I-90 Winter Corridor: Montana Blizzards and Cascade Passes

How America's longest interstate earns its danger stripes — from Washington's Cascades to Montana's open range to the Buffalo snow belt

At 3,020 miles, Interstate 90 is the longest US interstate highway — running from the waterfront of Seattle to the streets of Boston. Most of its length is manageable freight territory. But three segments make I-90 a serious winter corridor for commercial drivers: the Cascade passes of Washington State, the open range of Montana, and the Buffalo–Albany snow belt of upstate New York.

Understanding these segments, and knowing how to navigate them, is essential for any driver or dispatcher running the northern transcontinental freight lane.

[Read More]

Cabbage Hill and the Blue Mountains: I-84's Most Dangerous Descent

Why the grade near Pendleton, Oregon has humbled even experienced mountain drivers

Interstate 84 is the primary east-west freight corridor through Oregon and Idaho, following the Columbia River gorge before turning south through the high desert toward Boise and Salt Lake City. Most of this route is straightforward for experienced commercial drivers — until the highway climbs into the Blue Mountains east of Pendleton.

At the summit of what truckers call Cabbage Hill (the locals’ name for the Emigrant Hill section of I-84), the road crests above 4,000 feet before dropping dramatically toward the Umatilla River valley and Pendleton below. What follows is one of the most consequential descents on any US interstate.

[Read More]

Colorado Mountain Passes: Loveland Pass and Wolf Creek Pass

The high-altitude routes trucks are forced onto when tunnels close — and why they rank among the most dangerous roads in North America

Colorado sits at the intersection of two of the highest transcontinental freight routes in North America: I-70 crossing the Continental Divide at the Eisenhower Tunnel, and US-160 serving the southwestern corner of the state. Both routes have sections that force trucks onto some of the most demanding roads in commercial driving — roads that make the already-challenging main corridors look mild by comparison.

This article covers two of those routes: Loveland Pass (US-6) and Wolf Creek Pass (US-160).

[Read More]

I-75 Through Michigan: Detroit, Deteriorating Roads, and the Great Lakes Winter

Why Michigan's primary north-south freight corridor is infamous for pavement so bad it causes motion sickness — and winters that compound every risk

Michigan’s roads have a national reputation that has transcended trucking circles into popular culture. The state’s infrastructure funding shortfall, combined with one of the most punishing freeze-thaw climates in the contiguous United States, has produced a highway network that truckers and civilians alike recognize immediately. “Michigan, Michigan, and Michigan is pretty bad too.” “I75 in Michigan heading towards Detroit is an abomination.” One trucker reported getting motion sickness from the sustained bouncing on a Michigan interstate. This is the road.

[Read More]

I-405: Seattle's Perpetual Danger Zone

Heavy traffic, distracted drivers, aggressive curves, degraded road surface, and the most complex interchange geometry in the Pacific Northwest

Interstate 405 runs 30 miles along the eastern shore of Lake Washington from Renton in the south through Bellevue, Kirkland, and Bothell to its junction with I-5 at Lynnwood in the north. It is the primary bypass route for commercial vehicles avoiding downtown Seattle on I-5, and it is widely regarded among truckers as one of the most difficult urban driving environments in the western US.

The combination of extremely high traffic volume, curves and hills that are unusual for an interstate, a chronically degraded road surface, and aggressive driving behavior from a tech-corridor commuter population creates conditions that demand constant attention from commercial drivers.

[Read More]

I-285: Atlanta's Perimeter Highway and Its Truck Driver Trap

Nearly 2 million daily drivers, 18-lane interchanges, and some of the most confusing geometry on the interstate system — why Atlanta's outer loop is a serious hazard for commercial vehicles

For commercial truck drivers passing through or around Atlanta, Georgia, Interstate 285 presents a category of hazard that is entirely different from the mountain passes and desert heat that dominate most dangerous highway discussions. I-285 is an urban loop — 63 miles of freeway encircling Atlanta — that carries nearly 2 million vehicles per day at some of its most congested points. The danger here is not weather, grades, or isolation. It is volume, speed, complexity, and the unforgiving consequences of getting a merge wrong at highway speed in heavy traffic.

[Read More]

Alabama Department of Transportation (ALDOT)

United States of America - Alabama

Department of Transportation

ALDOT

[Read More]

Alaska Department of Transportation and Public Facilities (DOT&PF)

United States of America - Alaska

Department of Transportation

DOT&PF

[Read More]

Albuquerque — Trucking Hub

New Mexico, United States

Albuquerque

New Mexico, United States of America

[Read More]

Arizona Department of Transportation (ADOT)

United States of America - Arizona

Department of Transportation

ADOT

[Read More]