Originally known as the Congress Interchange and changed to Circle Interchange in 1964, it was built in the late 1950s and early 1960s, at the same time as the construction of the
Kennedy Expressway. The
University of Illinois at Chicago is to the southwest of the interchange. When the campus opened in 1965, it was called the University of Illinois at Chicago Circle, making it the only university in the world known to be named after a freeway interchange. Due to its congestion, the May 2008 issue of
Popular Mechanics listed this interchange among their list of
the 10 Pieces of U.S. Infrastructure We Must Fix Now. In a dedication ceremony held on August 29, 2014, this interchange, formerly called the Circle Interchange, was renamed the Jane Byrne Interchange in honor of former
Chicago Mayor Jane M. Byrne (1979–1983). It has established a project web site, which is being used to schedule public meetings. On April 3, 2013, the
Chicago Tribune featured a front-page article on the estimated $420 million project, which was slated to take four years. The project began in late 2013. The interchange, as well as a series of overpasses surrounding it, would receive a complete overhaul, including the addition of a flyover ramp from northbound I-90/I-94 to westbound I-290. It also sought to move the Taylor Street exit (from eastbound I-90/I-94 traffic) north. The northwest flyover of the Jane Byrne Interchange opened on December 4, 2016, after which the old ramp was closed and demolished. Several more ramps, as well as the expressways themselves, were rebuilt during the course of the project. One ramp that connects from northbound Dan Ryan to eastbound Ida B. Wells was closed from the spring of 2014 to September 7, 2019. On the same day, the second lane of the flyover ramp, as well as the Morgan Street off-ramp, opened. Delays and increasing costs led to a final completion date of December 16, 2022, at which time all lanes and ramps were opened to motorists. The estimated final cost of the reconstruction was $804.6 million. IDOT stated they expected a 50% reduction in traffic delays as a result of the project's conclusion. ==See also==