Department of Highways WSDOT was founded as the Washington State Highway Board and the Washington State Highways Department on March 13, 1905, when then-governor
Albert Mead signed a bill that allocated $110,000 to fund new roads that linked the state. The State Highway Board was managed by State Treasurer, State Auditor, and Highway Commissioner Joseph M. Snow and the Board first met on April 17, 1905, to plan the 12 original state roads. The first state highway districts, each managed by a District Engineer, were established in 1918. During this period, the construction of highways began. In 1921, the State Highway Board was replaced by the Washington Highway Committee and the Washington State Highways Department became a division of the Washington State Department of Public Works. The first gas tax (1
¢ per gallon) was levied and Homer Hadley started planning a
pontoon bridge across
Lake Washington, which would later become the
Lacey V. Murrow Memorial Bridge, which opened on July 2, 1940. In 1923, the State Highways Department separated from the Public Works Department and organized the first official system of highways, Washington's state road system. In 1926, the U.S. government approved the U.S. route system, which connected the country by road.
11 U.S. Routes entered Washington at the time. Later in 1929, the Highway Committee was merged with the State Highways Department. The
Lake Washington Floating Bridge and the original
Tacoma Narrows Bridge opened in 1940. The Tacoma Narrows Bridge collapsed because of winds on November 7 that year, earning it the name
Galloping Gertie. The Washington State Highway Commission was formed in 1951. On June 29, 1956,
President Dwight Eisenhower signed the
Federal Aid Highway Act of 1956, which started the
Interstate Highway System.
Originally, two Interstates entered Washington; most work was not completed until the 1970s. In 1964, the
state highways were renumbered to the
current system.
Metro Transit was created in 1972 and work on highways rapidly continued.
The North Cascades Highway (SR 20) was completed in 1972, and the first
HOV lanes in Washington were installed on
SR 520 that same year.
Department of Transportation A combined state department of transportation was proposed in the mid-1960s and gained the support of Governor
Dan Evans. Charles Prahl, who resigned as head of the Department of Highways, criticized the Evans administration's proposal to create a transportation "superagency" and the prioritization of
rapid transit in plans for the urban transportation system of Seattle. The Washington State Department of Transportation was authorized by the state legislature and assumed the responsibilities of several agencies on September 21, 1977. William A. Bulley, the existing Director of Highways, was appointed as the state's first Secretary of Transportation to lead the new agency, which had absorbed state departments that had overseen highways, toll bridges, aeronautics, canals, and community development. The State Highway Commission was renamed to the Washington State Transportation Commission, with its first meeting taking place on September 21, 1977. In 1991, a smaller renumbering of state highways occurred. The renumbering produced some new highways and either realigned or removed highways from the system. In 1996,
Sound Transit was formed and in the same year, the Washington State Transportation Commission adopted its first 20-year transportation plan. Throughout the 1990s, WSDOT and ODOT partnered with
Amtrak to create a train service that went from Canada to Oregon, which later became the
Amtrak Cascades. The
2001 Nisqually earthquake damaged most state highways around the
Seattle metropolitan area and most of the budget was turned over to the
Puget Sound region to help rebuild and repair roads and bridges. Since the beginning of the 21st century, WSDOT has been tasked with rebuilding and renovating aging portions of the highway system across the state. Several sections with poor conditions required emergency repairs in early 2023, including a large hole in an offramp to SR 99 in Seattle and broken concrete panels on I-5 in Everett and I-90 near Issaquah. WSDOT has also been tasked with replacement of 437
fish barriers, mainly outdated
culvert designs, in Western Washington to comply with a federal court order to restore
salmon runs that are protected by Native American treaty rights. , 146 of the barriers had been replaced or rehabilitated; the program is expected to cost $7.8 billion by 2030. As of 2025, a budget shortfall is leading transportation officials to become scared of what they may mean for future repaving, repairs, or emergency issues. ==Administration==