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Transportation in Minnesota

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Transportation in Minnesota is primarily centered on the Minneapolis-St. Paul metropolitan area, and is overseen by the Minnesota Department of Transportation.

Contents

[edit] Ground transportation

Almost all north-south through railroads and long-distance four-lane expressways go to or through the Twin Cities. Most east-west through routes do also, the exceptions being a corridor from the North Dakota border to the port of Duluth/Superior comprised of two BNSF rail routes and U.S. Route 2, and a corridor across southern Minnesota from South Dakota to the Mississippi River and Wisconsin with I-90, Minnesota State Highway 60 and U.S. Route 14, and the DM&E Railroad.

[edit] Highway system

Image:MN-62.svg Minnesota's major Interstate highways are I-35, I-90, and I-94. I-535 is a spur route from Duluth to Superior, Wisconsin. In the Twin Cities I-35 splits into I-35W through Minneapolis and I-35E through St. Paul. I-94 has one spur, Interstate 394 from Minneapolis to the western suburbs, and two loop routes, Interstate 494 and Interstate 694, which form a beltway around the Twin Cities.

The interstates are part of a class of routes know as interregional corridors, which also includes U.S. Routes 2, 8, 10, 14, 52, 53, 61, 63, 169, and 212 and Minnesota State Highways 23, 34, 36, 60, 210, and 371<ref>Interregional Corridors and Regional Trade Centers (pdf). Minnesota Department of Transportation. Retrieved on 2006-06-30.</ref>. Interregional corridors represent two percent of the state's highways but account for one-third of all vehicle miles traveled. <ref>Office of Investment Management: The Minnesota Interregional Corridor System (2005). Retrieved on 2006-06-30.</ref> Less heavily traveled regional corridors include U.S. Routes 12, 59, 71, and 75, and a number of state highways.

[edit] Intercity bus lines

Intercity bus service on a skeletal network of lines is provided by Greyhound, Jefferson Lines, and Coach USA.

[edit] Railroads

Major freight railroads in Minnesota include BNSF Railway, Union Pacific Railroad, Canadian Pacific Railway, Canadian National Railway, and the Dakota, Minnesota and Eastern Railroad. Principal ladings include coal from the Powder River Basin to ports and eastern power plants, grain and other agricultural products from farm to processors and ports, taconite (a form of iron ore) from northeastern Minnesota to Lake Superior ports or on all-rail routes to steel mills, timber and forest products, and intermodal traffic.

The state is served by one intercity passenger rail line, Amtrak's Empire Builder, which stops daily in each direction at Winona, Red Wing, St. Paul, St. Cloud, Staples, and Detroit Lakes.

See also: List of Minnesota railroads

[edit] Air transportation

Minnesota’s principal airport is Minneapolis-St. Paul International Airport (MSP), the headquarters and a major passenger and freight hub for Northwest Airlines. MSP is also a hub for Sun Country Airlines, and is served by most other domestic carriers. Large commercial jet service is also provided to and from airports at Duluth and Rochester. Scheduled commuter service also is available at Bemidji, Brainerd, Hibbing, International Falls, St. Cloud, and Thief River Falls.

[edit] Water transportation

Image:LockAndDamNo2 HastingsMN.JPG Much of Minnesota's early transportation followed the numerous rivers and lakes. Early European explorers and settlers followed the routes used by the Voyageurs in the fur trading days, and later on steamboat services operated on the principal rivers. Commercial water transportation now is limited to the shipment of bulk commodities on two routes. Barges haul grain and other products down the Mississippi River system from the ports of Minneapolis (the head of navigation), Savage (on the Minnesota River), St. Paul, Red Wing and Winona to downstream river ports, and to ports on the Gulf of Mexico for transshipment to ocean-going cargo ships. Cargo vessels known as lakers haul grain, coal, and iron ore from the Lake Superior ports of Duluth-Superior, Two Harbors, Silver Bay, and Taconite Harbor through Lake Superior to the lower Great Lakes, while ocean-going ships referred to as salties operate from the Twin Ports out the St. Lawrence Seaway to the ocean.<ref>Minnesota Ports and Waterways. Minnesota Department of Transportation.</ref>

[edit] Public transit

[edit] Bus

Bus transit systems exist in Rochester, Winona, Duluth, St. Cloud, East Grand Forks, Mankato, Moorhead and the Minneapolis-St. Paul metropolitan area. The latter is served by the Metro Transit system, which has an extensive system with over 200 routes. Some metro areas have opted to create their own bus systems, such as Southwest Metro Transit and the Minnesota Valley Transportation Authority.

[edit] Light rail

Twin City Rapid Transit also operated streetcars in the Twin Cities area from the 1890s until 1954, when buses supplanted the streetcars. Light Rail in Minnesota currently consists of one line, the Hiawatha Line, operated by Metro Transit. Completed in 2004, this line runs from the Mall of America, through the MSP airport via a tunnel, and along Hiawatha Avenue into downtown Minneapolis. The line has been very successful, receiving a 65% higher ridership than expected in its first year of service.<ref>Facts about trains and construction Accessed 07/01/2006</ref>

In the future, other light rail lines may be built. The Central Corridor, which would connect downtown Minneapolis to downtown St. Paul, is in the planning stages. It may be followed by the Southwest Corridor light rail from downtown Minneapolis to the southwest metro.

[edit] Heavy rail

There are no heavy-rail commuter rail systems extant in the state, but one is in the development stages. The 82 mile (131 km) Northstar Corridor line is envisioned to connect Minneapolis with St. Cloud along the BNSF Railroad.<ref>Facts and Figures Accessed 07/01/2006</ref> A bonding bill was signed in 2006 to build 40 miles of this route to Big Lake by 2009.<ref>Legislature passes $1 billion public works bill Accessed 07/01/2006</ref>

Planned or proposed light and heavy rail passenger service references:

[edit] References

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