Interstate 840 (Tennessee)


Interstate 840, formerly State Route 840, is a freeway that serves as an outer bypass route around Nashville, Tennessee. Built by the Tennessee Department of Transportation, it is also designated as Tennessee National Guard Parkway. At a length of long, it is the tenth-longest auxiliary Interstate Highway in the nation. The route serves the cities of Lebanon, Murfreesboro, Franklin, and Dickson, all suburbs of Nashville.
First proposed by former Governor Lamar Alexander as part of a system of Bicentennial Parkways, construction began in 1991 and was completed in 2012. I-840 was originally planned as an Interstate Highway, but was constructed entirely with state funds, and as a result was initially designated as a state route. In 2015, approval was given by the Federal Highway Administration and the American Association of State Highway and Transportation Officials to redesignate SR 840 as I-840 as part of its integration into the Interstate Highway System. On August 12, 2016, TDOT announced that the route had officially been renamed Interstate 840, and that re-signing work would begin.

Route description

I-840 begins at an interchange in Dickson County southeast of Dickson and Burns. It initially runs southeast through a rural area, passing through a mix of farmland and woodlands characterized by a terrain made up of rolling hills, the eastbound lanes briefly gaining a truck climbing lane. The highway crosses briefly into Hickman County about later. The route remains in Hickman County for less than, before crossing into Williamson County, and reaching an interchange with State Route 100 about later. I-840 continues through a predominantly rural area over the next, alternating between farmland and woodlands, before transitioning into a region characterized by dense woodlands, rolling hills with moderate grades, and several streams and creeks, and reaching SR 46 at an interchange near the community of Leiper's Fork about beyond this point. About later, I-840 crosses the Natchez Trace Parkway and gradually turns east, continuing through similar terrain. After about, I-840 passes through flat terrain consisting primarily of farmland and woodlands over the next approximately, before briefly entering a rapidly growing suburban area south of Franklin and coming to an interchange with U.S. Route 31. About beyond this point is an interchange with US 431. Less than later, I-840 comes to an interchange with I-65 that resembles a cloverstack interchange, containing two loop ramps and two underpass ramps that cross I-840 combined together.
After this interchange, I-840 crosses a steep hill and continues through terrain consisting of several rolling hills, some with relatively steep grades, and crosses the Harpeth River about later. later I-840 comes to an interchange with US 31A and US 41A near the community of Triune. About later I-840 crosses SR 96 at the top of a large hill and begins a steep downgrade; the westbound lanes utilize a truck climbing lane over a short distance to ascend the hill from the east. It then crosses into Rutherford County, entering a more flat terrain and another rapidly developing suburban area, and about later, I-840 comes to an interchange with I-24 northwest of Murfreesboro. This interchange is almost a complete cloverleaf, containing three loop ramps and one flyover. The route then turns northeast, passing through a relatively flat region with little elevation change, and interchanges with US 41 and US 70S in a cloverstack interchange about later. About later, I-840 crosses the west fork of the Stones River, gradually turning northwest, and about later, turns sharply northeast, and crosses the east fork of the Stones River about beyond this point. About later I-840 shifts north, and another later crosses the Fall Creek impoundment of J. Percy Priest Lake. A short distance later is an interchange with the western terminus of SR 452. I-840 then crosses into Wilson County less than later, and has an interchange with SR 109 about beyond this point. The route then turns northeast, and about later reaches its eastern terminus with I-40 west of Lebanon.

History

Planning and construction

The route that is now Interstate 840 had its origins in the 1975 Tennessee Highway System Plan issued by TDOT for the next four years, which first identified the need for an outer beltway around Nashville by 1995. The I-840 project was initiated in 1986 with the passage of the Better Roads Program by the Tennessee General Assembly. This program, which had been proposed and spearheaded by then-governor Lamar Alexander, increased the state's gasoline and diesel taxes to fund six new freeway projects and a backlog of 15 projects that had been labeled as urgent needs, as well as other projects. I-840 was the largest of these six freeway projects, dubbed "Bicentennial Parkways", and was initially expected to cost $351 million. While initially referred to as I-840 in the state plan, the highway was constructed entirely with state transportation funds and was officially designated as a state route. The 1986–1987 state budget contained the initial funding for the project. Planning work began in 1988, and the alignment for the first section was announced in December of that year. Survey and design work began in 1989, and the alignment for the remainder of the route was announced in January 1990. The first contract for construction was awarded on August 2, 1991, and work progressed in stages.
The first section of I-840, between I-40 in Lebanon and Stewart's Ferry Pike, opened on August 2, 1995. The extension to I-24 near Murfreesboro was completed on November 21, 1996. The section between I-24 and US 31A/US 41A near Triune was completed on November 30, 2000. The portion between US 31A/US 41A and US 431 near Franklin, including the interchange with I-65, opened on October 18, 2001. The section between I-40 near Dickson and SR 100 opened on December 5, 2002. Due to high costs and environmental concerns, the proposed northern half of I-840 was indefinitely placed on hold in 2003. The section between US 431 and US 31 opened to traffic on September 9, 2005.
Construction of the majority of I-840 was met with very little controversy. As work moved into predominantly rural southwestern Williamson County, however, a group of landowners opposed to the route began a movement to stop its construction in 1997. Between the late 1990s and mid 2000s, these landowners, spearheaded by singer-songwriter Gene Cotton, filed complaints and eventually lawsuits in an effort to have TDOT address both environmental and aesthetic issues, considerably slowing work on the segment between SR 100 and US 31. A number of criticisms were also made about TDOT's handling of the construction of the route, such as an accusation that they chose to construct I-840 as a state route to avoid federally required environmental studies. TDOT awarded the first contract for the segment between SR 100 and SR 46 on June 14, 2002, but additional litigation forced TDOT to completely cease work on this segment three months later. As a result of these lawsuits, TDOT chose to slightly modify the design and employ new construction methods on the remaining sections the following year. These changes included construction of bridges over streams feeding the South Harpeth River instead of culverts, multiple wildlife underpasses, and designation of the remaining sections as a scenic highway, which prohibits billboards and uses brown powder-coated guardrail. They also formed a citizen's resource team, made up of nine local residents who worked with TDOT to select the final designs and alignment of these stretches.
On February 9, 2006, TDOT announced that the realignment of the final segment of I-840 had been chosen and that work on the unfinished sections would proceed. The first contract for construction of the segment between SR 100 and SR 46 was re-awarded on June 1, 2007, and construction on I-840 resumed the following month. This segment opened on October 27, 2010. The contract for the segment between Leiper's Creek Road and US 31 was awarded on December 12, 2008, and on February 19, 2010, TDOT awarded the final construction contract for I-840, the segment between SR 46 and Leiper's Creek Road. These two segments, the final of I-840, were opened on November 2, 2012. The project took 26 years to complete at a cost of $753.4 million .

Northern loop

TDOT was first authorized to begin studies for a northern loop of I-840 north of Nashville and past Dickson, Clarksville, Springfield, and Gallatin by the state legislature in 1993. Environmental studies began in 1994 and a draft environmental impact statement was released in 1995. Many residents in the predominantly rural and agricultural areas where the route was to pass were initially opposed. Plans were later abandoned and the General Assembly ordered TDOT to discontinue further studies and planning of that highway because of state budget problems. An entire circular loop would possibly be about long, with the northern segment ranging from. Other important objections against additional extensions of the I-840 highway include the hilly nature of the terrain north of Nashville, which would require huge and costly amounts of excavation, soil relocation, and bridge construction. In October 2003, TDOT placed the northern loop plan on indefinite hold, citing a lack of documented transportation needs and lack of participation from local politicians. The western terminus of I-840 was actually constructed in anticipation of the northern segment, and as a result, contains a very short unused extension.

Redesignation

TDOT first submitted a request to the FHWA to redesignate SR 840 as I-840 in November 1991, but this was withdrawn two months later after it was chosen to construct the entire route with state funds.
In 2015, TDOT submitted a request to AASHTO to redesignate SR 840 as I-840. Though the application had an error that required TDOT to refile it, AASHTO conditionally approved it and submitted it to the FHWA for their approval. FHWA approved the change on July 22, 2015, and AASHTO finalized their approval on September 25, 2015. TDOT announced on August 12, 2016 that it would start replacing the signs to change over the designation the week of August 14, and that the project would be completed by the end of the year at a cost of $230,000 .

Tennessee National Guard Parkway

In 2005, the Tennessee General Assembly passed legislation designating I-840 as the "Tennessee National Guard Parkway". Since 2007, the state has named bridges on I-840 in honor of members of the Tennessee National Guard killed in the global War on Terror.

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