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How good are American roads?

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193 points chmaynard | 3 comments | | HN request time: 0.807s | source
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VyseofArcadia ◴[] No.42194874[source]
How does Hawaii have interstates?
replies(5): >>42194997 #>>42195095 #>>42196098 #>>42196749 #>>42198531 #
1. kube-system ◴[] No.42196098[source]
Because "interstate" doesn't refer to the function of the particular road, it refers to the federal program that created them: the "Dwight D. Eisenhower National System of Interstate and Defense Highways".

There are a ton of interstate highways which do not go between states, even in the continental US, and especially the auxiliary (i.e. 3-digit) interstate highways: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_auxiliary_Interstate_H...

The US already previously had (and still has), a national road system that traversed across states other than the Eisenhower system. But nobody calls these roads "interstate" because they're not in the Eisenhower system: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/United_States_Numbered_Highway...

"Interstate" has always specifically referred to Eisenhower system roads only.

replies(1): >>42196241 #
2. kunwon1 ◴[] No.42196241[source]
I watched this YT video [1] about the interstate system recently, I found it informative and entertaining

To me, the Eisenhower Tunnel in CO [2] is noteworthy. It crosses the continental divide at altitude. From what I've read and watched, they don't allow HAZMAT trucks to go through, because the risk is simply too high (well equipped fire/rescue departments are hours away, among other factors)

[1] https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SR7BA3xEmDo

[2] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eisenhower_Tunnel?useskin=vect...

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3. kube-system ◴[] No.42196305[source]
As I understand, HAZMAT is very commonly banned in a lot of tunnels, and some jurisdictions ban it in all tunnels.