This article needs additional citations for verification. (October 2023) |
I-90 highlighted in red | ||||
| Route information | ||||
| Maintained by ISTHA, IDOT, and SCC | ||||
| Length | 123.89 mi[1] (199.38 km) | |||
| NHS | Entire route | |||
| Major junctions | ||||
| West end | ||||
| Major intersections |
| |||
| East end | ||||
| Location | ||||
| Country | United States | |||
| State | Illinois | |||
| Counties | Winnebago, Boone, McHenry, Kane, Cook | |||
| Highway system | ||||
| ||||
Interstate 90 (I-90) in the US state of Illinois runs roughly northwest-to-southeast through the northern part of the state. From the Wisconsin state line at South Beloit, it heads south to Rockford before heading east-southeast to the Indiana state line at Chicago. I-90 traverses 124 miles (200 km) through a variety of settings, from farmland west of the Fox River Valley through the medium-density suburbs west of O'Hare International Airport, through Downtown Chicago, and through the heart of the industrial southeast side of Chicago before entering Indiana.
I-90 comprises several named highways. The Interstate runs along the Jane Addams Memorial Tollway (previously called the Northwest Tollway) from South Beloit to O'Hare Airport, the Kennedy Expressway from O'Hare to the Chicago Loop, the Dan Ryan Expressway from the Loop to the Chicago Skyway, and the Skyway to the Indiana state line. The Jane Addams and Chicago Skyway are toll roads maintained by the Illinois State Toll Highway Authority (ISTHA) and the Skyway Concession Company (SCC), respectively. The remainder of the highway is maintained by the Illinois Department of Transportation (IDOT).
Route description
Winnebago County
I-90 enters Illinois concurrently with I-39 in South Beloit as a six-lane expressway. US Route 51 (US 51) joins Interstate at exit 1 (South Beloit); the 0.3 miles (0.48 km) between the exit and the state line is the only point where I-39 is not concurrent with US 51 in Illinois. The Jane Addams Memorial Tollway is immediately south of Rockton and the South Beloit Toll Plaza (the northernmost toll plaza in Illinois). I-39/I-90 continues in nearly a north–south direction towards Rockford, and IL 173 serves as its first exit; the Interstate pass through Rock Cut State Park (among the largest in the state). The next exit (East Riverside Boulevard) forms the border between Rockford and Loves Park. US 20 makes its first two interchanges with I-90 in Winnebago County, both within two miles (3.2 km) of each other in the Rockford region. The first is with the State Street US 20 business route connecting Rockford and Belvidere. The second is where I-90 splits with I-39/US 51, with the latter taking the path of the westbound US 20 bypass between Rockford and Cherry Valley for approximately three miles (4.8 km) before it splits again to move southward. As the Jane Addams splits from I-39, I-90 takes a sharp change in direction from south to east; until it crosses through Jane Byrne Interchange in Chicago, it is signed only as I-90. The I-39/I-90 split between Rockford and Cherry Valley marks the point where I-90 and US 20 follow nearly parallel routing until their eastern terminus in Massachusetts (though sharing no concurrency). Eastward of the interchange, I-90 is fitted with center-mounted lighting. Shortly before entering Boone County, I-90 crosses the Kishwaukee River.
Boone, McHenry, and Kane counties
Shortly after entering Boone County, I-90 passes over US 20 and has two exits providing access to Belvidere (accessing the eastern terminus of the US 20 business route). In addition to a westbound toll plaza, an Illinois Tollway oasis is located here (the sole example on I-90). The over-highway design of the oasis houses multiple vendors, allowing tollway travelers the options of resting, eating, and refueling from one location on the highway. East of Belvidere, I-90 exits the Rockford region and enters into more substantially rural surroundings, spacing exits much further apart. It changes to a southeast direction as it approaches McHenry County, where the only exit is in unincorporated Riley on IL 23 (five miles [8.0 km] south of Marengo); to match the westbound Belvidere Toll Plaza, eastbound traffic passes through the Marengo Toll Plaza (approximately a mile eastward of IL 23). As I-90 enters Kane County, the surroundings begin to transition from the farmland of Boone and McHenry counties towards various locations of the western Chicago suburbs (entering the Golden Corridor of Illinois); within five miles (8.0 km), the tollway has two exits. In Hampshire, I-90 has its third interchange with US 20; an eastward exit is located with IL 47 between Pingree Grove and Huntley. As I-90 approaches the Fox Valley, it enters Elgin, passing Randall Road (the historic western terminus of the Chicago suburbs). After the interchange, I-90 expands from six to eight lanes in width and gradually turns east as it passes through the Elgin Toll Plaza (both directions) and IL 31. After crossing the Fox River, it passes.
Suburban Cook county

After passing IL 25 in Elgin, I-90 moves uphill and enters Cook County, heading eastward towards I-290 (Eisenhower Expressway). Prior to its intersection with the Eisenhower, the highway passes through Hoffman Estates (including IL 59) and Schaumburg (each also have a westbound-only interchange). Eastward of the Barrington Road exit (the first SPUI exit on the tollway), I-90 is fitted with active traffic management gantries. I-290 has its northern terminus with I-90, becoming IL 53 north of the tollway. To the north, the exit provides access to many suburbs accessed by both US 12 and US 14. To the south, the Eisenhower provides expressway access to the city of Chicago, along with access to I-355 (accessing the southern suburbs with access to I-55 and I-80). After passing the Eisenhower, I-90 expands from eight to ten lanes and turns gradually southeast towards Des Plaines (passing through Rolling Meadows and Arlington Heights). As it approaches Elmhurst Road (IL 83 north of I-90), the tollway moves back to eight lanes as it passes directly north of O'Hare International Airport; it widens back to ten lanes as it passes over US 45. The final exits for the I-90 tollway are in Rosemont, on Devon Avenue (westbound traffic) and River Road (eastbound).
Chicago
Moving east of the Tri-State Tollway (I-294) and crossing the Des Plaines River, I-90 enters the Chicago city limits; no longer tolled, it becomes the Kennedy Expressway, with the CTA Blue Line operating in the median. After crossing IL 43, the Kennedy turns southeast, with I-94 joining it at IL 50 in the Mayfair neighborhood (marking the southern terminus of the Edens Expressway). Eastward of IL 50 (Cicero Avenue), the highway operates with reversible express lanes, directing express traffic in addition to the eight lanes of local traffic. Following the direction of the Chicago River, the Kennedy Expressway has its eastern terminus in the West Loop at the Jane Byrne Interchange (passing the Eisenhower Expressway). After passing through the Jane Byrne Interchange, I-90/I-94 becomes the Dan Ryan Expressway. In contrast to the electronically controlled gates used by the Kennedy, the Dan Ryan is up to 14 lanes wide (with a center express section and outer lanes for local traffic). In the Englewood neighborhood, I-90 splits from I-94, becoming the tolled Chicago Skyway. Following the southeast direction of the railroad tracks in the area, the six-lane skyway is an elevated road linked to a bridge crossing the Calumet River. As it exits Illinois, I-90 continues into Hammond, Indiana, (directly over US 20 and US 41) before moving back onto ground level as the Indiana Toll Road.
History
Jane Addams Memorial Tollway
The 76-mile (122 km) Northwest Tollway portion of I-90 opened on August 20, 1958.[2] Prior to the opening, the first vehicle to officially travel the new roadway was a covered wagon navigated by local resident John Madsen who took five days to make the journey.[3]
On September 7, 2007, highway officials responding to an effort by state lawmakers renamed the Northwest Tollway to Jane Addams Memorial Tollway, after Jane Addams, the Nobel Peace Prize winner and founder of the Settlement House movement in the US.[4][5]
The Illinois Tollway's 2005–2012 Congestion-Relief Program provided $644.1 million (equivalent to $991 million in 2024[6]) in projects along the I-90 corridor.[7] Projects included rebuilding and widening of the tollway between I-39 and Rockton Road, including a reconfiguration of the I-90/I-39 interchange. This construction started in 2008 and was completed by the end of 2009.[8]
From 2013 to 2016, over $2 billion (equivalent to $2.65 billion in 2024[6]) was spent on rebuilding and widening the Jane Addams Memorial Tollway from I-39 to the Kennedy Expressway. The inside shoulders were widened for future transit opportunities, and active traffic management was incorporated into the corridor from IL 59 to the eastern end.[9][10] In addition, almost all of the crossroad bridges were rebuilt and several interchanges were reconfigured/expanded.[11] In 2019, a $33.4-million (equivalent to $40.3 million in 2024[6]) interchange with IL 23 was added near Marengo to provide the first I-90 interchange in McHenry County.[12]
Until 1978, I-90 was routed on the Congress Street Expressway (later named the Eisenhower Expressway) which was extended from the Loop to the interchange of the Northwest Tollway and IL 53. The Kennedy Expressway was signed only as I-94, and the portion of present-day I-90 between the Edens Expressway and IL 53 was not signed as an Interstate Highway. This provided a non-toll section of I-90 between Downtown Chicago and IL 53. The route designations were changed to their present form when I-90 was moved to follow the entire length of the Kennedy Expressway and the Jane Addams Tollway, and the original route was designated I-290.
In 2018, ISTHA raised the speed limit on I-90 from 65 to 70 mph (105 to 113 km/h) from the I-39 split to Randall Road. They also raised it from 55 to 70 mph (89 to 113 km/h) from Randall Road to Mount Prospect Road and raised it from 55 to 60 mph (89 to 97 km/h) from Mount Prospect Road to the Kennedy. The speed limit for buses is 65 mph (105 km/h), and the speed limit for trucks is 60 mph (97 km/h).[13]
Chicago Skyway

The Chicago Skyway was originally known as the Calumet Skyway.[14] It cost $101 million (equivalent to $840 million in 2024[6]) to construct and took about 34 months (nearly three years) to build. Nearly eight miles (13 km) of elevated roadway, the Chicago Skyway was originally built as a shortcut for cars from State Street, a major north–south street on Chicago's South Side that serves the Loop, to the steel mills on the Southeast to the Indiana state line where the Indiana Toll Road begins. Later, when the Dan Ryan Expressway opened, the Chicago Skyway was extended west to connect to it. There are only two eastbound exits east of the toll barrier, whereas there are four westbound exits west of the toll barrier (so that no exits are available until one has crossed the bridge and paid the toll). The Chicago Skyway opened to traffic on April 16, 1958.[14][15]
The Skyway's official name, referring to it as a "toll bridge" rather than a "toll road", is the result of a legal quirk. At the time of its construction, the city charter of Chicago did not provide the authority to construct a toll road. However, the city could build toll bridges, and it was found that there was no limit to the length of the approaches to the bridge. Therefore, the Skyway is technically a toll bridge spanning the Calumet River with a six-mile-long (9.7 km) approach. This also is part of the reason that there are no exits available until after one has crossed the bridge and paid the toll.[16]
Historically, the Chicago Skyway was signed as, and was widely considered to be part of, I-90 from the mid-1960s forward (after I-90 in this area had been swapped with I-94). However, from around 1999 until 2022, the Chicago Department of Transportation worked under a new assumption that they had never received official approval to designate the Skyway as I-90. The city subsequently replaced most of the "I-90" signage with "TO I-90/I-94" signage. IDOT has always reported and continues to report the Skyway as part of the Interstate Highway System, and the Federal Highway Administration (FHWA) also does consider the Chicago Skyway's roadway as I-90 unless IDOT revokes their designation of such.[17] As of 2022, the Skyway is again signed as I-90, though now denoted with non-standard oversized shields constructed by CDOT.
In the 1960s, the newly constructed Dan Ryan Expressway and the neighboring Calumet, Kingery, and Borman expressways provided free alternatives to the tollway, and the Skyway became much less used. As a result, from the 1970s through the early 1990s, the Skyway was unable to repay revenue bonds used in its construction.[18] Traffic volumes rebounded from the late 1990s onward, partially because of the construction of casinos in Northwest Indiana, along with reconstruction of the Dan Ryan, Kingery, and Borman expressways.[19] In June 2005, the Skyway became compatible with electronic toll collection, with users now able to pay tolls using I-Pass or E-ZPass transponders.[20]
Chicago's Department of Streets and Sanitation formerly maintained the Chicago Skyway Toll Bridge System. A 2004 transaction that gave the city a $1.83-billion (equivalent to $2.9 billion in 2024[6]) cash infusion leased the Skyway to the Skyway Concession Company, a joint-venture between the Australian Macquarie Infrastructure Group and Spanish Cintra, which assumed operations on the Skyway on a 99-year operating lease. The agreement between the Skyway Concession Company and the City of Chicago marked the first time an existing toll road was moved from public to private operation in the US.[21]

Until the summer of 2015, to the south of the toll plaza, an unusually-placed McDonald's restaurant and its parking lot (including a drive-thru) sat in the median of the toll approach as a de facto rest stop before leaving or entering Chicago. The franchisee terminated the lease with the SCC shortly before, blaming closure on the declining profits as the restaurant was more popular for its restrooms than the food it offered. The McDonald's building was later torn down, and the toll approach was further expanded upon its former footprint.[22][23]
Exit list
| County | Location | mi[24] | km | Exit | Destinations | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Winnebago | South Beloit | 0.00 | 0.00 | Continuation into Wisconsin | ||
| 0.29 | 0.47 | 1 | Western end of US 51 concurrency | |||
| Rockton | 2.71 | 4.36 | 3 | Northwestern end of Jane Addams Memorial Tollway; last free exit Eastbound | ||
| 3.60 | 5.79 | South Beloit Toll Plaza 1 | ||||
| Rockford | 8.94 | 14.39 | 8 | Tolled westbound exit and eastbound entrance | ||
| 12.47 | 20.07 | 12 | Tolled westbound exit and eastbound entrance | |||
| 15.76 | 25.36 | 15 | ||||
| Cherry Valley | 17.40 | 28.00 | 17 | Eastern end of I-39/US 51 concurrency | ||
| Boone | Belvidere | 20.40 | 32.83 | 20 | Irene Road | Tolled eastbound exit and westbound entrance |
| 22.93 | 36.90 | Belvidere Toll Plaza 5 (westbound) | ||||
| 23.51 | 37.84 | Belvidere Oasis | ||||
| 24.62 | 39.62 | 25 | Belvidere–Genoa Road | Tolled exit ramps | ||
| McHenry | Riley | 36.10 | 58.10 | 36 | Tolled exit ramps and westbound entrance | |
| 37.39 | 60.17 | Marengo Toll Plaza 7 (eastbound) | ||||
| Kane | Hampshire | 41.54 | 66.85 | 42 | ||
| Huntley | 46.02 | 74.06 | 47 | |||
| Elgin | 51.78 | 83.33 | 52 | Tolled eastbound exit and westbound entrance | ||
| 53.42 | 85.97 | Elgin Toll Plaza 9 | ||||
| 54.22 | 87.26 | 54 | Signed as exits 54A (south) and 54B (north); tolled westbound exit and eastbound entrance | |||
| Kane–Cook county line | 55.95 | 90.04 | 56 | Tolled westbound exit and eastbound entrance | ||
| Cook | Hoffman Estates | 57.77 | 92.97 | 58 | Beverly Road | Westbound exit and eastbound entrance; tolled westbound exit |
| 59.31 | 95.45 | 59 | Tolled exit ramps | |||
| 61.81 | 99.47 | 62 | Barrington Road | Single-point urban interchange | ||
| Schaumburg | 65.19 | 104.91 | 65 | Roselle Road | Westbound entrance ramp via Central Road | |
| 66.93 | 107.71 | 67 | Meacham Road | Westbound exit and entrance; no access from I-290 and IL 53 ramp | ||
| Rolling Meadows | 67.84 | 109.18 | 68 | Signed as exits 68A (east/south) and 68B (north); tolled eastbound exit; western terminus of I-290 | ||
| Arlington Heights | 70.47 | 113.41 | 70 | Arlington Heights Road – Elk Grove Village | Tolled eastbound exit and westbound entrance | |
| Des Plaines | 73.25 | 117.88 | 73 | Tolled eastbound exit and westbound entrance | ||
| 74 | Currently under construction; expected to be complete in 2026; will be I-490 exits 6A-B | |||||
| 75.80 | 121.99 | 76 | Westbound exit and eastbound entrance | |||
| Rosemont | 76.75 | 123.52 | Devon Avenue Toll Plaza 17 (westbound) | |||
| 77.03 | 123.97 | — | Westbound entrance | |||
| 77.20 | 124.24 | 77A | Eastbound exit and westbound entrance; I-190 exit 1C; I-294 exit 40 | |||
| 77B | Signed as exit 77 westbound; I-294 exit 40B | |||||
| 78.20 | 125.85 | River Road Toll Plaza 19 (eastbound) | ||||
| Chicago | 79.28 | 127.59 | 79 | Signed as exits 79A (south) and 79B (north); westbound exits via I-190; eastbound exit 79A via River Road Toll Plaza | ||
| 78.65– 79.6 | 126.57– 128.1 | 79C | Westbound exit and eastbound entrance; eastern terminus of I-190; southeastern end of Jane Addams Memorial Tollway; last free exit westbound; former exit 78 | |||
| 79.99 | 128.73 | 80 | Canfield Road | Westbound exit and eastbound entrance | ||
| 80.84 | 130.10 | 81A | ||||
| 81.14 | 130.58 | 81B | Sayre Avenue | Westbound exit and eastbound entrance | ||
| 81.85 | 131.72 | 82A | Nagle Avenue | No westbound exit | ||
| 82.09 | 132.11 | 82B | Bryn Mawr Avenue | Westbound exit | ||
| 82.31 | 132.47 | 82C | Austin Avenue to Foster Avenue | Eastbound exit | ||
| 82.79 | 133.24 | 83A | Foster Avenue | No eastbound exit | ||
| 83.01 | 133.59 | 83B | Central Avenue | Westbound exit and eastbound entrance | ||
| 83.71 | 134.72 | 84 | Lawrence Avenue | Eastbound To I-94 | ||
| 84.35– 84.59 | 135.75– 136.13 | 43B | Western end of I-94 concurrency; westbound exit and eastbound entrance; western end of reversible express lanes | |||
| 84.77 | 136.42 | 43C | Montrose Avenue | Westbound exit and eastbound entrance | ||
| 85.03 | 136.84 | 43D | Kostner Avenue | Westbound exit | ||
| 85.39– 85.62 | 137.42– 137.79 | 44A | No westbound exit | |||
| 85.62– 85.81 | 137.79– 138.10 | 44B | Westbound exit and eastbound entrance | |||
| 86.34 | 138.95 | 45A | Addison Street | |||
| 86.77 | 139.64 | 45B | Kimball Avenue | |||
| 87.08 | 140.14 | 45C | Belmont Avenue / Kedzie Avenue | Westbound exit and eastbound entrance | ||
| 87.64 | 141.04 | — | Sacramento Avenue | Eastbound entrance | ||
| 87.79 | 141.28 | 46A | California Avenue | Eastbound exit and westbound entrance | ||
| 87.96 | 141.56 | 46B | Diversey Avenue | Westbound exit and eastbound entrance | ||
| 88.53– 88.90 | 142.48– 143.07 | 47A | Western Avenue / Fullerton Avenue | Westbound exit and eastbound entrance from Western Avenue | ||
| 89.08 | 143.36 | 47B | Damen Avenue | Westbound exit and eastbound entrance | ||
| 89.52 | 144.07 | 48A | Armitage Avenue | Eastbound traffic uses Armitage Avenue to Ashland Avenue | ||
| 90.10 | 145.00 | 48B | Westbound traffic uses North Avenue to Ashland Avenue | |||
| 90.66 | 145.90 | 49A | Division Street | |||
| 90.91 | 146.31 | 49B | Augusta Boulevard / Milwaukee Avenue | Westbound exit and eastbound entrance | ||
| 91.40 | 147.09 | 50A | Ogden Avenue | Eastbound exit and westbound entrance | ||
| 91.62 | 147.45 | 50B | Ohio Street | Eastern end of reversible express lanes | ||
| 92.19 | 148.37 | 51A | Lake Street | Westbound exit and eastbound entrance | ||
| 92.27 | 148.49 | 51B | Randolph Street west | |||
| 92.34 | 148.61 | 51C | Washington Boulevard east | Exits only; no entrances | ||
| 92.44 | 148.77 | 51D | Madison Street | |||
| 92.53 | 148.91 | 51E | Monroe Street | Eastbound exit | ||
| 92.62 | 149.06 | 51F | Adams Street west | Eastbound exit and westbound entrance | ||
| 92.71 | 149.20 | 51G | Jackson Boulevard east | Eastbound exit and westbound entrance | ||
| 92.72– 93.35 | 149.22– 150.23 | 51H | Jane Byrne Interchange; southeastern end of Kennedy Expressway; northern end of Dan Ryan Expressway; eastern termini of I-290/IL 110 | |||
| 51I | Ida B. Wells Drive | |||||
| 93.42 | 150.34 | 51J | Taylor Street / Roosevelt Road | Eastbound exit and westbound entrance; former exit 52A | ||
| 93.57 | 150.59 | 52B | Roosevelt Road / Taylor Street | Westbound exit and eastbound entrance | ||
| 94.22 | 151.63 | 52C | 18th Street | Eastbound exit and westbound entrance | ||
| 94.48 | 152.05 | 53A | Canalport Avenue / Cermak Road | Westbound exit and eastbound entrance; Chinatown exit | ||
| 94.22– 96.04 | 151.63– 154.56 | 53 | Signed as exits 53B (south) and 53C (north) westbound; I-55 exits 292 and 293B; Cermak Road access from westbound only; western end of express lanes | |||
| 96.16 | 154.75 | 54 | 31st Street | |||
| 96.45 | 155.22 | 55A | 35th Street | Access to Rate Field and the Illinois Institute of Technology | ||
| 96.98 | 156.07 | 55B | Pershing Road | |||
| 97.44 | 156.81 | 56A | 43rd Street | |||
| 97.97 | 157.67 | 56B | 47th Street | |||
| 98.88 | 159.13 | 57 | Garfield Boulevard | |||
| 99.50 | 160.13 | 58A | 59th Street | Westbound exit and eastbound entrance | ||
| 100.00 | 160.93 | 58B | 63rd Street | Eastbound exit and westbound entrance | ||
| 100.00– 100.33 | 160.93– 161.47 | 59A | Eastern end of I-94 concurrency; eastern end of express lanes; eastbound exit and westbound entrance | |||
| 100.33 | 161.47 | 100 | State Street | Westbound exit and eastbound entrance | ||
| 101.42 | 163.22 | 101 | St. Lawrence Avenue | Westbound exit and eastbound entrance | ||
| 101.78 | 163.80 | 102 | 73rd Street | Westbound exit and eastbound entrance | ||
| 103.04– 103.33 | 165.83– 166.29 | 103 | Stony Island Avenue north to Lake Shore Drive | Westbound exit and eastbound entrance | ||
| 103.93 | 167.26 | — | Jeffery Boulevard | Eastbound entrance | ||
| 104.28 | 167.82 | 104 | 87th Street | Westbound exit | ||
| 104.67 | 168.45 | Chicago Skyway Toll Plaza | ||||
| 105.26 | 169.40 | 105 | Anthony Avenue / 92nd Street | Eastbound exit and westbound entrance | ||
| 105.82– 106.21 | 170.30– 170.93 | Chicago Skyway Toll Bridge | ||||
| 107.62 | 173.20 | 107 | Eastbound exit and westbound entrance | |||
| 107.82 | 173.52 | Continuation into Indiana | ||||
1.000 mi = 1.609 km; 1.000 km = 0.621 mi
| ||||||
Related routes
I-90 has two related auxiliary Interstate Highways within Illinois. I-190 is a spur into O'Hare International Airport in Chicago that is also known as the Kennedy Expressway O'Hare Extension or the O'Hare Expressway. I-290 takes a southeasterly dogleg left route accessing the western suburbs and heading eastward into Downtown Chicago. It is also known as the Dwight D. Eisenhower Expressway. A third route, the Western O'Hare Beltway, is under construction and has been designated I-490. This new route, passing along the west side of O'Hare between I-90 and I-294, is expected to open in 2026.[25]
See also
References
- ^ Starks, Edward (January 27, 2022). "Table 1: Main Routes of the Dwight D. Eisenhower National System of Interstate and Defense Highways". FHWA Route Log and Finder List. Federal Highway Administration. Retrieved September 18, 2022.
- ^ "N. W. Tollway Opens Aug. 20 at Ceremony". Chicago Daily Tribune. June 30, 1958. Archived from the original on October 26, 2012. Retrieved April 18, 2010 – via ProQuest Archiver.
- ^ "First Tollway Vehicle to Be Covered Wagon". The Milwaukee Journal. Associated Press. August 11, 1958. part 1, p. 10. Archived from the original on May 6, 2016. Retrieved April 18, 2010 – via Google News.
- ^ Ryan, Joseph (September 7, 2007). "Northwest Tollway Renamed for Reformer Addams". Daily Herald. Arlington Heights, IL. Retrieved September 8, 2007.
- ^ Illinois General Assembly (May 22, 2007). "Full text of HJR0019". Retrieved September 8, 2007.
- ^ a b c d e Johnston, Louis; Williamson, Samuel H. (2023). "What Was the U.S. GDP Then?". MeasuringWorth. Retrieved November 30, 2023. United States Gross Domestic Product deflator figures follow the MeasuringWorth series.
- ^ Illinois State Toll Highway Authority (2011). Congestion Relief Program: 2011 Update (PDF) (Report). Illinois State Toll Highway Authority. Retrieved September 19, 2014.
- ^ Illinois State Toll Highway Authority. "Cherry Valley Interchange (I-90/39) Reconstruction and Reconfiguration" (PDF). Illinois State Toll Highway Authority. Retrieved September 19, 2014.
- ^ "Transit on I-90" (PDF). Jane Addams Memorial Tollway Rebuilding and Widening Project. Illinois State Toll Highway Authority. Retrieved September 19, 2014.
- ^ "A Smart, State-of-the-Art, 21st Century Corridor" (PDF). Jane Addams Memorial Tollway Rebuilding and Widening Project. Illinois State Toll Highway Authority. Retrieved September 19, 2014.
- ^ "New and Improved Interchanges" (PDF). Jane Addams Memorial Tollway Rebuilding and Widening Project. Illinois State Toll Highway Authority. Retrieved September 19, 2014.
- ^ "Interchange Route 23 Interchange Project". Illinois State Toll Highway Authority. March 20, 2019. Retrieved July 26, 2019.
- ^ "New 70 MPH Speed Limit on I-90 Segment in Northwest Suburbs Now Matches Segment from Elgin to Wisconsin". Cardinal News. March 28, 2018. Retrieved October 21, 2020.
- ^ a b Foust, Hal (April 17, 1958). "A Great Day For Chicago! Skyway Open". Chicago Tribune. Archived from the original on November 2, 2012. Retrieved June 21, 2010.
- ^ Chicago Area Transportation Study. "System Facilities". Chicago Area Transportation Study. Archived from the original on June 18, 2007. Retrieved July 7, 2007.
- ^ Mayer, Harold M.; Wade, Richard C. (1969). Chicago: Growth of a Metropolis. Chicago: University of Chicago Press. p. 442. ISBN 0-226-51274-6.
- ^ Samuel, Peter (June 29, 2005). "Skyway Is Interstate 90 Unless State Withdraws Reports: Feds". TollRoadsNews. Archived from the original on March 9, 2012. Retrieved January 3, 2010.
- ^ McClendon, Dennis (2005). "Skyway". Encyclopedia of Chicago. Retrieved July 7, 2007.
- ^ Illinois Department of Transportation (2005). "Getting Around Illinois". Illinois Department of Transportation. Archived from the original on June 30, 2007. Retrieved July 7, 2007.
- ^ Hilkevitch, Jon (May 27, 2005). "Skyway will add I-PASS". Chicago Tribune. Retrieved July 14, 2019.
- ^ "Chicago privatizes Skyway toll road in $1.8 billion deal". Southern Illinoisian. Carbondale, IL. Associated Press. October 17, 2004. Retrieved March 4, 2008.
- ^ Amer, Robin (July 10, 2015). "Skyway McDonald's Is Shut Down, Where Will Drivers Go When They Need To Go?". DNAInfo. Block Club Chicago. Archived from the original on July 11, 2015. Retrieved June 29, 2023.
- ^ "Skyway McDonald's Closes, Chicago Reacts". NBC Chicago. WMAQ-TV. July 11, 2015. Retrieved June 29, 2023.
- ^ Illinois Technology Transfer Center (2011). "GIS Data". Illinois Department of Transportation. Archived from the original (ESRI shapefile) on June 26, 2013. Retrieved February 18, 2013.
- ^ "Construction underway for new I-490 western O'Hare corridor to I-90, Rt. 390, Tri-State Tollway". April 29, 2021.
External links
- Illinois Tollway official site
- Official website of the Chicago Skyway
- Chicago Department of Transportation[permanent dead link]
- Description and history at Richard Carlson's Illinois Highways
- Historic, Current & Average Travel Times For The Jane Addams Tollway
- Best of Transportation Page
- Chicago Skyway (I-90) at Steve Anderson's ChicagoRoads.com
- Historic American Engineering Record (HAER) No. IL-145, "Chicago Skyway Toll Bridge"
- Chicago Skyway High Bridge at Structurae