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Interstate 129 (I-129) is an auxiliary Interstate Highway which connects South Sioux City to Interstate 29 in Sioux City, Iowa. Opened in 1976, I-129 is a 3.48-mile (5.60 km) long route, running 3.21 miles (5.17 km) in Nebraska. At 0.27 miles (0.43 km), Interstate 129 is the shortest highway in the state of Iowa. A rare characteristic of I-129 is that it is one of only four Interstates to enter a state that its parent does not enter (I-29, in this case, does not enter Nebraska). The other three are I-275 around Cincinnati, Ohio since I-75 does not enter Indiana, I-287 around New York City because I-87 does not enter New Jersey, and I-535 because I-35 (located in the Duluth-Superior area) does not enter Wisconsin.

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Interstate 129 marker

Interstate 129
Sioux City regional map with I-129 highlighted in red.
Sioux City regional map with I-129 highlighted in red.
Route information
Length: 3.48 mi[2] (5.60 km)
Nebraska: 3.21 mi (5.17 km)
Iowa: 0.27 mi (0.43 km)
Existed: November 22, 1976[1] – present
Major junctions
West end: US-20 / US-75 / US-77 in South Sioux City, NE
  US-77 in South Sioux City, NE
East end: I-29 / US 20 / US 75 in Sioux City, IA
Highway system

Interstate 129 (I-129) is an auxiliary Interstate Highway which connects South Sioux City to Interstate 29 in Sioux City, Iowa. Opened in 1976, I-129 is a 3.48-mile (5.60 km) long route, running 3.21 miles (5.17 km) in Nebraska. At 0.27 miles (0.43 km), Interstate 129 is the shortest highway in the state of Iowa. A rare characteristic of I-129 is that it is one of only four Interstates to enter a state that its parent does not enter (I-29, in this case, does not enter Nebraska). The other three are I-275 around Cincinnati, Ohio since I-75 does not enter Indiana, I-287 around New York City because I-87 does not enter New Jersey, and I-535 because I-35 (located in the Duluth-Superior area) does not enter Wisconsin.

Contents

Route description[edit]

Interstate 129 begins along U.S. Route 20 on the western edge of South Sioux City, Nebraska, just west of exit 1, a cloverleaf interchange with U.S. Route 75 and U.S. Route 77. US 77 travels north through South Sioux City before ending at Interstate 29 in Sioux City while US 75 joins I-129 and US 20. One mile (1.6 km) later, I-129 / US 20 / US 75 intersect Dakota Avenue at a partial cloverleaf interchange.[3] U.S. Route 20 Business is designated along Dakota Avenue.

East of Dakota Avenue, I-129 / US 20 / US 75 travels south of South Sioux City and passes through rolling farmland. For the rest of I-129's length, the two directions of I-129 / US 20 / US 75 traffic are separated by a Jersey barrier instead of a grassy median. The three routes cross the Missouri River and immediately intersect Interstate 29 at an interchange. Due to the minimum amount of space along the Missouri River banks, the I-29 interchange is a modified two-level cloverstack interchange.[4] At I-29, US 20 and US 75 continue east around Sioux City and I-129 ends.

History[edit]

After the passage of the Federal-Aid Highway Act in 1968, the mileage which would eventually be manifested in over 1,400 miles (2,300 km) of interstate highway was allocated to the states. Iowa received the smallest allocation, one half-mile (0.4 km), for the southern bypass of Sioux City.[5] On the 1973 state highway map, the Iowa State Highway Commission showed the planned route on the state map for the first time.[6] Interstate 129 was opened on November 22, 1976.[1]

Exit list[edit]

State County Location Mile[3][7] km Exit Destinations Notes
Nebraska Dakota
South Sioux City 0.00 0.00 US-20 west West end of US 20 overlap
0.38 0.61 1A US-75 south / US-77 south – Fairgrounds West end of US 75 overlap
0.40 0.64 1B US-77 north – Sioux City
1.50 2.41 2 South Sioux City, Dakota City
Missouri River 3.21
0.000
5.17
0.000
NebraskaIowa state line
Iowa Woodbury
Sioux City 0.286 0.460 1
I-29 / US 75 Bus. north – Council Bluffs, Downtown Sioux City
US 20 east / US 75 north – Fort Dodge, Le Mars East end of US 20 / US 75 overlap
  •       Concurrency terminus
  •       Closed/former
  •       HOV only
  •       Incomplete access
  •       Tolled/ETC
  •       Unopened

References[edit]

  1. ^ a b Iowa Department of Transportation. The National System of Interstate Defense Highways: 1956–1996. 
  2. ^ "Route Log & Finder". FHWA. November 2002. Retrieved October 21, 2008. 
  3. ^ a b Nebraska Department of Roads. "Nebraska Highway Reference Log Book". Retrieved February 27, 2010. 
  4. ^ Google Inc. Google Maps – Interstate 129 (Map). Cartography by Google, Inc. http://maps.google.com/maps?f=q&source=s_q&hl=en&geocode=&sll=42.448415,-96.393088&sspn=0.00528,0.009634&g=Sioux+City&ie=UTF8&hq=&hnear=Sioux+City,+Woodbury,+Iowa&t=h&layer=x&ll=42.445834,-96.373959&spn=0.010561,0.019269&z=16. Retrieved February 27, 2010.
  5. ^ Federal Highway Administration. "FHWA By Day - December 13". Retrieved August 1, 2010. 
  6. ^ Iowa State Highway Commission (1973) (PDF). Iowa State Highway Map (Map). Sioux City inset. http://www.iowadot.gov/maps/msp/historical/pdf/1973_back.pdf. Retrieved August 1, 2010.
  7. ^ "2009 Volume of Traffic on the Primary Road System of Iowa" (PDF). Iowa Department of Transportation. January 1, 2009. Retrieved September 30, 2010. 

Route map: Google / Bing

Browse numbered routes
Iowa 128 IA Iowa 130
N-128 NE N-133
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