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词条 Interstate 10 in New Mexico
释义

  1. Route description

  2. History

  3. Exit list

  4. See also

  5. References

  6. External links

{{About|the section of highway in New Mexico|the entire length of highway|Interstate 10}}{{Use mdy dates|date=April 2012}}{{Infobox road
|state=NM|type=I
|route=10
|map={{maplink|frame=yes|plain=yes|frame-align=center|frame-width=290|frame-lat=32|frame-long=-107.8|zoom=7|type=line|id=Q981632|stroke-width=3}}
|map_custom=yes
|map_notes=I-10 highlighted in red
|length_mi=162.264
|length_ref=[1]
|established=1957[2]
|direction_a=West|direction_b=East
|terminus_a={{jct|state=AZ|I|10}} at Arizona state line
|junction={{plainlist|
  • {{jct|state=NM|US|70}} in Lordsburg
  • {{jct|state=NM|US|180}} in Deming
  • {{jct|state=NM|US|70}} in Las Cruces
  • {{jct|state=NM|I|25|US|85}} in Las Cruces

}}
|terminus_b={{jct|state=TX|I|10|US|85|US|180}} at Texas state line
|previous_type=NM|previous_route=10
|next_type=NM|next_route=11
|counties=Hidalgo, Grant, Luna, Doña Ana
}}

Interstate 10 (I-10) in the US state of New Mexico is a {{convert|164.264|mi|adj=on}} long route of the United States Interstate Highway System. I-10 traverses southern New Mexico through Hidalgo, Grant, Luna, and Doña Ana counties. The Interstate travels west–east from the Arizona state line to the interchange with I-25 in Las Cruces, and then travels north–south to the Texas state line. US Route 80 in New Mexico (US 80) was replaced by Interstate 10.

Route description

I-10 enters Hidalgo County, New Mexico from Cochise County, Arizona as a four lane divided highway. The highway travels east through rural southwest New Mexico, passing between Steins Mountain and Attorney Mountain, part of the Peloncillo Mountains, before passing by the ghost town of Steins. Continuing east, the southern terminus of New Mexico State Road 80 (NM 80) is intersected, serving Rodeo, followed by NM 338. Passing Lee Peak the highway turns southeast entering Lordsburg. US 70 is intersected in town, and becomes concurrent with the highway as it continues east past the Lordsburg Municipal Airport, before exiting the town. Near the Grant County line the highway bypasses the ghost town called Shakespeare. Entering Grant County, the highway continues southeast then northeast after intersecting NM 146. The highway passes over the Continental Divide on the Grant-Luna county line. Continuing east, the highway intersects the city of Deming and the highway becomes concurrent with US 180 as the three highways continue east. The highway enters Doña Ana County as it approaches Las Cruces. US 70 exits the highway as it enters the city (becoming Picacho Avenue), and the Interstate begins to turn south. Just south of the New Mexico State University campus, I-10 has a junction with the southern terminus of I-25. At the I-25 junction, I-10/U.S. Route 180 also becomes concurrent with US 85. At this point, the highway is now headed almost due south before crossing into Anthony, Texas (in El Paso County, Texas) from Anthony, New Mexico (in Doña Ana County).[3]

  • Note: the speed limit has increased from {{convert|70|to|75|mph|km/h|abbr=on|round=5}} on I-10 from Mesquite to Anthony at the Texas state line, and I-10 south of Las Cruces is now three lanes in each direction.

History

{{Infobox road small
|name=State Road 14
|state=NM
|type=NM 1952
|route=14
|location=Arizona–New Mexico state line to Road Forks
|length_mi=5
|length_ref=[4]
|formed=1927
|deleted=1960
}}

I-10 replaced US 80 through New Mexico, bypassing major portions of old US 80 in the western portion of the state and in Doña Ana County. US 80 was one of the original United States Numbered Highways established in 1926.[5] The portion of US 80 between the Arizona state line and Anthony was decommissioned on October 6, 1989, while the remainder of the route though the state was removed October 12, 1991.[6]

From 1927 to 1960, the section of Interstate 10 between Road Forks and the Arizona state line was designated New Mexico State Road 14 (NM 14). Though it was only {{convert|5|mi|adj=on}} long, NM 14 and its Arizona counterpart, SR 86, served as a direct bypass for US 80 between Road Forks and Benson, Arizona. US 80 itself looped south to Douglas, Arizona at the Mexico-US border between Road Forks and Benson. By the late 1940s, NM 14 had been paved and carried the majority of US 80 traffic by 1950. With the advent of I-10, NM 14 was removed from the state road system in 1960.[4]

The Interstate was first numbered I-10 by the American Association of State Highway Officials, in cooperation with the Department of Commerce, in 1957.[7]

Exit list

{{jcttop|exit|length_ref=[8]}}{{NMint|exit
|county=Hidalgo
|cspan=11
|location=none
|mile=0.000
|road={{jct|state=AZ|I|10|dir1=west|city1=Tucson}}
|notes=Continuation into Arizona
}}{{NMint|exit
|location=none
|mile=3.630
|exit=3
|road=Steins
}}{{NMint|exit
|location=none
|mile=5.833
|exit=5
|road={{Jct|state=NM|NM|80|dir1=south|location1=Road Forks}}
|notes=Former US 80 west
}}{{NMint|exit
|location=none
|mile=11.200
|exit=11
|road={{Jct|state=NM|NM|338|dir1=south|city1=Animas}}
}}{{NMint|exit
|location=none
|mile=15.680
|exit=15
|road=Gary
}}{{NMint|exit
|location=Lordsburg
|lspan=4
|mile=20.820
|mspan=2
|exit=20A
|road=New Mexico Information Center (Free maps, literature & Internet service), Rest Area
|notes=Westbound access via exit 20
}}{{NMint|exit
|mile=none
|exit=20B
|road={{Jct|state=NM|BL|10|dab1=Lordsburg|dir1=east|name1=W. Motel Drive}}
|notes=Signed as exit 20 westbound; former US 80 east
}}{{NMint|exit
|mile=22.610
|exit=22
|road={{Jct|state=NM|NM|494|name1=Main Street}}
}}{{NMint|exit
|type=concur
|mile=24.565
|mile2=24.610
|exit=24
|road={{Jct|state=NM|BL|10|dab1=Lordsburg|US|70|dir2=west|name2=E. Motel Drive}}
|notes=Western end of US 70 overlap; former US 80 west
}}{{NMint|exit
|location=none
|mile=29.556
|exit=29
|road=No name exit
|notes=Ulmorris Road is the connecting road, but it is not listed on road signs
}}{{NMint|exit
|location=none
|mile=34.273
|exit=34
|road={{Jct|state=NM|NM|113|dir1=south|city1=Playas}}
}}{{NMint|exit
|county=Grant
|cspan=2
|location=none
|mile=42.570
|exit=42
|road=Separ
}}{{NMint|exit
|location=none
|mile=49.900
|exit=49
|road={{Jct|state=NM|NM|146|dir1=south|city1=Hachita|city2=Antelope Wells}}
}}{{NMint|exit
|county=Luna
|cspan=8
|location=none
|mile=56.210
|exit=55
|road=Quincy
}}{{NMint|exit
|location=none
|mile=63.320
|exit=62
|road=Gage
}}{{NMint|exit
|location=none
|mile=68.570
|exit=68
|road={{Jct|state=NM|NM|418|dir1=east}}
|notes=Former US 70 / US 80
}}{{NMint|exit
|location=Deming
|lspan=4
|mile=81.220
|exit=81
|road={{Jct|state=NM|BL|10|dab1=Deming|dir1=east|name1=W. Pine Street}}
}}{{NMint|exit
|type=concur
|mile=82.120
|exit=82A
|road={{Jct|state=NM|US|180|dir1=west|to2=to|NM|26|dir2=east|I|25|city1=Silver City|city2=Hatch}}
|notes=Western end of US 180 overlap
}}{{NMint|exit
|mile=82.580
|exit=82B
|road=Cedar Street
Railroad Boulevard
|notes=Eastbound signage
Westbound signage
}}{{NMint|exit
|mile=85.240
|exit=85
|road={{Jct|state=NM|BL|10|dab1=Deming|dir1=west|name1=E. Pine Street}}
}}{{NMint|exit
|location=none
|mile=102.950
|exit=102
|road=Akela
}}{{NMint|exit
|county=Doña Ana
|cspan=12
|location=none
|mile=116.125
|exit=116
|road={{Jct|state=NM|NM|549|dir1=west}}
|notes=Former US 70 / US 80
}}{{NMint|exit
|location=none
|mile=127.230
|exit=127
|road=Corralitos Road
}}{{NMint|exit
|location=Las Cruces
|lspan=6
|mile=132.031
|exit=132
|road= Las Cruces International Airport
}}{{NMint|exit
|type=concur
|mile=134.637
|exit=135
|road={{Jct|state=NM|US|70|dir1=east|name1=W. Picacho Avenue}}
|notes=Eastern end of US 70 overlap
}}{{NMint|exit
|mile=138.968
|exit=139
|road={{Jct|state=NM|NM|292|dir1=south|name1=Motel Boulevard}}
}}{{NMint|exit
|mile=120.215
|exit=140
|road={{Jct|state=NM|NM|28|name1=Avenida de Mesilla}}
}}{{NMint|exit
|mile=141.552
|mile2=141.827
|exit=142
|road={{Jct|state=NM|NM|478|name1=Main Street|NM|101|dir2=west|name2=University Avenue|road=Valley Drive ({{Jct|state=NM|NM|188|noshield=yes}})}}
|notes=Valley Dr. not signed eastbound; NM 478 (Main St.) not signed eastbound; NM 478 if former US 80/US 85
}}{{NMint|exit
|type=concur
|mile=144.349
|mile2=144.650
|exit=144
|road={{Jct|state=NM|I|25|name1=US 85|dir1=north|city1=Las Cruces|city2=Albuquerque}}
|notes=Western end of US 85 overlap; southern terminus of I-25
}}{{NMint|exit
|location=none
|mile=151.200
|exit=151
|road={{Jct|state=NM|NM|228|city1=Mesquite}}
}}{{NMint|exit
|location=none
|mile=154.950
|exit=155
|road={{Jct|state=NM|NM|227|dir1=west|city1=Vado|city2=Berino}}
}}{{NMint|exit
|location=none
|mile=160.400
|exit=162
|road={{Jct|state=NM|NM|404|city1=Anthony|city2=Chaparral}}
}}{{NMint|exit
|location=none
|mile=162.264
|road={{jct|state=TX|I|10|US|180|dir2=east|US|85|dir3=south|city1=El Paso}}
|notes=Continuation into Anthony, Texas
}}{{Jctbtm|exit|keys=concur}}

See also

{{Wikipedia books|Interstate 10}}
  • Business routes of Interstate 10
  • {{Portal-inline|New Mexico}}
  • {{Portal-inline|U.S. Roads}}

References

1. ^{{cite web|url=http://nmshtd.state.nm.us/upload/images/CHDB/Interstate%20Routes.pdf|title=Interstate Highways|publisher=New Mexico Department of Transportation|accessdate=December 3, 2010|format=PDF}}
2. ^{{cite map|publisher=American Association of State Highway Officials|title=Official Route Numbering for the National System of Interstate and Defense Highways|url=http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Interstate_Highway_plan_August_14,_1957.jpg|accessdate=June 16, 2011|date=August 14, 1957}}
3. ^{{google maps|url=https://maps.google.com/maps?f=d&source=s_d&saddr=I-10+E&daddr=I-10+E&hl=en&geocode=FU6_6wEdmg-A-Q%3BFedK6AEdgqyl-Q&gl=us&mra=dme&mrcr=0&mrsp=1&sz=16&sll=32.00027,-106.581244&sspn=0.005423,0.013797&ie=UTF8&ll=32.166313,-107.506714&spn=1.385679,3.532104&z=8|title=Interstate 10|accessdate=December 3, 2010}}
4. ^{{cite web | url=http://www.steve-riner.com/nmhighways/NMHome.htm | title=New Mexico Highways | date=19 January 2008 | accessdate=13 April 2015 | author=Riner, Steve | pages=State Routes 1-25}}
5. ^{{cite map |author1= Bureau of Public Roads |author2= American Association of State Highway Officials |date= November 11, 1926 |title= United States System of Highways Adopted for Uniform Marking by the American Association of State Highway Officials |url= http://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth298433/m1/1/zoom/ |scale= 1:7,000,000 |location= Washington, DC |publisher= U.S. Geological Survey |oclc= 32889555 |accessdate= November 7, 2013 |via= University of North Texas Libraries |last-author-amp= yes}}
6. ^{{cite web|url=http://www.fhwa.dot.gov/infrastructure/us80.cfm|title=U.S. Route 80 The Dixie Overland Highway|last=Weingroff|first=Richard F.|date=April 6, 2010|work=Highway History|publisher=Federal Highway Administration|accessdate=December 4, 2010}}
7. ^{{cite map|publisher=American Association of State Highway Officials|title=Official Route Numbering for the National System of Interstate and Defense Highways|url=http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Interstate_Highway_plan_August_14,_1957.jpg|accessdate=December 4, 2010|date=August 14, 1957}}
8. ^{{cite web|title=TIMS Road Segments by Posted Route/Point with AADT Info|url=http://dot.state.nm.us/content/dam/nmdot/Data_Management/Interstate_AADT_Listing.pdf|publisher=New Mexico Department of Transportation|accessdate=October 9, 2017|location=Santa Fe|pages=1-6|format=PDF|date=June 8, 2016}}

External links

{{Attached KML|display=title,inline}}
  • {{Commons category-inline|Interstate 10 in New Mexico}}
{{state detail page browse|type=I|route=10|statebefore=Arizona|state=New Mexico|stateafter=Texas}}{{3di|10}}{{DEFAULTSORT:I10 in New Mexico}}

6 : Transportation in Hidalgo County, New Mexico|Transportation in Grant County, New Mexico|Transportation in Luna County, New Mexico|Transportation in Doña Ana County, New Mexico|Interstate 10|Interstate Highways in New Mexico

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