Interstate 435
Interstate 435 (I-435) is an auxiliary Interstate Highway that forms a beltway encircling much of the Kansas City metropolitan area, spanning both Kansas and Missouri. The route totals 83 miles in length, providing a major bypass for through traffic and serving as a key connector for radial Interstates including I-29, I-35, I-70, I-470, and US 71. In Missouri, the 52.78-mile portion begins at the Kansas state line near the Missouri River, proceeds eastward and southward through cities such as Gladstone, Kansas City, Independence, Raytown, and Grandview, before returning westward to the Kansas border south of the metropolitan area. The highway in Kansas covers the remaining distance, linking Johnson County communities like Overland Park and Shawnee to the Missouri River and bypassing the urban core of Kansas City. As part of the National Highway System, I-435 handles significant freight and commuter volumes, with certain segments classified as Tier 1 freight corridors. It supports Kansas City's position as a major logistics hub, connecting to Kansas City International Airport and intermodal facilities while facilitating movement between larger metros like St. Louis and Omaha. The beltway experiences high traffic demands, with the south leg identified as a congestion bottleneck, prompting ongoing improvements such as bridge replacements, interchange reconstructions (e.g., the I-435/I-70 interchange completed in 2020), and capacity expansions to enhance safety and reliability. Construction of I-435 began in the mid-1960s, with segments opening progressively through the 1970s and the full loop completed by 1988, evolving from early urban freeway developments into a vital circumferential route. Over 91% of Missouri's Interstates, including I-435, were in good condition as of 2013, though increasing truck traffic underscores the need for continued investment, with Missouri updating its freight plan as of 2025.Design and route
Overall layout
Interstate 435 is a loop route of Interstate 35 that forms an 83-mile (133 km) beltway around the Kansas City metropolitan area, serving as a key circumferential highway for regional travel.[1] The route begins and ends at I-35 near Lenexa, Kansas, and encircles the urban core of Kansas City by traversing both Kansas and Missouri, providing bypass access for long-distance traffic while connecting suburban communities.[1] In Kansas, it passes through Johnson and Wyandotte counties, while in Missouri, it covers Platte, Clay, and Jackson counties.[2] The beltway features a brief concurrency of 3.1 miles with Interstate 29 and U.S. Route 71 near Kansas City International Airport in Platte County, Missouri, where the routes overlap along the northwestern segment.[1] This shared alignment means the loop is not entirely independent, though it otherwise forms a continuous circuit connecting major radial highways such as I-35, I-70, I-29, and US 71.[3] The overall path emphasizes suburban and semi-rural traversal, facilitating efficient circulation around the metro area's core without penetrating downtown Kansas City.[1]Kansas portion
Interstate 435 begins its Kansas segment at a full cloverleaf interchange with its parent route, Interstate 35, in Lenexa within Johnson County. From this southern terminus, the beltway heads northward as a suburban arterial, initially carrying four lanes in each direction while traversing the affluent communities of Overland Park and Shawnee. This initial stretch serves residential and commercial developments, providing key access to local roadways and contributing to commuter traffic flow around the Kansas City metropolitan area. A notable feature along this segment is the three-wye interchange with K-10 in Lenexa, which enhances freight connectivity westward toward Lawrence.[1] Entering Wyandotte County, I-435 shifts toward more industrial landscapes, crossing the Kansas River near Edwardsville and approaching the Fairfax Industrial District in Kansas City, Kansas. Here, the highway supports freight movement with connections to Kansas Highway 5 and U.S. Highway 69, facilitating logistics in the region's manufacturing hubs. Further north, the route passes near the Legends Outlets shopping and entertainment district, boosting access to retail and business activities adjacent to the highway.[1][4] The Kansas portion concludes at the Missouri state line just south of the Missouri River, where I-435 crosses via a dedicated bridge into Riverside, Missouri. Spanning approximately 28 miles through Johnson and Wyandotte counties, the segment predominantly features four lanes per direction, expanding to six or eight lanes in denser urban zones such as near Metcalf Avenue in Overland Park to accommodate higher traffic volumes. This configuration reflects ongoing improvements to handle suburban growth and regional commerce.[1][5]Missouri portion
The Missouri portion of Interstate 435 comprises 52.8 miles (85.0 km) of the beltway, primarily located within the Kansas City metropolitan area across Platte, Clay, and Jackson counties.[1] This segment serves as a critical commuter and freight corridor, facilitating access to suburban developments, industrial areas, and major transportation hubs.[6] Entering Missouri from Kansas via a bridge over the state line in Platte County, I-435 initially curves eastward, passing in close proximity to Kansas City International Airport (MCI) while briefly overlapping with Interstate 29 for about 3 miles.[1] The route then forms a northern arc through Platte and Clay counties, traversing rural and semi-urban landscapes before reaching its interchange with Interstate 35 in Claycomo.[3] From there, I-435 turns southward, entering eastern Jackson County and skirting the edges of Kansas City's urban core, including industrial parks and residential suburbs such as Gladstone, Kansas City, Raytown, and Independence.[1] Continuing south, the highway passes near key landmarks, including the Truman Sports Complex, which houses Arrowhead Stadium (home of the Kansas City Chiefs) and Kauffman Stadium (home of the Kansas City Royals), located at the Interstate 70 interchange.[1] The segment from mile marker 63.4 to 54.2, encompassing this area near the stadiums, is designated as the Lamar Hunt Memorial Highway in honor of the sports executive and founder of the American Football League.[7] The route completes its southern arc through more densely developed areas, crossing back into Kansas near Grandview before the beltway reconnects with Interstate 35.[1] Notable improvements in this portion include the conversion of the Front Street interchange in Kansas City to a diverging diamond interchange, which opened on November 6, 2011, to enhance traffic flow in an industrial zone handling high volumes of freight.[8] Similarly, the Route 210 interchange in Clay County was reconstructed as a diverging diamond, fully opening on July 31, 2019, to reduce congestion and improve safety for approximately 100,000 daily vehicles on this key northside connector.[9] More recently, as of 2025, the I-435 South Loop Link design-build project has rehabilitated bridges over Wornall Road, Holmes Road, 104th Street, and the Blue River, along with interchange upgrades, to improve capacity and safety.[6] Additionally, upgrades at the I-70/I-435 interchange are ongoing to enhance safety and reduce congestion.[10]History
Planning and designation
The planning for Interstate 435 originated in the mid-1960s as an integral component of the Interstate Highway System, aimed at addressing severe traffic congestion in the Kansas City metropolitan area by providing a circumferential route around the urban core.[11] Initial proposals, dating to 1965, sought to establish a beltway to bypass the city and facilitate smoother connections among the primary radial interstates serving the region.[12] Early feasibility studies emphasized a loop configuration, approximately 50 miles in initial scope, designed to link Interstates 35, 70, and 29 while encircling key suburban growth areas on both sides of the state line.[1] These efforts involved close coordination between the Kansas Department of Transportation (KDOT) and the Missouri Department of Transportation (MoDOT) to align the route across state boundaries, ensuring compatibility with federal standards for urban interstates.[11] The route's designation as an auxiliary beltway, numbered I-435, was approved by the American Association of State Highway Officials (AASHO, predecessor to AASHTO) and the Federal Highway Administration (FHWA) in the mid-1960s, formalizing its role as a full loop around Kansas City.[1] Legislatively, I-435's inclusion was bolstered by amendments in the Federal-Aid Highway Act of 1968, which expanded the Interstate System by 1,472 miles nationwide to prioritize urban bypasses and beltways like the Kansas City loop.[11] This act provided critical federal funding authorization through the Highway Trust Fund, enabling detailed route approvals and environmental reviews for cross-state projects.[11] The numbering and final alignment were ratified by AASHO on June 23, 1969, solidifying I-435's status within the national network.[1]Construction and openings
Construction of Interstate 435 proceeded incrementally from the mid-1960s through the late 1980s, transforming planned segments into a functional beltway around the Kansas City metropolitan area. The initial phase began in 1965 with the opening of a short segment in Kansas from Interstate 35 to U.S. Route 69 (then cosigned with Metcalf Avenue) in Overland Park, marking the first piece of the future loop.[12] The same year, a separate segment opened in Missouri from Interstate 70 to U.S. Route 50 in eastern Kansas City, establishing early footholds on both sides of the state line but without direct connectivity.[1] These openings reflected the project's bi-state scope, requiring coordination between the Kansas Department of Transportation (KDOT) and the Missouri Department of Transportation (MoDOT) to align designs and funding under the Interstate Highway System.[13] By 1969, construction connected the initial Kansas and Missouri segments through southern Kansas City, extending the route eastward to Missouri Route 78 (now East 23rd Street) at Blue Summit by 1970 and creating a continuous path for the first time.[1] In 1971, the highway was further extended northward to U.S. Route 24, advancing the northern arc. A major milestone came in 1973 with the completion of the Missouri River crossing, built in 1972 and opened to traffic the following year, linking the route across the river and connecting to Interstate 35 in Claycomo to form roughly half the beltway.[14] This phase involved significant engineering efforts to span the waterway while minimizing environmental impacts. The project's progress faced challenges, including coordination across state jurisdictions, which complicated right-of-way acquisitions and design standards, as well as urban disruptions such as property condemnations and resident displacements, particularly affecting communities of color in eastern Kansas City starting around 1969.[15] Further advancements included the 1983 opening of a key segment near Kansas City International Airport, comprising the east-west section between approximate exits 36 and 41 parallel to Missouri Route 291, enhancing access to the northwest metropolitan area.[1] The full loop achieved operational status in 1987 with the closure of the final gap near the western boundary, spanning 81 miles after nearly two decades of phased builds.[13][12] Delays stemmed from community opposition, property rights disputes, and the logistical demands of navigating urban and rural terrains across two states, underscoring the complexities of large-scale interstate projects during the era.[15]Interchanges
Major junctions
The southern terminus of Interstate 435 occurs at a complex interchange with I-35 near Lenexa, Kansas, serving as the beltway's entry point and connecting suburban commuters to the primary north-south corridor linking Wichita and Kansas City.[16] This junction facilitates efficient distribution of traffic from I-35 into the western suburbs while integrating with K-10 for local access. Clockwise from the south, a key eastern connection links I-435 to I-70 at exit 12, providing vital access to downtown Kansas City and eastward routes toward St. Louis.[10] Reconstructed as a partial turbine interchange, this junction enhances safety and flow for high-volume traffic, with recent upgrades replacing all bridges to accommodate growing suburban-to-urban commutes.[17] In the northern segment, I-435 shares a concurrency with I-29 and US 71 beginning at mile 31.00 (exit 31), spanning about 3.6 miles near Kansas City International Airport before diverging near Platte City, Missouri.[3] This overlap supports airport-bound travel and northward routes to St. Joseph, distributing freight and passenger traffic from the beltway to radial interstates while minimizing congestion around the major aviation hub.[18] Further east, I-435 connects with US 24 at mile 59.03 (exit 59) in Independence, Missouri, enabling seamless links to local arterials and eastern suburbs.[19] This folded diamond interchange aids in channeling traffic toward Independence and beyond, serving as a critical node for regional commerce. As a circumferential route, these major junctions on I-435 play a pivotal role in radial access, distributing traffic from inbound interstates like I-35, I-70, and I-29 to surrounding suburbs and employment centers, with the beltway encircling Kansas City at a 10- to 15-mile radius to alleviate central city pressure.[20] These connections handle some of the highest volumes in the region on southern segments.[6] Ongoing construction, including ramp closures and lane restrictions on the southern portion as part of the US 69 improvements project (expected completion November 2025), may impact access at affected interchanges.[21] Notable among their designs are diverging diamond interchanges (DDIs) at key points, such as the Front Street junction—one of the area's first DDIs to improve flow in industrial zones (completed 2011)—and the Route 210 interchange, which prioritizes signal-free movements for enhanced efficiency (completed 2018).[22][23]Exit list
Interstate 435 features approximately 80 exits numbered sequentially in a clockwise direction, beginning at its southern interchange with I-35 in Lenexa, Kansas (exit 1), and completing the loop back at the northern interchange with I-35 (exit 83). The route spans Johnson and Wyandotte counties in Kansas and Platte, Clay, and Jackson counties in Missouri, with mileposts resetting at the state line but exit numbers continuing uninterrupted. The following tables detail all exits, including numbers, approximate mile markers where available from state logs and guides, locations, and primary destinations served. Special configurations include diverging diamond interchanges at exit 57 (Front Street, completed 2011) and exit 55 (MO 210, completed 2018) in Missouri.[24][25][26][27]Kansas Exits
| Exit | Mile | County | Location | Destinations |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1A | 0.00 | Johnson | Lenexa | Lackman Road |
| 1B | 0.50 | Johnson | Lenexa | K-10 west – Lawrence |
| 2 | 1.50 | Johnson | Overland Park | 95th Street |
| 3 | 3.00 | Johnson | Overland Park | 87th Street |
| 5 | 5.00 | Johnson | Merriam | Midland Drive |
| 6A | 6.00 | Wyandotte | Kansas City | Shawnee Mission Parkway east |
| 6B | 6.00 | Wyandotte | Kansas City | Shawnee Mission Parkway west – Kansas Speedway |
| 6C | 6.50 | Wyandotte | Kansas City | Johnson Drive |
| 8A | 8.00 | Wyandotte | Kansas City | Holliday Drive |
| 8B | 8.50 | Wyandotte | Kansas City | Woodend Road |
| 9 | 9.00 | Wyandotte | Kansas City | K-32 – Bonner Springs |
| 11 | 11.00 | Wyandotte | Kansas City | Kansas Avenue |
| 12 | 12.00 | Wyandotte | Kansas City | I-70 – Topeka/St. Louis |
| 13 | 13.00 | Wyandotte | Kansas City | US 24/US 40/US 73 – State Avenue |
| 14A | 14.00 | Wyandotte | Kansas City | Parallel Parkway east |
| 14B | 14.00 | Wyandotte | Kansas City | Parallel Parkway west |
| 15A | 15.00 | Wyandotte | Kansas City | K-5 south – Leavenworth Road east |
| 15B | 15.00 | Wyandotte | Kansas City | Leavenworth Road west |
| 18 | 18.00 | Wyandotte | Kansas City | K-5 north – Wolcott Drive, Wyandotte County Lake |
| 75B | 75.00 | Johnson | Kansas City | State Line Road (MO state line) |
| 77A | 77.00 | Johnson | Overland Park | Roe Avenue |
| 77B | 77.00 | Johnson | Overland Park | Nall Avenue |
| 79 | 79.00 | Johnson | Overland Park | US 169 – Metcalf Avenue |
| 81 | 81.00 | Johnson | Overland Park | US 69 – Fort Scott |
| 82 | 82.00 | Johnson | Lenexa | Quivira Road – KU Edwards Campus, Johnson County Community College |
| 83 | 83.00 | Johnson | Lenexa | I-35 – Wichita/Des Moines, US 50/US 56/US 169 |
Missouri Exits
| Exit | Mile | County | Location | Destinations |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 22 | 22.00 | Platte | Parkville | MO 45 – Weston, Parkville |
| 24 | 24.00 | Platte | Kansas City | MO 152 – NW Barry Road, Country Road N |
| 29 | 29.00 | Platte | Kansas City | MO D – NW 120th Street |
| 36 | 36.00 | Clay | Kansas City | NW Cookingham Drive – KCI Airport |
| 37 | 37.00 | Clay | Kansas City | NW Skyview Avenue |
| 40 | 40.00 | Clay | Kansas City | NW Cookingham Drive |
| 41A | 41.00 | Clay | Riverside | US 169 south |
| 41B | 41.00 | Clay | Riverside | US 169 north – Smithville |
| 42 | 42.00 | Clay | Kansas City | N Woodland Avenue |
| 45 | 45.00 | Clay | Kansas City | MO 291 – NE Cookingham Drive |
| 46 | 46.00 | Clay | Kansas City | NE 108th Street |
| 47 | 47.00 | Clay | Kansas City | NE 96th Street |
| 49A | 49.00 | Clay | Kansas City | MO 152 west |
| 49B | 49.00 | Clay | Kansas City | MO 152 east – Liberty, NE Barry Road |
| 51 | 51.00 | Clay | Kansas City | Shoal Creek Parkway |
| 52A | 52.00 | Clay | Claycomo | US 69 – Claycomo |
| 52B | 52.00 | Clay | Claycomo | I-35 south – Kansas City, Des Moines |
| 54 | 54.00 | Clay | Kansas City | Parvin Road/NE 48th Street – Worlds of Fun |
| 55 | 55.00 | Clay | Kansas City | MO 210 east – Richmond, North Kansas City (diverging diamond) |
| 57 | 57.00 | Jackson | Kansas City | Front Street (diverging diamond) |
| 59 | 59.00 | Jackson | Kansas City | US 24 east – Winner Road, Independence Avenue |
| 60 | 60.00 | Jackson | Kansas City | MO 12 east – Truman Road, 12th Street |
| 61 | 61.00 | Jackson | Kansas City | MO 78 east – 23rd Street |
| 63A | 63.00 | Jackson | Kansas City | US 40/I-70 west – Kansas City, Sports Complex |
| 63B | 63.00 | Jackson | Kansas City | I-70 east – St. Louis, Blue Ridge Cutoff |
| 65 | 65.00 | Jackson | Kansas City | Eastwood Trafficway |
| 66A | 66.00 | Jackson | Kansas City | MO 350 east – E 63rd Street, Raytown |
| 66B | 66.00 | Jackson | Kansas City | Blue Parkway |
| 67 | 67.00 | Jackson | Kansas City | Gregory Boulevard – Swope Park |
| 69 | 69.00 | Jackson | Kansas City | 87th Street |
| 70 | 70.00 | Jackson | Kansas City | Bannister Road |
| 71A | 71.00 | Jackson | Grandview | I-470 east/US 50 – Lee's Summit |
| 71B | 71.00 | Jackson | Grandview | I-49 south/US 71 south – Joplin |
| 73 | 73.00 | Jackson | Kansas City | 103rd Street |
| 74 | 74.00 | Jackson | Kansas City | Holmes Road |
| 75A | 75.00 | Jackson | Kansas City | Wornall Road – Avila College |
| 75B | 75.00 | Jackson | Kansas City | State Line Road (KS state line) |