U.S. Route 400 Explained

Country:USA
Type:US
Route:400
Map Custom:yes
Map Notes:US 400 highlighted in red
Maint:CDOT, KDOT, MoDOT, and the city of Cimarron
Length Mi:481.306
Established:1994
History:Extended west in 1996
Direction A:West
Terminus A: in Granada, CO
Junction:
Direction B:East
Terminus B: near Joplin, MO
States:Colorado, Kansas, Missouri
System1:
State:CO
System2:
State:KS
System3:
State:MO

U.S. Route 400 (US 400) is a 481.306adj=midNaNadj=mid mostly east–west U.S. Highway, commissioned in 1994. The highway's western terminus is in Granada, Colorado, at an intersection with US 385. The highway's eastern terminus is southwest of Joplin, Missouri, near Loma Linda, at an interchange with Interstate 44, with which it shares with US 166. It originally ended in Garden City, Kansas; in 1996 it was extended to its current western terminus.

Route description

The route number does not follow the numbering convention for U.S. Highways established by the American Association of State Highway and Transportation Officials. The number 400 implies the route is a spur of U.S. Route 0,[1] which does not exist.

Colorado

US 400 begins in Granada at an intersection with US 385. It then runs concurrently with US 50 through Holly east to the Kansas border.

Kansas

US 400 and US 50 enter Kansas west of Coolidge. They run concurrently through Garden City, where it intersects US 83 and separate at Dodge City, which is where it intersects US 56 and US 283. It continues southeast from Dodge City and first intersects US 54 at Mullinville.

US 400 and US 54 begin a long concurrency at Mullinville which passes through Greensburg, Pratt and Kingman before entering Wichita. While in Wichita, US 400 and US 54 intersect Interstate 235 and the concurrency of US 81 and Interstate 135. K-96 provides a short freeway connection to Interstate 35, which is also the Kansas Turnpike. At Augusta, US 400 and US 54 enter into another concurrency with US 77, and US 400 breaks from this concurrency at Haverhill.

US 400 continues east through several small towns before turning southeast to go through the Fredonia area and intersecting US 75 at Neodesha. After a brief concurrency with US 75, it turns east, first intersecting U.S. Route 169 near Morehead and then US 59 near Parsons before finally intersecting US 69 south of Pittsburg. It then turns south with US 69 and at Crestline, follows US 69A south to Riverton. US 400 then turns east with US 166 at Baxter Springs and the two highways run concurrently eastward into Missouri.

The entire 1.369miles section of US 400 in Cimarron is maintained by the city.[2]

Missouri

US 400, along with US 166, terminates at I-44 about one mile (1.6 km) east of the Kansas-Missouri state line, three miles (5 km) west of Joplin.

History

US 400 was first established on December 1, 1994, and at that time ran from the east end of the US-50 and US-83 overlap, eastward to the east county line of Cherokee County, Kansas.[3]

In a May 3, 1995 resolution, it was approved to move US-400 and K-96 to a new alignment between northwest of Fredonia and Neodesha, at that time the overlap with K-47 was removed.[4] In a December 3, 1998 resolution, it was approved to truncate K-96 to end at US-400 by Wichita.[5] [6]

U.S. Route 154

State:KS
Type:US
Route:154
Location:Dodge City, KansasMullinville, Kansas
Formed:1926
Deleted:1982

A section of U.S. 400 that ran from Dodge City to Mullinville, Kansas was U.S. Route 154 from 1926 to 1982. It later became K-154 before becoming part of U.S. 400.

Construction on the first section of the East Kellogg improvement project started in August 2015. The project included a redesigned intersection with Webb Road and widened US-54 and US-400 from four lanes to six lanes from Webb Road to Greenwich Road. Construction on a second project began in 2016, to continue widening the highway to a six-lane freeway between Greenwich Road and K-96. Also new bridges will be built over I-35/KTA, new ramps will be constructed from southbound I-35/KTA to westbound US-54/US-400 and from eastbound US-54/US-400 to both northbound and southbound I-35/KTA. In addition, two-lane one way frontage roads on each side of the freeway will be built. Construction for both projects should be completed by late 2021.[7] A two-mile section of the new highway, from Eastern Street to the K-96 junction, opened on November 21, 2019.[8] On April 16, 2020, vandals damaged an estimated $50,000 worth of construction equipment, which included a bulldozer, excavator and an off-road vehicle.[9]

See also

Notes

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: FreightWaves Classics: National Highway System helps commerce move from coast-to-coast. Freightwaves Inc. . February 23, 2021 . June 18, 2021.
  2. Web site: Kansas Department of Transportation . January 1, 2012 . Resolution Designating City Connecting Links in State Highway System . Topeka . Kansas Department of Transportation . September 7, 2020.
  3. Web site: Kansas Department of Transportation . December 1, 1994 . State Highway Resolution to establish Highway US-400 in thirteen counties in Kansas . Topeka . Kansas Department of Transportation . July 22, 2020.
  4. Web site: Kansas Department of Transportation . May 5, 1995 . Resolution to relocate, redesignate and withdraw segments of highway in Wilson County . Topeka . Kansas Department of Transportation . July 13, 2021 .
  5. Web site: Kansas Department of Transportation . December 3, 1998 . Rural Resolution to remove K 96 from US 400 in Wilson County . Topeka . Kansas Department of Transportation . July 14, 2021 .
  6. Web site: Kansas Department of Transportation . December 3, 1998 . Rural Resolution to remove K 96 from US 400 in Butler County . Topeka . Kansas Department of Transportation . July 14, 2021 .
  7. Web site: 2020 . About the Projects . East Kellogg Improvements . Kansas Department of Transportation . August 27, 2020.
  8. Web site: Kansas Department of Transportation . November 21, 2019 . Two-mile section of Kellogg freeway opens in east Wichita . Topeka . Kansas Department of Transportation . August 24, 2020.
  9. News: Jason . Tidd . April 16, 2020 . After $50K vandalism at East Kellogg construction site, Crime Stoppers offers $10K reward . The Wichita Eagle . August 27, 2020.