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rk911's avatar
rk911
Explorer
Jan 08, 2018

Best Way Around Houston

we'll be heading to Phoenix west on I-10 from I-55 in early February. for several reasons we'd prefer not to detour off I-10 towards the Dallas area. if our schedule holds we'd be hitting Houston late morning or early afternoon on a Friday, possibly a Saturday. absent construction or traffic accidents both of which I will check on before we get there...barrel through on 10 or detour onto 610? tolls don't bother us. suggestions?
  • Isaac-1 wrote:
    The I-210 bridge is not nearly as bad as the I-10 bridge in Lake Charles, it has a long sweeping curve that is not nearly as steep, and no shoulders, but at least has wider lanes than the I-10 bridge.

    thanks, Issac...appreciate the help.
  • The I-210 bridge is not nearly as bad as the I-10 bridge in Lake Charles, it has a long sweeping curve that is not nearly as steep, and no shoulders, but at least has wider lanes than the I-10 bridge.
  • holy bumper tag, Batman! thanks for the photos and the Lake Charles advice. I've adjusted the GPS route to take I-210 around. is the 210 bridge just as steep?
  • I-10 passes north of the ship channel, however there are steep bridges on both beltway 8 (toll road) and I-610, fog can also be an issue north of Galveston Bay (Beaumont to Baytown on I-10) in the mornings in early spring, though typically this is more common in March. The bridges are usually not a big deal, but are steep enough to slow down some large trucks. On this topic take the I-210 bypass around Lake Charles LA, it will add 3-5 miles, but will let you avoid the steep, narrow, antiquated I-10 bridge that dates back to the late 1940's, the I-210 bridge by contrast was built in the 1970's.

    I-10 west (katy freeway) in Houston is a mixed use roadway with free interstate outer lanes, and limited access HOV / toll road expressway down the middle which I think is EZ pass only. The katy freeway built about 10-15 years ago is the widest stretch of freeway in the US in places up to 22 lanes wide and about 25 miles long.

    p.s. here are a couple of photos for you

    Katy freeway, and the I-10 bridge in Lake Charles, LA

  • Isaac-1 wrote:
    ...p.s. If there are downtown traffic issues, I tend to find I-610 south being the better option than I-610 north, though you do have to deal with the ship channel bridge when going south.
    generally less traffic on south bypass? and what's the issue with the ship channel bridge? does the interstate cross over the channel or is it a draw/swing bridge?

    Isaac-1 wrote:
    Many of the toll roads around Houston are Texas EZ Tag only roads with no conventional toll booths.
    I pulled up a map of the toll roads in/around Houston and see that I-10 west of the city has tolls. automatic lanes only or are there humans collecting the toll?
  • I,ve gone straight threw easier than the by pass,did a sunday morning one time ,hardly any cars .
  • If you are going through Houston, I-10 straight through is generally the best bet, the bypass loops just take you out of your way, and all tend to have similar levels of traffic as going straight through, at least in certain areas. Traffic on Saturday will be lighter than on Friday, and downtown Houston is almost a ghost town on Sundays.

    p.s. If there are downtown traffic issues, I tend to find I-610 south being the better option than I-610 north, though you do have to deal with the ship channel bridge when going south. Many of the toll roads around Houston are Texas EZ Tag only roads with no conventional toll booths.

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