western Alabama, where it will connect with I-20 near Cuba, Alabama. This extension is in the planning stages. This extension will roughly follow the route of US-80.
- The junction between I-85 and I-77 in Charlotte is a strange configuration. When I-85 passes under I-77, the northbound lanes of I-77 are to the west (south on I-85) of the southbound lanes, and southbound I-77 is to the east (north on I-85) of northbound. The travel lanes on I-77 return to their proper positions north and south of this interchange.
- I-85 could also be extended to Baltimore. It would merge with I-95 in Petersburg, then follow it through Richmond, Fredericksburg, Springfield and Alexandria. The addition of I-85 to the Capital Beltway would create a third interstate sharing the same road around Washington, D.C., along with I-95 and I-495. (Currently, the only time that three Interstates share the same road is I-55/I-64/I-70 in the St. Louis area.) Coincidentally, a similar situation would be created in Richmond, where I-95 and I-64 run together for 4 miles. The I-85/I-95 merge would leave the Beltway at College Park, Maryland, and then I-85 itself would leave I-95 at the MD 32 interchange. From there, I-85 would follow MD 32 to the Baltimore-Washington Parkway and continue its northward trek along that route. The reason that the Parkway doesn't carry a route number south of MD 32 is because the National Parks Service, who owns that stretch, wouldn't allow route numbers there, 295 or not. I-85 would end in Baltimore at its junction with I-95, like it currently does in Petersburg. There could also be a business spur assigned to the ensuing surface street that leads into the downtown district. Anyway, if I-85 is extended northward into Maryland and Pennsylvania, there would be some justification for renumbering Interstate 99 as Interstate 81 and the current I-81 as Interstate 83 to a point.