Ames, Iowa – June 11, 2024 – The Iowa Transportation Commission approved the Fiscal Year 2025-2029 Iowa Transportation Improvement Program at its meeting today. The Program documents investments in Iowa’s multimodal transportation system covering aviation, public transit, railroads, trails, and highways.
The program is posted on the Iowa DOT’s website.
The Program is developed and approved annually by the Commission and includes specific highway and bridge projects anticipated to be constructed over the next five years on the state highway system made up of all Interstate, U.S., and Iowa signed routes. All other roads in the state are under the jurisdiction of individual cities and counties and each local jurisdiction develops their own program of highway, road, street, and bridge construction projects.
Program Overview
The highway and bridge projects included in this Program are funded with approximately $4.5 billion of state and federal funding forecast to be available over the next five years. Projects included in the Program are consistent with the goals and objectives of the State Long-Range Transportation Plan and identified following a detailed evaluation of safety, traffic, congestion, condition, and other data. This assures the projects are those necessary to provide modern, safe, and efficient transportation of goods and the traveling public.
The Commission prioritizes investments that improve the safety and condition of existing state highways and bridges, and this Program includes over $3.9 billion of investments in that area. Significant investments in bridges have been made over the last 18 years dropping the number of poor condition bridges on the state highway system from 256 in 2006 to 23 in 2024. This Program includes more than $1.4 billion of additional bridge investments.
The interstate system connects all transportation systems in Iowa and facilitates the efficient movement of freight within, to/from, and through Iowa. This Program invests in projects that add capacity where necessary, replace major river crossings, and modernize interchanges to improve safety and to handle future traffic demands such as:
- I-80 Middle Road Interchange reconstruction in Bettendorf
- I-80 Mississippi River bridge replacement
- I-35/80/235 Southwest Mixmaster modernization in Polk County
- I-380 widening from 120th Street to U.S. 30 (including Wright Brothers interchange reconstruction) in Linn County
- I-380 widening from Swan Lake Road to 120th Street in Johnson and Linn counties
- I-35 bridge replacement and widening at the U.S. 30 interchange in Ames
- I-35 widening between Ankeny and Iowa 210
- I-29 interchange construction in Woodbury County
- Addition of over 50 truck parking spots.
Projects in this Program that address safety and operational needs include:
- Iowa 21 near Belle Plaine to improve access during times of flooding
- U.S. 75 north of Sioux Center to south junction with U.S. 18 to replace aging pavement
- Iowa 149 Des Moines River bridge to Woodland Ave in Ottumwa to replace aging pavement
- Iowa 12 Gordon Drive bridge in Sioux City to replace an aging viaduct
- Iowa 58 Greenhill Road Interchange in Cedar Falls to replace an existing at-grade intersection
- U.S. 151 Interchange with County Road X-20 at Springville to replace an existing at-grade intersection
- U.S. 30 Interchange at 610th Avenue at Nevada to replace an existing at-grade intersection
- Super-2 improvements on U.S. 63 in Tama County and U.S. 18 in Kossuth County to provide more passing opportunities and improve safety
Contact: Stuart Anderson, director of the Iowa DOT’s Transportation Development Division, 515-239-1661 or stuart.anderson@iowadot.us