Minnesota State Highway 110

Minnesota State Highway 110 (MN 110) was a short 5.245-mile-long (8.441 km) connector highway in Minnesota, which ran from an interchange with State Highway 55 in Mendota Heights to an interchange with Interstate 494 in Inver Grove Heights, south of downtown Saint Paul.

Trunk Highway 110
MN 110 highlighted in red
Route information
Maintained by MnDOT
Length5.245 mi[1] (8.441 km)
Existed1965–2018
Major junctions
West end MN 55 in Mendota Heights
 
East end I-494 in Inver Grove Heights
Location
CountiesDakota
Highway system
  • Minnesota Trunk Highways
MN 109MN 111

On October 23, 2017, MnDOT announced that Highway 110 would be renamed as an extension of State Highway 62. MnDOT says the change is necessary to prevent confusion to visitors and residents. Highway 62 signs went up in August 2018, while Highway 110 signs will be labelled "Old Highway 110" for one year after the switch.[2][3]

Route description

Highway 110 served as an east–west arterial route between Mendota Heights, Mendota, West St. Paul, Sunfish Lake, and Inver Grove Heights. The route was a four lane divided highway with a total of seven stoplights for eastbound traffic and six westbound.

The highway had a major junction with Interstate 35E in the center of Mendota Heights. The route also has an interchange with Robert Street / Robert Trail (State Highway 3) in Inver Grove Heights.

MN 55 crossing the Minnesota River. MN 110's western terminus is across the river.

Highway 110 paralleled Interstate 494 throughout its route in Dakota County. It also had an interchange with Interstate 494 at its eastern terminus in Inver Grove Heights.

The western terminus of Highway 110 was located near the confluence of the Minnesota and Mississippi rivers at the Mendota Bridge.

The Sibley House Historic Site museum in Mendota, overlooking Fort Snelling, is located immediately north of the junction of former Highway 110 and 13. The museum is on Highway 13.

History

Highway 110 was marked in 1965 and replaced the same route previously known as part of Highway 100 from 1934 to 1965.

This route was originally part of the Highway 100 Beltway circling the entire Twin Cities during the 1940s and 1950s.[4] It was paved before 1940 and constructed as a divided highway by 1953.

Highway 110 was numbered as a derivative of Highway 100 in 1965.

Before completion of the I-494 freeway in 1985, I-494 had a missing link during the previous twenty years. Highway 110 had carried all I-494 traffic from its beginning at State Highway 55 in Mendota Heights, to the then completed portion of I-494 beginning again at Babcock Trail in Inver Grove Heights. There was a traffic signal at this junction (where Highways 3, 52, 110, and 494 all intersected) for many years following completion of the nearby Lafayette Freeway (then marked Highway 3, now U.S. 52). An interchange has since been constructed replacing this traffic signal.

After a resurfacing construction project in 2017, the Minnesota Department of Transportation announced that, starting in 2018, Highway 110 would change its name to Highway 62, providing one continuously-named highway that connects two ends of I-494.[2]

Major intersections

The entire route was in Dakota County.

Locationmi[1]kmDestinationsNotes
Mendota Heights0.0000.000 MN 55 westWestbound exit and eastbound entrance
0.3870.623 MN 13 to MN 55 east
1.4962.408 I-35E – St. Paul, Albert LeaI-35E north exit 101, south exits 101A-B; interchange
2.1673.487 MN 149 (Dodd Road)
Inver Grove Heights4.4707.194 MN 3 (South Robert Trail)Interchange
5.2458.441 I-494 / US 52 – St. Paul, RochesterI-494 exit 67; eastbound exit and westbound entrance
1.000 mi = 1.609 km; 1.000 km = 0.621 mi
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References

KML is from Wikidata
  1. Minnesota Department of Transportation. "Statewide Trunk Logpoint Listing" (PDF). St. Paul: Minnesota Department of Transportation. Retrieved August 1, 2018.
  2. Ferraro, Nick. "Hwy. 100 in Dakota County to get a new name - and it's a familiar one". Pioneer Press. St. Paul, MN. Retrieved October 23, 2017.
  3. Harlow, Tim (September 10, 2018). "The Drive: What Happened to Hwy. 110? It's Now Hwy. 62". Star Tribune. Minneapolis. Retrieved September 10, 2018.
  4. Minnesota Department of Highways; H.M. Gousha (1953). Official Road Map of Minnesota Showing the State Highway System and Main Secondary Roads (Map). Scale not given. St. Paul: Minnesota Department of Highways. OCLC 5673160, 80405240 via Minnesota Digital Library. (Showing road conditions as of January 1, 1953)
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