The
Falls-to-Falls Corridor (officially
The Falls-to-Falls Corridor--United States Route 53 from International Falls on the Minnesota/Canada border to Chippewa Falls, Wisconsin) is, by the
United States federal government, a recognized trade corridor.
In the 1990s, the federal government listed the corridor as a priority for development. The primary development planned is infrastructure-related, specifically, a highway improvement project designed to spur economic development in northwestern Wisconsin and northeastern Minnesota by upgrading U.S. Highway 53 to full expressway standards from Chippewa Falls, Wisconsin to International Falls, Minnesota. Interstate Highway 535 forms the only section of the route that is part of the Interstate Highway System.
Minnesota
Federal funding for the project in northern Minnesota was $940k in 2003

and $600k in 2004

At present, with the exception of 3.5 miles within the city of
Duluth (Piedmont Avenue and Trinity Road), the route is completed as expressway as far north as the north side of the city of
Virginia, leaving approximately 90 miles of the route as-yet incomplete. A section between Virginia and
Cook is currently under construction.
Wisconsin
With the exception of a 5-mile stretch in urban
Superior, the entire route within Wisconsin is completed to
freeway or expressway standards. The Superior section is, however, multi-lane divided highway. On the south end of the corridor, the connection to
Interstate Highway 94 is a 7.5 mile stretch through the
Eau Claire-Chippewa Falls conurbation. After years of legal and political wrangling, the decision was made in the late 1990s to bypass the current route, rather than to upgrade the present highway to freeway standards. The northern half of this bypass, as far south as
WIS 312 was opened to traffic in
mid-2005. The southern half of the bypass, which includes a new pair of multilane bridges over the
Eau Claire River, goes mostly through
Altoona and includes new interchanges with
WIS 312,
U.S. Highway 12 and
WIS 93. The
U.S. 53 /
U.S. 12 single point urban interchange became Wisconsin's first and won
multiple awards in 2005 and 2006. This section of the bypass was opened mid-morning on August 21st, 2006.
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External links