Birmingham Northern Beltline

Interstate 422 marker
Interstate 422
Corridor X-1
Proposed Birmingham Northern Beltline corridor highlighted in red
Route information
Auxiliary route of I-22
Maintained by ALDOT
Length52.5 mi (84.5 km)
Major junctions
South end I-20 / I-59 / I-459 / US 11 south of Bessemer
Major intersections
North end US 11 near Argo
Location
CountryUnited States
StateAlabama
Highway system
  • Alabama State Highway System
US 411I-422 US 431
SR 759Alabama 959.svg SR 1

Interstate 422 (I-422), Corridor X-1, or the Birmingham Northern Beltline is a proposed 52.5-mile-long (84.5 km) northern bypass route around Birmingham, Alabama, through northern and western Jefferson County that is projected to be completed by 2047. Along with the existing I-459, the Northern Beltline would complete the bypass loop of central Birmingham for all Interstate traffic. The project's budget is $5.445 billion; upon completion, the Northern Beltline will be the most expensive road in Alabama's history, and among the most expensive per mile ever built in the United States.

Current plans for the route have it connecting to I-59 at I-459's current southern terminus in Bessemer, at approximately milemarker 147 to the northeast of Trussville, near Argo. Additional studies are underway to determine the economic feasibility to continue the route from its proposed northeastern terminus southward to I-20 in the LeedsMoody area in western St. Clair county.

The route has been designated as the Appalachian Regional Commission's high-priority Corridor X-1, unsigned State Route 959 (SR 959), and I-422. The 422 numbering does not conform to normal Interstate guidelines, since it only crosses its "parent" route I-22 in the middle (and will connect only via I-222), while bypass and loop routes are usually numbered by the route connected to at or near each end, which would result in the use of a number such as 659.

History

As early as the 1960s, the prospect of a complete beltway encircling Birmingham was envisioned. Although the proposal was initially dropped from the original Interstate Highway System, the completion of Birmingham's outer beltway has been speculated since the completion of I-459 in 1985. By 1989, the first federal and local funds were earmarked for a project to study the feasibility of constructing the route.[citation needed]

In September 1993, the Birmingham Metropolitan Planning Organization made a $500,000 request from the Alabama Department of Transportation (ALDOT) for preliminary engineering of the beltline. Through the continued efforts of representative Spencer Bachus, in June 1995, the project was designated by the Federal Highway Administration as part of the National Highway System. As a result of this designation, the beltline would be eligible for federal transportation funding.[citation needed]

In 1997, the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) reviewed a number of potential routes for the Birmingham Northern Beltline. They submitted comments on September 8, 1997, and recommended ALDOT select a shorter, 30-mile (48 km) route due to its smaller environmental impact. They also firmly recommended against the longest route, citing that the route would "disrupt streams at 14 crossings, impact over 4050 acres [1,640 ha] forested lands within the ROW, and will destroy up to 68 acres [28 ha] of wetlands at 114 different sites. It will also have the greatest impact on wildlife of all the alignments discussed". This is the route that ALDOT eventually selected for the Northern Beltline.

In 2000, the Northern Beltline was added to the area’s Transportation Plan, and, in 2001, Senator Richard Shelby and Congressman Spencer Bachus secured $60 million to buy right of-way and do preliminary engineering for the route. In 2003, Shelby secured an additional $2 million for the continued purchasing of right-of-way. Progress continues with the purchasing of additional right-of-way through the county as of 2006.[citation needed] In May 2009, Bachus announced in the Birmingham News that the Northern Beltline had been designated as I-422.

Construction started on a 1.34-mile (2.16 km) section north of Pinson on February 24, 2014, which will connect State Route 79 (SR 79) near White Oaks to SR 75 near Palmerdale. This section is budgeted to cost $46 million and was expected to be completed by fall 2016.

Controversy

The construction of the Northern Beltline has significant opposition from local communities and local conservation groups. Lawsuits were filed in 2011 and 2013 to block construction of the beltline by environmental groups were pending in federal court. The groups cited the project's environmental and economic impact in their filing. The groups' request for preliminary injunction to stop construction was blocked in January 2014, though a final judgement had not been made. The Northern Beltline is to cross Black Warrior and Cahaba river tributaries in 90 places, including two major sources of drinking water, and will affect 35 wetland areas once constructed. Some groups, such as OCHS, claim that the Beltline will increase traffic congestion on I-59.

The 52-mile-long (84 km) project is budgeted to cost $5.445 billion, making it the most expensive road project in Alabama history. At $104.7 million per mile ($65.1 million per kilometer), this budget also makes the Northern Beltline one of the most expensive roads per mile built in the US. This cost does not include the cost of extending sewer services, powerlines, and other needed infrastructure where beltline will be constructed. In 2010, a study estimated 69,535 jobs would be created by the beltline. However, a later study found that just 2,805 jobs would be added in the area by 2048.

Exit list

The entire route is in Jefferson County.

LocationmikmExitDestinationsNotes
Bessemer0A-B I-459 north
I-20 / I-59 – Birmingham, Tuscaloosa, Meridian
Proposed southern terminus; southern terminus of I-459
McAdory4 CR 36 (Johns Road)Proposed interchanges
Hueytown515th Street Road / Virginia Drive
7 CR 46 (Warrior River Road)
Sylvan Springs9 SR 269 (Birmingport Road)
Graysville12 US 78 / SR 5 (Adamsville Parkway)
Brookside13
I-222 south to I-22
Mount Olive14 CR 112 (Brookside Mt. Olive Road)
16 CR 77 (New Found Road)
17 CR 112 (Mt. Olive Road)
18A-B I-65 – Birmingham, Montgomery, Huntsville, Decatur
19 US 31 (Decatur Highway / SR 3) – Morris, Gardendale
21 CR 129 (Glenwood Road)
22 CR 121 (New Castle Road)
Pinson23 CR 151 (Narrows Road) – Pinson
25 SR 79 (New Bradford Highway)
26 SR 75 – Pinson
Clay28 CR 30 (Old Springville Road) – Clay
30A-B I-59 – Birmingham, Gadsden
30C US 11 / SR 7 – GadsdenProposed northern terminus
1.000 mi = 1.609 km; 1.000 km = 0.621 mi
  •       Unopened

This page was last updated at 2022-05-29 02:56 UTC. Update now. View original page.

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