“In the past 20 years, the people of Kansas have invested around $1.2 billion dollars in I-70’s expansion, repair, and maintenance,” Lorenz said. “We will continue to focus on preservation and maintenance of our state’s interstates. I am proud to say that preservation is specifically called-out as a top priority in the new Eisenhower Legacy Transportation Program. At the Kansas Department of Transportation (KDOT), we are committed to fulfilling our responsibility.”
On Nov. 14, 1956, Kansas completed the first section of Interstate in the U.S. under the new Federal-Aid Highway Act of 1956. This eight-mile section of I-70 is just west of Topeka. Celebrations of completed sections of I-70 continued for the next 14 years until the final section was opened on June 17, 1970.
The highway system is important for the travel industry across the state. “Visitors from all across this land come to Kansas and travel on our highways to experience our wide open spaces, our beautiful state parks and wildlife areas, and to enjoy the abundant activities that make us a great state to visit,” said Kansas Department of Wildlife, Parks and Tourism Secretary Brad Loveless.
Members of the I-70 Association also participated in the celebration.
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“Kansas I-70 is an economic driver to many communities across the state,” said Julie Roller Weeks, Abilene Convention & Visitors Bureau Director and Kansas I-70 Association member. “By making travel easier, we see increased sales and visitation in our businesses and attractions. The economic impact of tourism and Kansas I-70 makes a big difference in our communities.”
I-70 is the direct east-west route through Kansas. It originally cost $155.6 million (an average of $420,000 per mile) to construct the 370 miles of I-70, not including the Kansas Turnpike portion. At the time I-70 opened, it was the longest continuous segment of interstate highway to be completed by any state in the nation.
Today, Kansas has a total of 875 miles of Interstate, which is .62 percent (less than 1 percent) of all roads in Kansas. These roadways carry 24.6 percent of the traffic, nearly one-fourth of all travel in the state.