Interstate 10
Interstate 10 (I-10) is an east-west transcontinental Interstate Highway forming the southernmost coast-to-coast route in the United States, extending 2,460 miles (3,960 km) from its western terminus at State Route 1 in Santa Monica, California, to its eastern terminus at Interstate 95 in Jacksonville, Florida.[1][2] The highway spans eight states—California, Arizona, New Mexico, Texas, Louisiana, Mississippi, Alabama, and Florida—crossing deserts, mountains, bayous, and urban centers while serving as a critical freight corridor for national commerce.[3][4] Designated as part of the Christopher Columbus Transcontinental Highway, I-10's construction, largely completed by 1990 with the opening of the Papago Freeway Tunnel in Phoenix, Arizona, exemplifies the Interstate System's engineering feats in accommodating high-volume traffic over vast distances.[5] Its longest segment, over 880 miles through Texas, underscores the route's role in linking major ports and economic hubs like Los Angeles, Houston, and New Orleans.[6]