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IH-35

Austin , TX 78705



Here's the best part about this interstate: it connects San Antonio and Dallas to one of the coolest cities in the United States. I'm sure that's why the traffic can be heavy most times of the day and night. We also didn't allow it to grow into the concrete monstrosities that cities like Dallas and Houston have, so we have more green space and more time to appreciate that green space while we're stuck in traffic. There's lots of big rigs on the road, which means that all of your favorite big box stores will be fully stocked when you get there tomorrow. Occasionally, they're responsible for a pretty terrible accident, which means you'll have even more time to fully appreciate the sights and sounds of our wonderful city. Speaking of, it goes right by the UT football stadium and on the right days, you can listen to the game while you're parked on I-35! Such forward thinking! How can you not love it?

A small version of what I imagine hell to be like. Truck Drivers with gigantic rigs everywhere. Narrow lanes. Construction EVERYWHERE. Prepare to get flat tires and broken windshields. That's if you make it through the traffic.

IH 35 connects some really great cities in TX, DFW, Austin and San Antonio. It's a necessary evil that people love to hate. I try to avoid it, but sometimes you just gotta use it, and at those times I'm glad it's here. Love it or hate it, it's here to stay.

A gleaming Buick with Iowa plates glides up to a dusty service station on the outskirts of Georgetown. Two grizzled men in grimy flannel shirts watch from a bench out front. The older man with beady rat-eyes and ears like Mickey Mouse, strums a banjo and chuckles; "Looks like we got another one gonna try The Road" The younger man gazes at the car, now parked. "Maybe we should send him the other way. He don't know no better. He don't understand." "That ain't our problem. And they never listen anyway." The gas pump clicks and stops, and the driver, a smiling middle-aged man in pressed slacks and polo shirt, calls out to the men. "Excuse me, but is this the road to Austin ?" A pause hangs uncomfortably for several long seconds. "Yep. The Road...." Another pause as the older man leans forward: "Big rigs that'll crush you flatter'n Ashley Olsen's rear end without even slowing down. On ramps that you might as well just jump headfirst into a woodchipper. Lawmen just lookin' for trouble. Towed cars held to hitches by duct tape and wishes. Traffic jams that can drain the very soul out of you, leaving a shriveled lifeless husk. Oh, that's The Road to Austin alright." "Oh, that'll work just fine, sir. It can't be that bad. I've got Apple Maps and GPS. You all have a great day." As the Buick pulls away, the older man strums his banjo. "I told you." The younger man nods,"You tried to tell him. Maybe we could have just sent him to Mopac. Maybe this one will make it. He'll be better than the others." "Maybe," said the older man. And he laughed.

I try so hard to avoid 35 at all costs - so what was I thinking moving to an apartment right off Riverside and 35?!? Now I'm stuck on this gigantic parking lot WAY more than I would like to be. How is it that there's rush hour traffic 23 hours of the day?!? (I'm assuming it's still pretty clear between 3:30-4:30 am, however I haven't tested this in a few years.) We have millions of Californians storming their way to Austin, driving up the home prices and turning our highways in to parking lots. 35 was bad enough years ago, but it's getting so much worse. It's WAY past time to improve public transportation with more rail lines and service to San Marcos, Pflugerville/Round Rock and the freaking airport!!! http://www.usatoday.com/story/money/cars/2013/05/04/worst-traffic-cities/2127661/ -WE BEAT NYC FOR WORST TRAFFIC! WE'RE #4! *SMH!*

I avoid IH35 every time I can, especially during rush hour. That's hard to do when getting around in the Round Rizzle. It is the only Interstate that I know of that gets used like Main Street. I am an impatient driver and I do have road rage. So, when I'm stuck for hours in bumper to bumper traffic cause of some unnecessary and avoidable wreck, it ain't a good thing. I'm often yelling obscenities or flipping people off. My other artery for travel is MOPAC. Guess I'll yelp them next.

expect traffic at anytime. Txdot needs to fix this asap.

If we can review the Freezing Arctic Blast, surely we can review the I35 which is the major corridor from Texas to Minnesota. It's jammed because of people moving into Austin nowadays. The highway wasn't built to take on the increase of the population. Luckily I live close by to work, I don't even get on the freeway. Even with the toll road being built and no one taking the toll road, I35 is still jammed. I think someone would understand why this does not get 5 stars.

What can I say about 35 that hasn't been said a thousand times everyday by anybody who has to deal with this highway. 35 and I have a love /hate relationship that has it's struggles 5 days a week. Pros: It connects me to the downtown area easily (for work), but of course there are other options. If at any point I can escape to San Antonio--tis the only way. Cons: Who designed this highway? Why would you build an exit that forces you to slam on your breaks and do an immediate cross over that is nearly impossible to make. Need to get on the lower deck during 5 oclock traffic---good luck! Cross your fingers and pray that the traffic gods are in a generous mood. There are sections of the highway that severly need to be redesign/reconstructed but OMG I can't imagine how long that would take! Oh 35 what are we to do?

To spite anyone that writes a serious complaint and expects to be taken serious about a highway. I would say ride a bike if you don't like the highway, but Austin's Carpet Bagging bicyclists have ruined bike riding for anyone and everyone. 35 is a great highway. Would give 7 stars if possible. Would be better if we could keep all the Prius, Volvo, and Subaru drivers on the frontage road.

There was a car fire around 11 30 am today. It burned the grass for 50 feet on either side of the car. Thank goodness for the fire department. In this heat and drought it could have been a disaster.

I have most certainly experienced better. This is a tough review, as I think that our town's infrastructure was designed to handle max occupancy of 190,000. In layman's' terms, if you have to travel this road during any peak hours of the day, settle in and hope your air conditioner works. Last memorable experience I had on this abortion of a road was a few months ago. It was around 6 PM on a Friday, 110 degrees and I had been sitting sandwiched between two eighteen wheelers for about twenty minutes breathing diesel fumes and talking myself out of a panic attack. They need to have a drive by Xanax dispensing station every mile or so if they expect people to not go psychotic. Praise Jah that I don't have to travel this road during peak hours. If so, I would probably not be sitting here writing this review right now. I would either be six feet under or in the clink for a serious case of road rage. If for some strange chance you see me on 35...please don't honk at me or give me the bird. If you do, you're asking for it. Fair warning. ;)

I-35? I admit it has its ups and downs, but as far as I can tell, it's still the best interstate highway we've got going in Austin. I think they've become conscious of their reputation, because they're pretty good about providing exits at regular intervals now.

If you're traveling between Austin and Fort Worth, I-35 is quite literally a nightmare. Two lanes of "stop and go" is the best way to describe it ... Listen up fellow motorists: THE LEFT LANE IF FOR PASSING ONLY! It's the law, look it up (see Sec. 545.051). It doesn't matter how fast you are going, I don't care if you are reaching near light speed or have somehow altered the laws of physics to go even faster, when a car pulls up behind you, you are obliged to pull over. Impede the flow of traffic by continuing to drive in the left lane and you could be fined $200. Yes, this means you! If you can't travel fast enough to keep other drivers off of your tail, then you should move over and get into the right lane. The slow lane. The pokey, puttery lane reserved for all the unemployed, sightseeing, Airstream pullin', recreational vehicle drivin' fools that haven't a care in the world nor a schedule to match. This is the lane reserved for little old ladies, people driving VW microbuses, eighteen wheelers, gravel trucks, dump trucks, garbage trucks, nuclear waste transports, junk haulers from across the border, landscaping rigs with debris flying off the back, the Oscar Meyer weinermobile, and every other highway miscreant who thinks that it's clever to drive the speed limit and slow down everyone else behind them that chooses to speed between cities at high rates of speed. Why can't you get out of our way? Why do you continue to clog the interstate with your self-righteous motoring habits? Why do you insist on being the speed governor for everyone else who wants to go faster? YOU are what makes I-35 the bad dream that it is today.

I like it! The upper deck gives you a cool view of the city. The lower deck is like driving through a piece of highway history, with outdated and fascinatingly dangerous engineering. Don't hate the road, hate the drivers.

Well, you are what you are. The good: ~You brought me on my last trek from Indiana to Austin. ~I only have to visit you once a week now when I go to San Antonio to my corporate office and because my job is so close. The bad: ~Your congestion makes no sense on a Sunday at 2pm. ~You are a dirty, dirty girl. ~Your overpass at Ben White has taken so damn long. ~Your flyover on Ben White has a huge crack on it with missing concrete that I see on my smoke breaks. Why doesn't someone fix it or at least cover it up to stop my anxiety. Did Haliburton make you? ~Your suicide ramps that only give you seconds to go from 10mph to 70mph or stop and get honk at or run over.

OK it does eventually get me where I'm going, but does it have to be so ugly? First they took away the low-flying airplanes when they moved the airport. I miss that! Best way to wake up an early morning commuter or big rig long hauler with the thrill of impending death! Now, they have that massive rock and debris pile right by the upper deck that once was the green, collegiate Concordia. What is the image we are putting out there for visitors?? Post-apocolyptical?? Welcome to Austin! Home of the H-Bomb?? What happened to our green city???

I-35 is the best example of why our government is terrible at managing anything. God forbid they are in charge of anything important. And to think our gas is taxed an extra 50 cents a gallon, every damn time, and we still have potholes and massive congestion.

ermg i can yelp the 35?!!? this day can't get better. oh god can i yelp the missouri pacific too, don't call it the mopac. the one star is for the asses who thought to divide the up and down part with the fast lanes going down to the slower moving traffic and the slow lanes are rewarded with no on ramps. genius, except that it's not.