User:Kurzov/Interstate Highways in Hawaii
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The Interstate Highways of Hawaii are grade-separated, divided highways that connect areas of Hawaii. As of February 2018, there are four interstate highways in Hawaii. They are numbered not by an east-west or north-south numbering system, but by the order of construction. Despite the name 'interstate', the freeways do not connect to other states, as Hawaii is an island chain in the Pacific, far from the continental United States. The interstates are all located on the island of Oahu.
Routes
[edit]Number | Length in miles (in km) | Northern/western terminus | Southern/eastern terminus | Formed | Removed | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
H-1 | 27.2 (43.8)[2] | HI-93 near Kapolei | HI-72 east of Honolulu | 1960 | current | Named Queen Liliuokalani Freeway west of exit 19
Named Lunalilo Freeway east of exit 19 |
H-201 | 4.1 (6.6)[3] | H-1 near Fort Shafter
(HI-99 near Aloha Stadium as HI-78) |
H-1 and H-3 near Hawala | 1989 | current | Named Moanalua Freeway
Unsigned until 2004 |
H-2 | 8.3 (13.4)[4] | HI-99 near Wheeler Army Airfield | H-1 near Pearl City | 1976 | current | Named Veterans Memorial Freeway |
H-3 | 15.3 (24.6)[5] | H-1 and H-201 near Hawala | MCBH main gates | 1997 | current | Named John A. Burns Freeway |
References
[edit]- ^ Voss, Oscar. "Hawaii Highways -- Oahu route list (part 1)". www.hawaiihighways.com. Retrieved 2018-02-18.
- ^ "Overview of H-1". Google Maps. Retrieved 2018-02-18.
- ^ "Overview of H-201". Google Maps. Retrieved 2018-02-18.
- ^ "Overview of H-2". Google Maps. Retrieved 2018-02-18.
- ^ "Overview of H-3". Google Maps. Retrieved 2018-02-18.