Minnesota State Highway 36

Route map:
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Trunk Highway 36 marker

Trunk Highway 36

Map
MN 36 highlighted in red
Route information
Maintained by MnDOT
Length21.718 mi[2] (34.952 km)
Existed1933[1]–present
Major junctions
West end I-35W at Roseville
Major intersections
East end WIS 64 at Oak Park Heights
Location
CountryUnited States
StateMinnesota
CountiesRamsey, Washington
Highway system
  • Minnesota Trunk Highway System
I-35W MN 37

Minnesota State Highway 36 (MN 36) is a 21.718-mile-long (34.952 km) highway in Minnesota, which runs from its interchange with Interstate 35W (I-35W) in Roseville and continues east to its eastern terminus at the Wisconsin state line (near Stillwater), where it becomes Wisconsin Highway 64 (WIS 64) upon crossing the St. Croix River at the St. Croix Crossing bridge. A portion of MN 36 is a major freeway in suburban Minneapolis–Saint Paul.

Route description[edit]

The intersection of MN 36 and Margaret Street at North St. Paul in February 2003

MN 36 serves as an east–west highway between the cities of Roseville, Little Canada, Maplewood, North St. Paul, Oakdale, Oak Park Heights, and Stillwater.[3][4]

MN 36 is a limited-access freeway from its interchange with I-35W in Roseville eastward to I-35E in Little Canada, and about five miles (8.0 km) beyond.[3][4]

Near Rosedale Center, MN 36 has a junction with MN 51 (Snelling Avenue). It then meets County Road 42 (CR 42, Rice Street) at an offset single-point urban interchange. The highway intersects I-35E in Little Canada. It straddles the border with and crosses into Maplewood, where it meets U.S. Highway 61 (US 61). The portion of MN 36 in North St. Paul is known as the Officer Richard Crittenden, Sr. Memorial Highway.[3][4]

The freeway section ends at a signal-controlled intersection with MN 120. MN 36 then becomes an at-grade expressway. It proceeds through Oakdale before an interchange with I-694 in Pine Springs. For about four miles (6.4 km) outside of the I-494/I-694 loop, the expressway section of MN 36 has a speed limit of 65 miles per hour (105 km/h).[5] It passes the cities of Grant and Lake Elmo before reaching Stillwater and Oak Park Heights.[3][4]

MN 36 crosses the St. Croix River via the St. Croix Crossing bridge and becomes WIS 64 upon crossing the state line into Wisconsin.[6]

History[edit]

MN 36 was authorized in 1933. Legally, it is defined as Legislative Route 118. The route is not marked with this number.[1]

At this time, MN 36 was significantly longer, running between Richfield and a point west of Stillwater. The route was a paved road from its junction with MN 5 northward to the Minneapolis city limits. It was known as Cedar Avenue for most of its course in Minneapolis. It then turned to the east on a bituminous surface until it reached US 61, at which point it became a gravel road to its terminus with U.S. Highway 212 (US 212) near Stillwater.[7] By 1941, the entire highway was paved with at least bitumen.[8] Excluding within Minneapolis and the portion between MN 49 and US 61, the entirety of the route was a four-lane divided highway.[9]

MN 36 did not originally reach the Wisconsin state line at the St. Croix River. Part of old MN 212 in Oak Park Heights and Stillwater was renumbered as MN 36 in 1960.[9]

By 1962, MN 36 extended past MN 5 and continued through Bloomington, ending at a junction with MN 13 in Eagan.[10]

The portion of MN 36 south of MN 62 was redesignated as a part of MN 77 in 1980. The former highway between MN 62 and I-35W reverted to county control as County Road 152 (Cedar Avenue).[11]

The section of MN 36 in North St. Paul was closed in 2007 from April to September. The highway was rebuilt to freeway standards during this time between White Bear Avenue in Maplewood and MN 120 (Century Avenue) in North St. Paul.The changes included grade-separated junctions with no interchanges or access within North St. Paul. The full closure in 2007 allowed the project to be completed more quickly and at a lower cost compared with a staged reconstruction. It also increased safety for construction workers. The MN 36 reconstruction project in North St. Paul was completed in 2008. The budget of the project was $24 million.[12]

An interchange was constructed in 2014 at MN 36 and Hilton Trail in Pine Springs. The project also included two roundabouts on Hilton Trail on either side of the highway, one at 60th Street North and another at an extension of Viking Drive.[13]

The Minnesota Legislature passed a bill in 2014 designating MN 36 in North St. Paul as the Officer Richard Crittenden Sr. Memorial Highway, honoring a North St. Paul officer killed in the line of duty in 2009.[14]

Prior to August 2017, upon reaching the St. Croix River, MN 36 merged with, and ran concurrently with MN 95 north into downtown Stillwater. At Chestnut St., MN 36 turned east and crossed the St. Croix River on the historic Stillwater Lift Bridge. On August 2, 2017, the new St. Croix Crossing bridge opened and MN 36 now uses this bridge to cross into Wisconsin, eliminating its concurrency with MN 95.[15]

Major intersections[edit]

All exits are unnumbered.

CountyLocationmi[2]kmDestinationsNotes
RamseyRoseville0.0000.000
I-35W south
Western terminus; west end of freeway; I-35W exit 22B
0.163–
0.427
0.262–
0.687
Cleveland Avenue south (CR 46)Parclo interchange
0.4800.772
I-35W north
Westbound exit and eastbound entrance; I-35W exit 22B
0.785–
0.825
1.263–
1.328
Fairview Avenue (CR 48)
1.2952.084 MN 51 (Snelling Avenue)
1.7702.849Hamline Avenue (CR 50)Right-in/right-out interchange
2.2723.656Lexington Avenue (CR 51)
3.2655.255Dale Street (CR 53)
Little Canada4.2756.880 CR 49 (Rice Street)Offset single-point urban interchange; former MN 49
5.1218.241
I-35E / US 10 east – St. Paul
Cloverleaf interchange; I-35E exit 111
5.7699.284Edgerton Street (CR 58)
Maplewood6.84411.014 US 61Cloverleaf interchange; westbound entrance includes bus entryway from Keller Parkway
7.32111.782English Street
8.445–
8.479
13.591–
13.646
White Bear Avenue (CR 65)
North St. Paul9.29614.960McKnight Road (CR 68)
9.97916.060Margaret StreetWestbound exit only
RamseyWashington
county line
North St. PaulOakdale line10.46516.842 MN 120 (Century Avenue)At-grade intersection; eastern end of freeway
WashingtonOakdale11.27118.139 CSAH 13 (Hadley Avenue)Dumbbell interchange
OakdalePine Springs line11.776–
11.793
18.952–
18.979
I-694Cloverleaf interchange; I-694 exit 52
Pine Springs12.30319.800 CSAH 29 (Hilton Trail)Interchange
Grant16.77526.997
CSAH 15 north (Manning Avenue)
Western end of CSAH 15 overlap; interchange
Oak Park Heights17.57728.287

CSAH 5 north / CSAH 15 south (Stillwater Boulevard)
Eastern end of CSAH 15 overlap; formerly MN 5; interchange
20.49032.975 MN 95 – Stillwater, Bayport
St. Croix River21.71834.952St. Croix Crossing; MinnesotaWisconsin line

WIS 64 east
Freeway continues into Wisconsin
1.000 mi = 1.609 km; 1.000 km = 0.621 mi

References[edit]

  1. ^ a b "Chapter 440-H.F. No. 2000". Session Laws of Minnesota for 1933. Mike Holm, Secretary of State. pp. 881–897.
  2. ^ a b Minnesota Department of Transportation. "Statewide Trunk Logpoint Listing" (PDF). St. Paul: Minnesota Department of Transportation. Retrieved May 5, 2024.
  3. ^ a b c d Minnesota Department of Transportation (2023). Official Highway Map, Minnesota (PDF) (Map) (2023–2024 ed.). 1:190,080. St. Paul: Minnesota Department of Transportation. Metropolitan Minneapolis–St. Paul inset. §§ X26–Z25. OCLC 1412257582. Archived (PDF) from the original on April 1, 2024. Retrieved May 4, 2024.
  4. ^ a b c d Google (May 4, 2024). "Overview Map of MN 36" (Map). Google Maps. Google. Retrieved May 4, 2024.
  5. ^ "New accessible crossings on busy MN 36 raise eyebrows, but MnDOT says they're needed". Pioneer Press. St. Paul, Minnesota. Retrieved May 4, 2024.
  6. ^ "Minnesota Highway 36 / Wisconsin Highway 64 - New St. Croix River Crossing - Project Status". Minnesota Department of Transportation. Retrieved November 4, 2009.
  7. ^ Minnesota Highway Department; McGill-Warner (1934). Map of Trunk Highway System, State of Minnesota (Map). Scale not given. St. Paul: Minnesota Highway Department. Minneapolis, Saint Paul and Vicinity inset. OCLC 5673160, 80405240. Retrieved May 5, 2024 – via Minnesota Digital Library. (Showing road conditions as of May 1, 1934)
  8. ^ Minnesota Department of Highways (1941). Official Road Map of Minnesota Showing the State Highway System and Main Secondary Roads (Map). Scale not given. St. Paul: Minnesota Department of Highways. Metropolitan Area inset. OCLC 5673160, 80405240. Retrieved May 5, 2024 – via Minnesota Digital Library. (Showing road conditions as of May 1, 1941)
  9. ^ a b Minnesota Department of Highways; H.M. Gousha (1960). Official Road Map of Minnesota Showing the State Highway System and Main Secondary Roads (Map). 1:760,320. St. Paul: Minnesota Department of Highways. OCLC 5673160, 80405240, 55590006. Retrieved May 5, 2024 – via Minnesota Digital Library.
  10. ^ Minnesota Department of Highways; H.M. Gousha (1962). Official Road Map Minnesota (Map). 1:760,320. St. Paul: Minnesota Department of Highways. OCLC 5673160, 80405240. Retrieved May 5, 2024 – via Minnesota Digital Library.
  11. ^ Minnesota Department of Transportation (1979). Minnesota, Lakes and a Whole Lot More: Official Transportation Map Minnesota (Map) (1979–1980 ed.). 1:1,137,760. St. Paul: Minnesota Department of Transportation. OCLC 5673160, 80405240. Retrieved May 5, 2024 – via Minnesota Digital Library.
  12. ^ Barnard, Kent (May 31, 2006). "Highway 36 closes in 2007 for reconstruction through North St. Paul" (Press release). Minnesota Department of Transportation. Archived from the original on June 17, 2006. Retrieved June 2, 2006.
  13. ^ "Highway 36 at Hilton Trail" (PDF). Minnesota Department of Transportation. August 19, 2010. Archived from the original (PDF) on September 8, 2012. Retrieved October 18, 2010.
  14. ^ Harlow, Tim. "Segment of Hwy. 36 to be named for slain North St. Paul officer Richard Crittenden". Star Tribune. Minneapolis. Retrieved May 2, 2024.
  15. ^ "St. Croix Crossing". Minnesota Department of Transportation. August 2, 2017. Retrieved August 3, 2017.

External links[edit]

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