Vieux Carré Riverfront Expressway


The Vieux Carré Riverfront Expressway was a controversial, mostly-elevated, never-built freeway that would have cut through the French Quarter of New Orleans, Louisiana. From 1964 to 1969, it was also designated Interstate 310.

Route description

The freeway would have split from Interstate 10 at exit 237 and run south along Elysian Fields Avenue to the Mississippi River. There it would turn southwest and run to a point near Lafayette Street, where ramps would connect to the Greater New Orleans Bridge. An extension, never part of the Interstate Highway System, was to continue west to meet the Earhart Expressway.
A small piece of the freeway was built as a six-lane, tunnel, under the Rivergate Convention Center, now Harrah's New Orleans Casino. It is now used for valet parking.

History

The Louisiana Highway Department hired Robert Moses as a consultant in 1946 to examine New Orleans' traffic and propose solutions. His proposals included a 40-foot high, 108-foot wide freeway running 3.5 miles from I-10 near Elysian Fields Ave,
following Elysian Fields at ground level to the riverfront, and continuing south, elevated to the BR US 90 bridge approach. It was not added to the Interstate Highway System as an urban route in the 1950s due to a lack of funding, but by 1961 it was being considered for addition. One proposal to gain the mileage was to shift Interstate 10 to the Riverfront route, but eventually, in 1964, the Interstate 420 bypass of Monroe was removed from the Interstate System and the mileage transferred to the Riverfront Expressway project. It was officially added to the Interstate Highway System on October 13, 1964, as Interstate 310.
After wide local opposition, the freeway was removed from the Interstate System on August 22, 1969. Its mileage was used in part for a new southern bypass of New Orleans—Interstate 410—which was itself never completed.