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Interstate 10 in Louisiana

Highway in Louisiana

Interstate 10 in Louisiana

Highway in Louisiana

FieldValue
stateLA
route10
typeI
map
map_customyes
map_notesI-10 highlighted in red
length_mi274.42
length_ref
established1957
historyCompleted in 1978
direction_aWest
terminus_aat Texas state line
*{{JctstateLAUS171}} in Lake Charles
*{{JctstateLAI210}} in Lake Charles
*{{JctstateLAUS165}} near Iowa
*{{JctstateLAI49US167LA182}} in Lafayette
*{{JctstateLALA1}} in Port Allen
*{{JctstateLAI110}} in Baton Rouge
*{{JctstateLAI12}} in Baton Rouge
*{{JctstateLAI55}} near LaPlace
*{{JctstateLAI310}} near Kennner
*{{JctstateLAI610}} in New Orleans
*{{JctstateLAUS90Future49I910}} in New Orleans
*{{JctstateLAUS11}} in New Orleans
*{{JctstateLAI12I59}} near Slidell
direction_bEast
terminus_bat Mississippi state line
previous_typeLA
previous_route9
next_typeLA
next_route10
browse{{la browse
previous_typeLA
previous_route3026
route3027
next_typeLA
next_route3028}}
parishesCalcasieu, Jefferson Davis, Acadia, Lafayette, St. Martin, Iberville, West Baton Rouge, East Baton Rouge, Ascension, St. James, St. John the Baptist, St. Charles, Jefferson, Orleans, St. Tammany
  • in Lake Charles
  • in Lake Charles
  • near Iowa
  • in Lafayette
  • in Port Allen
  • in Baton Rouge
  • in Baton Rouge
  • near LaPlace
  • near Kennner
  • in New Orleans
  • in New Orleans
  • in New Orleans
  • near Slidell Interstate 10 (I-10), is a major transcontinental Interstate Highway in the Southern United States that runs across the southern part of Louisiana for 274.42 mi from Texas to Mississippi. It passes through Lake Charles, Lafayette, and Baton Rouge, dips south of Lake Pontchartrain to serve the New Orleans metropolitan area, then crosses Lake Pontchartrain and goes into Mississippi.

Route description

I-10 enters Louisiana at the state's southwestern corner from Orange, Texas, in a concurrency with US Route 90 (US 90), which leaves the freeway at the first exit. The two routes closely parallel each other through much of the state. The first community I-10 approaches in the state is Vinton. Between Sulphur and Lake Charles there is an interchange with I-210. I-10 crosses the Calcasieu River Bridge into Lake Charles, passing north of the center of town, before meeting the western end of I-210. Between Lake Charles and Lafayette, I-10 bypasses several small towns including Iowa, Welsh, Jennings, and Crowley. In Lafayette, I-10 meets the current southern terminus of I-49, leaving northwest out of the city and passing by the community of Breaux Bridge.

From Lafayette, the highway heads east-northeast toward Baton Rouge via the Atchafalaya Swamp Freeway, an 18.2 mi bridge across the Atchafalaya River and its accompanying swamp. Between the two cities, I-10 parallels US 190, from Opelousas to Baton Rouge. This route has signs and is designated as an alternate I-10 bypass that runs from I-10/I-49 north to US 190 (exit 19B at Opelousas) then east across to Baton Rouge and back down to I-10 via I-110 south. Traffic can be diverted both ways along this route should there be the necessity to close I-10 across the Atchafalaya Swamp Freeway and is also used as a hurricane evacuation route.

I-10 running west of New Orleans, spanning the Bonnet Carre Spillway at Lake Pontchartrain

In the capital of Baton Rouge, US 190 continues east alongside I-12 to Hammond and Slidell while I-10 turns southeastward and parallels US 61 (Airline Highway) to New Orleans. In the Crescent City, I-10 rejoins US 90 (and later US 11) as it heads toward Slidell. In Slidell, US 11 continues northeastward toward Hattiesburg, Mississippi, while I-10 and US 90 turn eastward toward coastal Mississippi.

Major bridges on I-10 in Louisiana include the Sabine River Bridge (c. 1952, replaced 2003), the Lake Charles I-10 Bridge (1952), the Atchafalaya Swamp Freeway (1973), the Horace Wilkinson Bridge over the Mississippi River (1968), the Bonnet Carré Spillway Bridge (c. 1972), the Industrial Canal Bridge (c. 1960), Frank Davis "Naturally N'Awlins" Memorial Bridge (1965, replaced 2010), and the Pearl River Bridge (c. 1970).

I-10 eastbound passing over Lake Charles/Calcasieu River near Lake Charles

History

Until around 1960, I-10 and I-59 would have split near the present I-510 interchange in eastern New Orleans.

By the beginning of planning for the Interstate Highway System in 1939 (then called the Interregional Highway System), the Houston–New Orleans–Mobile corridor was part of the system. Preliminary plans took it along US 90 all the way through Louisiana, serving Lake Charles and Lafayette but not Baton Rouge. By c. 1943, it had been shifted to the north west of New Orleans, using the Louisiana Highway 12 (LA 12), US 190, and US 61 corridors, and serving Baton Rouge but not Lake Charles or Lafayette. The 1947 plan shifted it to roughly the current alignment, including the long stretch of new corridor across the Atchafalaya Swamp. The corridor was assigned the I-10 designation in mid-1957.

Prior to the gaining of federal funding for the Interstate System in the late 1950s, a toll road, the Acadian Thruway, had been proposed between Lafayette and a point near Gramercy on Airline Highway (US 61). This would have provided a shorter route than I-10, bypassing Baton Rouge to the south. The Gramercy Bridge was later built along its planned alignment, with LA 3125 connecting to Gramercy, but no road extends west from the bridge across the Atchafalaya Swamp to Lafayette.

Atchafalaya Swamp Freeway in Iberville Parish
Interchange between I-10, I-12, and I-59 in Slidell

I-12, serving as a bypass of New Orleans around the north side of Lake Pontchartrain, was not added until October 17, 1957. At the time, I-10 and I-59 split in eastern New Orleans, with I-59 following present I-10 and I-10 following the US 90 corridor into Mississippi, and so I-12 only ran to I-59 north of Slidell. By the mid-1960s, the routes had been realigned to their current configuration, with I-12 and I-59 both ending at I-10 near Slidell.

Construction of the Interstate Highway System in Louisiana began in 1957. Early I-10 contracts were done under the route designation LA 3027. Much of the early construction on the I-10 corridor was concentrated on relieving traffic problems in urban centers. Several such projects were already underway and were incorporated into the route of I-10 during construction, such as the Pontchartrain Expressway in New Orleans. In addition, the two major bridges on the route in Calcasieu Parish between the Texas state line and Lake Charles were built for US 90 in the early 1950s and retrofitted for I-10 traffic. Sections of I-10 through rural areas and/or those sections already served adequately by existing highways, such as Airline Highway (US 61) between Baton Rouge and New Orleans, were constructed later in the program. By the spring of 1975, the entire route of I-10 had been opened across Louisiana except for a problem 5.5 mi section between Gonzales and Sorrento that was not completed for another three years.

Timeline

SegmentYear opened
Sabine River Bridge (Texas-Louisiana state line)title = Sabine bridge dedication heldnewspaper = The Times-Picayuneissn = 1055-3053location = New Orleansdate = May 12, 1954page = 1 }}
Sabine River to Vintontitle = New interstate link finished to Texas linenewspaper = State-Timeslocation = Baton Rougedate = February 23, 1967page = 10A }}
Vinton to Sulphurtitle = Sulphur-Vinton interstate opensnewspaper = Morning Advocateissn = 1056-2125location = Baton Rougedate = September 22, 1965page = 10B }}
Sulphur to Westlaketitle = Section of interstate opened at Lake Charlesnewspaper = State-Timeslocation = Baton Rougedate = April 17, 1962page = 5B }}
Calcasieu River Bridge (Westlake-Lake Charles)title = Calcasieu River Bridge to opennewspaper = Morning Advocateissn = 1056-2125location = Baton Rougedate = September 28, 1951page = 7B }}
Calcasieu River to US 171 (Lake Charles)title = Lake Charles Expressway dedication setnewspaper = State-Timeslocation = Baton Rougedate = April 2, 1963page = 7B }}
US 171 (Lake Charles) to US 165 (Iowa)title = Dedication set for major link in Interstate 10newspaper = Morning Advocateissn = 1056-2125location = Baton Rougedate = February 15, 1964page = 9A }}
US 165 (Iowa) to Welshtitle = Iowa-Welsh interstate link opensnewspaper = Morning Advocateissn = 1056-2125location = Baton Rougedate = December 10, 1964page = 15B }}
Welsh to JenningsSpring 1965
Jennings to Crowleytitle = Interstate 10 section will open todaynewspaper = Morning Advocateissn = 1056-2125location = Baton Rougedate = March 28, 1963page = 14D }}
Crowley to Dusontitle = Stewart says '66 was best one for roadsnewspaper = State-Timeslocation = Baton Rougedate = December 16, 1966page = 1 }}
Duson to US 167 (Lafayette)title = I-10 strip set for dedication early Wednesdaynewspaper = Morning Advocateissn = 1056-2125location = Baton Rougedate = October 29, 1968page = 5B }}
US 167 (Lafayette) to Grosse Tete (including Atchafalaya Basin Bridge)title = I-10 link opening Mondaynewspaper = State-Timeslocation = Baton Rougedate = March 8, 1973page = 1B }}
Grosse Tete to Lobdelltitle = Final segment of Interstate 10 between B.R., Texas dedicatednewspaper = The Times-Picayuneissn = 1055-3053location = New Orleansdate = March 29, 1974page = 1 }}
Lobdell to Port Allentitle = I-10 section opens Saturdaynewspaper = Morning Advocateissn = 1056-2125location = Baton Rougedate = November 6, 1970page = 10B }}
Baton Rouge Mississippi River Bridge (Port Allen-Baton Rouge)title = New bridge opens here tomorrownewspaper = State-Timeslocation = Baton Rougedate = April 9, 1968page = 1 }}
Baton Rouge Mississippi River to Perkins Roadtitle = BR Interstate section opens Friday morningnewspaper = State-Timeslocation = Baton Rougedate = September 15, 1964page = 1 }}
Baton Rouge Perkins Road to College Drivetitle = Opening is set this week for highway sectionnewspaper = State-Timeslocation = Baton Rougedate = October 20, 1965page = 8C }}
Baton Rouge: College Drive to Highland Roadtitle = Elle coupe le ruban; le chemin s'ouvrenewspaper = Morning Advocateissn = 1056-2125location = Baton Rougedate = June 1, 1974page = 1B }}
Highland Road to Gonzalestitle = I-10 section to be opened on Thursdaynewspaper = State-Timeslocation = Baton Rougedate = December 17, 1974page = 1 }}
Gonzales to Sorrentotitle = I-10 stretch is dedicatedfirst = Clairelast = Punekynewspaper = The Times-Picayuneissn = 1055-3053location = New Orleansdate = May 6, 1978pages = 1–2 }}
Sorrento to LaPlacetitle = LaPlace-Sorrento section of I-10 opened yesterdaynewspaper = State-Timeslocation = Baton Rougedate = April 17, 1975page = 1 }}
Laplace to Williams Boulevard (Kenner) (including Bonnet Carré Spillway Bridge)title = LaPlace-Kenner stretch of I-10 to open Fridaynewspaper = State-Timeslocation = Baton Rougedate = December 14, 1971page = 1 }}
Jefferson Parish: Williams Boulevard to Veterans Highway (Metairie)title = New segment of I-10 is to be dedicatednewspaper = The Times-Picayuneissn = 1055-3053location = New Orleansdate = May 12, 1968page = 1 }}
Jefferson Parish: Veterans Memorial Boulevard to Causeway Boulevard (Metairie)title = 2.4-mile link of I-10 slated to open Dec. 1newspaper = Morning Advocateissn = 1056-2125location = Baton Rougedate = November 14, 1967page = 9A }}
Jefferson Parish: Causeway Boulevard Metairie to Pontchartrain Expressway (New Orleans)title = Route to ease traffic tieupnewspaper = The Times-Picayuneissn = 1055-3053location = New Orleansdate = March 26, 1965page = 2-2 }}
New Orleans: Pontchartrain Expressway from Florida Avenue to Mound Avenuetitle = Pontchartrain Expressway link opensnewspaper = The Times-Picayuneissn = 1055-3053location = New Orleansdate = October 4, 1962pages = 2–4 }}
New Orleans: Pontchartrain Expressway from Mound Avenue to Airline Highway (US 61)title = Traffic artery to open Fridaynewspaper = The Times-Picayuneissn = 1055-3053location = New Orleansdate = February 15, 1962page = 1 }}
New Orleans: Pontchartrain Expressway from Airline Highway (US 61) to Claiborne Avenue (US 90)title = Time-saving big on expresswaynewspaper = The Times-Picayuneissn = 1055-3053location = New Orleansdate = February 20, 1960page = 1 }}
New Orleans: Claiborne Expressway from Pontchartrain Expressway to Tulane Avenuetitle = Interstate 10 section in N.O. to open todaynewspaper = State-Timeslocation = Baton Rougedate = December 8, 1972page = 16A }}
New Orleans: Claiborne Expressway from Tulane Avenue to Orleans Avenuetitle = Section of I-10 opens Mondaynewspaper = The Times-Picayuneissn = 1055-3053location = New Orleansdate = June 12, 1969page = 1 }}
New Orleans: Claiborne Expressway from Orleans Avenue to St. Bernard Avenuetitle = St. Bernard Ave.-Orleans St. link of I-10 to be dedicatednewspaper = The Times-Picayuneissn = 1055-3053location = New Orleansdate = March 12, 1968pages = 1–15 }}
New Orleans: Claiborne Expressway from St. Bernard Avenue to Franklin Avenuetitle = I-10 link of St. Bernard, Franklin Aves. completenewspaper = The Times-Picayuneissn = 1055-3053location = New Orleansdate = February 23, 1968pages = 1–5 }}
New Orleans: Claiborne Expressway from Franklin Avenue to Industrial Canaltitle = Interstate sections completed on schedulenewspaper = The Times-Picayuneissn = 1055-3053location = New Orleansdate = January 30, 1966page = 7-2 }}
New Orleans: Industrial Canal Bridgetitle = Approval given for use of spannewspaper = The Times-Picayuneissn = 1055-3053location = New Orleansdate = December 22, 1965page = 1 }}
New Orleans: Industrial Canal to Morrison Roadtitle = Interstate 10 link dedicatednewspaper = The Times-Picayuneissn = 1055-3053location = New Orleansdate = December 9, 1966pages = 1–2 }}
New Orleans: Morrison Road to Paris Roadtitle = Opening is set of I-10 portionnewspaper = The Times-Picayuneissn = 1055-3053location = New Orleansdate = October 17, 1972pages = 1–16 }}
New Orleans: Paris Road to US 11title = N.O.-to-Slidell time cut as Interstate-10 opensnewspaper = The Times-Picayuneissn = 1055-3053location = New Orleansdate = April 25, 1967pages = 1–12 }}
US 11 (New Orleans) to I-12/I-59 (Slidell) (including Lake Pontchartrain Twin Span Bridge)title = N.O.-Slidell twin bridges, highway links dedicatednewspaper = The Times-Picayunelocation = New Orleansissn = 1055-3053date = December 22, 1965page = 1 }}
I-12/I-59 (Slidell) to East Pearl Rivertitle = Interstate link opening todaynewspaper = The Times-Picayuneissn = 1055-3053location = New Orleansdate = February 16, 1971page = 1 }}
Pearl River Bridge (Louisiana-Mississippi state line)

Reconstruction of the portion at the I-610 Split vicinity was undertaken in the late 1990s. Also in the late 1990s, further work was done on the expressway as two ramps were constructed, connecting West I-10 to West Business U.S. 90 and westbound Claiborne Avenue (West US 90), replacing an earlier, more dangerous ramp. The direct ramp from 90B East to I-10 East was completed by 1989.

In the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina, the I-10 Twin Span Bridge, a portion of I-10 between New Orleans and Slidell, spanning the eastern end of Lake Pontchartrain, was severely damaged, causing a break in I-10 at that point. Unlike the Escambia Bay Bridge (east of Pensacola, Florida and damaged by Hurricane Ivan), which is a major artery, I-12 is available to bypass New Orleans. Taking I-12 to the Lake Pontchartrain Causeway allowed entry and exit to and from the Greater New Orleans area from the East. On October 14, 2005, at 3:00 pm, the eastbound span was reopened to two way traffic. On January 6, 2006, at 6:00 am, both lanes of the westbound span were reopened to traffic using temporary metal trusses and road panels to replace damaged sections. This restored all four lanes of the I-10 Twin Span for normal traffic with a 45 mph speed limit for the westbound lanes and 60 mph for the eastbound lanes. Oversized and overweight traffic was prohibited until a new permanent six-lane span replaced the two temporarily repaired spans. The eastbound span opened to traffic on July 9, 2009, and the westbound span opened on April 7, 2010, with the old bridge being permanently closed. The approaches to the westbound lanes were completed with a ribbon cutting ceremony on September 8, 2011, and the opening of all six lanes the next morning. The old Twin Span will be demolished in the near future. In 2014, the Louisiana State Legislature officially named the Twin Span as the Frank Davis "Naturally N'Awlins" Memorial Bridge.

A $68.9 million three-year construction project was completed between Causeway Boulevard and the 17th Street Canal in Metairie, Louisiana. It added new lanes in both directions and improve the exit and entrance ramps at Causeway and Bonnabel Boulevard.

In 2012, the state completed a widening project between Causeway and Clearview Parkway and between the I-10/I-610 split and Airline Highway (US 61). In 2015, the additional lanes were extended in Metairie, from Clearview Parkway west to Veterans Boulevard.

I-10 was widened to three lanes in each direction from the I-10/I-12 split to Highland Road (exit 166) from late 2008 to spring 2013.

On April 8, 2017, Louisiana DOTD broke ground on the reconstruction of 7 mi of I-10 between I-49 (exit 103) and the Atchafalaya Basin. A center concrete barrier was constructed, the road was repaved, and an extra travel lane was constructed, making I-10 three lanes in each direction. Construction began May 2017, was completed in October 2021, and had a ribbon cutting ceremony on November 22, 2021.

In order to reduce the amount of congestion for travelers trying to reach the Louis Armstrong New Orleans International Airport, flyover ramps were constructed at the I-10 and Loyola Drive Interchange in Kenner. Part of the project is constructing a diverging diamond interchange where both of the roads meet as well. The project connected I-10 to the new terminal at the airport that was completed in November 2019 and allowed quick access to a planned station on the proposed Baton Rouge–New Orleans Amtrak route on the south side of the airport. Construction began after the terminal was completed and was expected to be completed in November 2022. However, supply chain problems and the damage caused by Hurricane Ida in 2021 delayed the completion of the project to early-2023. Rainy weather during the Summer of 2022 further delayed the completion of the project to the Summer of 2023. Work on the diverging diamond interchange, which will be the first ever constructed in the state, was not to be started until the completion of the flyover bridges. The I-10 westbound ramp to Loyola Drive was finally opened to traffic on September 29, 2023; the ramp from the airport to I-10 east opened two weeks later on October 13. The diverging diamond opened on October 30.

Future

There are calls to remove I-10 from the Claiborne Expressway in New Orleans and rename I-610 to I-10. The entire length of the Pontchartrain Expressway would likely be renamed as I-910 or I-49. The movement to remove the expressway received backing from President Biden in April 2021. However, opponents of the removal, which could cost over $4 billion, pointed out that removing the road would increase and worsen traffic through the area as well as in other neighborhoods among other things. Instead, in October 2022, the governments of Louisiana and New Orleans introduced a $94.7 million proposal to improve the elevated freeway and the space beneath it as well remove four ramps in Tremé. They proposal asked for a $47 million grant for the project.

In 2022, the Calcasieu River Bridge turned 70 years old. With over 600,000 bridges, the average bridge age in the United States is 42 years old, with one in nine rated as deficient. Louisiana has a total of 13,050 bridges, and 1,827 out of those 13,050 (14%) are considered deficient. 1,963 bridges (15%) are considered functionally obsolete. It had been decided the bridge needed replacing since before 2002. There are several areas of concern including the age of the bridge, the low bridge ratings, steep grades, traffic congestion, amount of traffic that has been estimated at around 55,000 vehicles a day, low vertical traffic clearance, and contamination. These contributing factors rank the bridge as "a dangerous bridge" and 7th in the nation in need of replacing. In 2023, a plan was vetoed on the replacement bridge due to tolls being proposed. This made the project on hold until 2024 when a plan was approved that would include tolls, with especially high prices for trucks.

Exit list

Mall of Louisiana Boulevard

Economy Airport Parking / Consolidated Auto Rental

Carrollton Avenue

Auxiliary routes

  • I-110 is a spur northward through downtown Baton Rouge toward the northern part of the city. It was not in the original plans, but was added in the 1960s to replace the canceled I-410.
  • I-210 is a bypass around the south side of Lake Charles. It was added in 1962.
  • I-310 is a spur from I-10 west of New Orleans south to US 90 (future I-49). It was part of a longer I-410 from 1969 to 1977.
    • A previous I-310 was added in 1964 and canceled in 1969. It would've ran from I-10 east of downtown New Orleans south and southwest through the French Quarter to the Greater New Orleans Bridge.
  • The first I-410 was a northern bypass of Baton Rouge along the Airline Highway (US 61/US 190) corridor. It was added in September 1955 and removed by the late 1960s.
    • The second I-410 was defined in 1969 as a southern bypass of New Orleans, as a sort of replacement for the canceled I-310. The southern section of I-410 was canceled in 1977, and the west and east legs became I-310 and I-510, respectively.
  • I-510 is a spur from I-10 in eastern New Orleans south to the Paris Road Bridge over the Gulf Intracoastal Waterway (Mississippi River-Gulf Outlet Canal). It was part of a longer I-410 from 1969 to 1977.
  • I-610 is a bypass for through traffic north of downtown New Orleans. It was added in September 1955.
  • I-910 is a piece of future I-49 from downtown New Orleans south and west to Marrero. The temporary designation was assigned by the Federal Highway Administration and American Association of State Highway Officials in 1999, but is not signed and has not been accepted by the Louisiana Department of Transportation and Development.

References

References

  1. Starks, Edward. (May 6, 2019). "Table 1: Main Routes of the Dwight D. Eisenhower National System of Interstate and Defense Highways as of December 31, 2018". [[Federal Highway Administration]].
  2. Albarado, Sonny. (May 6, 1978). "Long-awaited I-10 link opened by Gov. Edwards". [[The Advocate (Louisiana).
  3. "Overview Map of I-10".
  4. Bureau of Public Roads. (1939). "Proposed Interregional Highway System". Bureau of Public Roads.
  5. Bureau of Public Roads. (c. 1943). "Routes of the Recommended Interregional Highway System". Bureau of Public Roads.
  6. Public Roads Administration. (August 2, 1947). "National System of Interstate Highways". Public Roads Administration.
  7. Public Roads Administration. (August 14, 1957). "Official Route Numbering for the National System of Interstate and Defense Highways". Public Roads Administration.
  8. Public Roads Administration. (October 17, 1957). "Routes To Be Added to the National System of Interstate and Defense Highways". Public Roads Administration.
  9. Public Roads Administration. (c. 1963). "The National System of Interstate and Defense Highways". Public Roads Administration.
  10. (August 7, 1957). "Federal funds for roads". State-Times.
  11. (May 12, 1954). "Sabine bridge dedication held". [[The Times-Picayune]].
  12. (February 23, 1967). "New interstate link finished to Texas line". State-Times.
  13. (September 22, 1965). "Sulphur-Vinton interstate opens". Morning Advocate.
  14. (April 17, 1962). "Section of interstate opened at Lake Charles". State-Times.
  15. (September 28, 1951). "Calcasieu River Bridge to open". Morning Advocate.
  16. (April 2, 1963). "Lake Charles Expressway dedication set". State-Times.
  17. (February 15, 1964). "Dedication set for major link in Interstate 10". Morning Advocate.
  18. (December 10, 1964). "Iowa-Welsh interstate link opens". Morning Advocate.
  19. (March 28, 1963). "Interstate 10 section will open today". Morning Advocate.
  20. (December 16, 1966). "Stewart says '66 was best one for roads". State-Times.
  21. (October 29, 1968). "I-10 strip set for dedication early Wednesday". Morning Advocate.
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  25. (April 9, 1968). "New bridge opens here tomorrow". State-Times.
  26. (September 15, 1964). "BR Interstate section opens Friday morning". State-Times.
  27. (October 20, 1965). "Opening is set this week for highway section". State-Times.
  28. (June 1, 1974). "Elle coupe le ruban; le chemin s'ouvre". Morning Advocate.
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  30. Puneky, Claire. (May 6, 1978). "I-10 stretch is dedicated". The Times-Picayune.
  31. (April 17, 1975). "LaPlace-Sorrento section of I-10 opened yesterday". State-Times.
  32. (December 14, 1971). "LaPlace-Kenner stretch of I-10 to open Friday". State-Times.
  33. (May 12, 1968). "New segment of I-10 is to be dedicated". The Times-Picayune.
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  35. (March 26, 1965). "Route to ease traffic tieup". The Times-Picayune.
  36. (October 4, 1962). "Pontchartrain Expressway link opens". The Times-Picayune.
  37. (February 15, 1962). "Traffic artery to open Friday". The Times-Picayune.
  38. (February 20, 1960). "Time-saving big on expressway". The Times-Picayune.
  39. (December 8, 1972). "Interstate 10 section in N.O. to open today". State-Times.
  40. (June 12, 1969). "Section of I-10 opens Monday". The Times-Picayune.
  41. (March 12, 1968). "St. Bernard Ave.-Orleans St. link of I-10 to be dedicated". The Times-Picayune.
  42. (February 23, 1968). "I-10 link of St. Bernard, Franklin Aves. complete". The Times-Picayune.
  43. (January 30, 1966). "Interstate sections completed on schedule". The Times-Picayune.
  44. (December 22, 1965). "Approval given for use of span". The Times-Picayune.
  45. (December 9, 1966). "Interstate 10 link dedicated". The Times-Picayune.
  46. (October 17, 1972). "Opening is set of I-10 portion". The Times-Picayune.
  47. (April 25, 1967). "N.O.-to-Slidell time cut as Interstate-10 opens". The Times-Picayune.
  48. (December 22, 1965). "N.O.-Slidell twin bridges, highway links dedicated". The Times-Picayune.
  49. (February 16, 1971). "Interstate link opening today". The Times-Picayune.
  50. Philbin, Walt. (March 8, 1989). "I-10's Deadly Ramps a Worry from the Start". The Times-Picayune.
  51. (March 2023). "6 album | Andy's Category 6 (& more) Photo Gallery | Fotki.com, photo and video sharing made easy". Public.fotki.com.
  52. Duvernay, Adam. (July 6, 2009). "New Twin Spans eastbound to open July 9". The Times-Picayune.
  53. Kelly, John. (April 6, 2010). "Old I-10 twin spans to close Wednesday". The Times-Picayune.
  54. (April 7, 2010). "Upgraded Twin Span Open To Commuters". [[WDSU-TV]].
  55. Volkert Construction Services. "Traffic shifts to new bridge". Volkert Construction Services.
  56. Public Information Office. (September 8, 2011). "Gov. Jindal Opens Traffic on New $803 Million Twin Span Project". [[Louisiana Department of Transportation and Development]].
  57. Mouton, Doug. (August 10, 2011). "Revamped Twin Spans to open several months early". [[WWL-TV]].
  58. Walker, Judy. (December 11, 2013). "Frank Davis' Culinary Legacy Will Live On". New Orleans Times-Picayune.
  59. "Interstate 10". Interstate-Guide.com.
  60. (November 23, 2021). "Edwards, state and local officials cut ribbon on I-10 widening project from Lafayette to Breaux Bridge". KLFY.com.
  61. (September 27, 2023). "DOTD announces the opening of the I-10 west flyover ramp at MSY airport". WDSU.
  62. (May 29, 2021). "I-10 Flyovers To Speed Access to NOLA Airport". Engineering News-Record.
  63. "Expanding passenger rail from New Orleans: Where to stop, what hurdles remain". NOLA.com.
  64. (January 16, 2021). "New Orleans airport flyover project taking shape, on track to finish in the second half of 2022". NOLA.com.
  65. (July 22, 2022). "New Orleans airport plans $85M connector road link to passenger rail; I-10 flyover delayed". NOLA.com.
  66. (September 6, 2022). "I-10 flyover exit-ramp project to New Orleans airport delayed again". NOLA.com.
  67. (October 13, 2023). "I-10 flyover ramp opens; connecting MSY directly to NOLA, further eastbound travel". www.fox8live.com.
  68. "DOTD announces opening of new I-10 west flyover ramp into MSY". Louisiana Department of Transportation.
  69. Muller, Wesley. (September 29, 2023). "New I-10 flyover ramp to New Orleans airport opens". Louisiana Illuminator.
  70. (September 26, 2023). "Long-awaited flyover ramp to New Orleans airport is complete; opening date set". NOLA.com.
  71. Eggler, Bruce. (July 22, 2010). "Claiborne Avenue expressway demolition gets support in report". The Times-Picayune.
  72. (April 12, 2021). "Movement to remove Claiborne Expressway gets presidential backing". WDSU.
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  78. Ashley. (February 1, 2024). "Plan approved for Louisiana I-10 bridge includes a hefty toll for truckers".
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