Transportation in Oklahoma City
Oklahoma City is near the geographic center of the United States and is an integral point on the U.S. Interstate Network. The city is served by numerous roads and highways, toll roads, three major airports, a train station, a bus station, and a transit system.
Roads and Highways
Oklahoma City is served by an extensive freeway network. The city's network serves every major city in the region and are 6–8 lanes. Most have a level of congestion significantly lower than most comparably sized cities. In fact, OKC's freeways are rarely congested with the "stop and go" commuter patterns of other major cities. It is often said that one can get from any part of the OKC Metro area to downtown in 30 minutes or less by freeway. The city streets are on a N–S–E–W grid network with major streets one mile separated.
The former section of I-40 directly adjacent to downtown was known as the "Crosstown Expressway". The I-40 Crosstown Construction Project relocated the original elevated stretch of highway several blocks to the south. It opened to the public in 2012.
Interstates
Three major interstate routes serve the city in addition to two secondary interstates. Oklahoma City is the only city in the nation dissected by two interstate highways that reach the entire length of the nation (Interstate 40 E-W and Interstate 35 N-S).
- Interstate 35 Major cities connected: (N) Wichita, Kansas City, Minneapolis. (S) Dallas-Fort Worth, Austin, San Antonio.
- Interstate 40 Major cities connected: (W) Amarillo, Albuquerque, Los Angeles/Riverside area (terminus). (E) Little Rock, Memphis, Nashville.
- Interstate 44 Major cities connected: (E) Tulsa, Saint Louis (terminus). (W) Lawton, Wichita Falls, Texas (terminus)
- Interstate 235 Downtown Oklahoma City I-35/I-40 junction to the I-44/Broadway Extension junction in North Oklahoma City
- Interstate 240 SW Oklahoma City I-44 to I-40 in East Oklahoma County.
Other major thoroughfares
- Broadway Extension (US-77) North Oklahoma City
- Lake Hefner Parkway (SH-74) Northwest Oklahoma City
- Kilpatrick Turnpike (Outer Loop Tollway) North and West Oklahoma City
- Airport Road – Southwest Oklahoma City
- Northwest Expressway (SH-3) Northwest Oklahoma City
- 39th Expressway (SH-66) West Oklahoma City
- Northeast 23rd Street (US-62) East Oklahoma County
- Shields Boulevard (US-77) South Oklahoma City
- Reno Avenue – West/East Central Oklahoma City
Air
Oklahoma City is a major air transportation and maintenance center, with three major airports and numerous other smaller ones. Will Rogers World Airport (OKC) is the principal commercial airport of the state and is the anchor of the city's network; located on the SW side of the city, the airport is completing the second phase of an expansion plan and is currently expanding its non-stop flight offerings (with emphasis on its top-15 O/D destinations). Will Rogers also serves as a major maintenance facility with numerous companies providing maintenance to large passenger aircraft. In addition, JPATS has its hub facility at the airport and numerous cargo carriers and air shuttles operate at the airport.
Wiley Post Airport (PWA) is located in the West Oklahoma City suburb of Bethany and is the FAA-designated reliever airport for Will Rogers World Airport. It also is the primary general and corporate aviation airport for the Oklahoma City metropolitan area.
Tinker Air Force Base is the largest military air depot in the nation and is located in SE Oklahoma County.
Clarence E. Page Municipal Airport is a city-owned public use airport located in Canadian County.
Sundance Airpark is a privately owned public use airport located in Canadian County.
Rail
Oklahoma City is experiencing a new renaissance in rail service. What began with only freight service in the early 1990s was transformed by the arrival of the Heartland Flyer. With its daily service to Fort Worth, the Heartland Flyer provides access to the nation's rail network and has given Oklahoma City yet another option for inter-state transportation.
There were plans in the early 1990s to build a light rail system for the city as part of the MAPS urban redevelopment program, but the project stalled repeatedly on issues of funding. (Ernest Istook, 5th District Congressman and chairman of the congressional transportation committee, played a major role in killing federal funding for the project). However he played vital roles in getting other major cities funded for light rail like Los Angeles.
A downtown trolley system will be implemented under a future new MAPS 3 initiative. METRO Transit released a new Mass Transit plan in January 2006 that details its vision of rapid transit in the coming years. The study results showed light-rail trolley in downtown OKC, commuter rail from downtown to the suburbs of Edmond and Norman, and a comprehensive, specialized metropolitan bus network.
Passenger service
Amtrak serves Oklahoma City via the Heartland Flyer, based out of the Art Deco Santa Fe train station in downtown. It has daily service to the satellite city of Norman and terminates at Fort Worth, Texas where passengers can transfer to the nation's rail network. There is currently a major push to expand the Heartland Flyer north into Kansas since the service has been guaranteed by recent state contributions.
There is also a heritage rail line under re-construction that will connect Adventure District in NE Oklahoma City to downtown. The line likely would run from the Santa Fe train station through Bricktown and the Oklahoma Health Center through the Eastside to Adventure District attractions such as the Oklahoma City Zoological Park, Remington Park, and the National Cowboy and Western Heritage Museum.
- Santa Fe Station
- Union Station
Freight lines
Union Pacific and Burlington Northern Santa Fe are the major freight lines in the city.
Bus
Union Bus Station is the principal bus terminal in the state. It is located in west downtown. Greyhound and several other intercity bus companies serve Oklahoma City given its central location.
Public Transit
Embark Transit is the public transit provider with its new bus terminal downtown at NW 5th Street and Hudson Avenue. Embark has numerous routes, most of them being in the central inner city areas and commuter routes from Edmond and Norman to downtown. Metro's service is lacking in some respects, but there are plans to improve it through Metro's vision known as Fixed Guideway Study.[1]
Also part of the FGS, a new modern streetcar system will be completed under the city's new MAPS 3 initiative. The light-rail trolley could connect the CBD with the other major downtown districts in the short term, with expansions proposed to Asia District and the NW Business District as well as the Oklahoma Health Center and Research Park and the Capitol District. The study results also shows commuter rail from downtown to the suburbs of Edmond, Moore and Norman and a comprehensive rapid or commuter bus network for the remainder of the metropolitan area.
References
- ↑ Oklahoma Fixed Guideway Study (accessed April 21, 2010)