Plans from 1955 (numbered in 1958) took
I-95 through Washington on what is now
I-395, turning east at
US 50 and leaving along the
Baltimore–Washington Parkway.
I-295 was to travel along its current route to south of the
11th Street Bridges, but then would have continued northeast along DC 295, ending at I-95 just outside DC. I-695 was to travel from I-295 over the 11th Street Bridges, turning west on what is now I-695 to end at I-95 (now I-395). Soon—possibly by 1958, when numbers were assigned—I-95 between
Baltimore,
Maryland, and Washington DC was shifted to a new alignment, splitting from the US 50 corridor northeast of
Washington Union Station. I-295 was shifted to cross the 11th Street Bridges and then turn east in the
median of present I-695 (where the ramps to
Robert F. Kennedy Memorial Stadium now lie), continuing north and northwest to end at I-95 and US 50 at their split. I-695 would be the short section of freeway between I-95 and I-295, and ramps on both sides of the
Whitney Young Memorial Bridge would provide a freeway-to-freeway connection between I-695 and DC 295 (via I-295). By 1971, an extension was added to the planned I-695. It would travel
concurrent with I-95 west to
Maine Avenue, where it would split (the existing
interchange provides for freeway-to-freeway ramps) and run northwest in a tunnel to end at
I-66, at the east end of the
Theodore Roosevelt Bridge (that interchange also has the appropriate ramps). Though this was never built, an I-695 South sign remained on I-66 westbound at the planned location of the terminus, covered with plywood, until its removal in 2018. The Southeast Freeway, including the section planned as I-295 to Pennsylvania Avenue, was built in the late 1960s. Plans for the remaining Interstates in Washington DC were canceled in 1977 after
much opposition, and I-295 was later truncated to I-695, with the former I-295 stub to Pennsylvania Avenue renumbered as part of I-695. In the 1990s, the Barney Circle Freeway was planned to travel from the east end of I-695 across the
Anacostia River to DC 295. This would have filled a hole in Washington DC's freeway system, which had no connection between I-395 and DC 295. (This would have been provided by I-295 and the Whitney Young Memorial Bridge.) After the Barney Circle Freeway plan was canceled in 1996, a left-turn movement was added at the interchange between Pennsylvania Avenue and DC 295, allowing traffic coming from I-695 to cross the Anacostia on Pennsylvania Avenue and join DC 295 directly, albeit passing through two
traffic signals. No ramp was provided from DC 295 south to Pennsylvania Avenue west, however, and so traffic from DC 295 south to I-395 south needed to cross the Anacostia on
South Capitol Street. That
decommissioning was foretold in April 2003, when the DC Office of Planning stated that "the elevated Southeast Freeway and industrial landscape create formidable psychological barriers" between the surrounding neighborhoods. In October 2008, the freeway was named one of ten US "Freeways Without Futures" by
Congress for the New Urbanism. In December 2009, construction began on replacement of the 11th Street Bridges and their interchange with I-295/DC 295, including ramps that now allow for highway-only travel between DC 295, I-295, and I-395 in all directions. The renderings for that project also show a deletion of the connections between the bridge and I-695 east, indicating that the stretch of the Southeast Freeway between 11th Street Southeast and Pennsylvania Avenue would soon be decommissioned and replaced by an at-grade
boulevard with traffic signals. In 2011, as a part of the project, I-695 was signed along the Southeast Freeway. Prior to the 11th Street Bridge Project, the
unsigned I-695 did not cross the bridges and terminated north of the Anacostia River. New signage installed by the
District Department of Transportation (DDOT) in 2011–2012 marks the first time I-695 has appeared on directional signs in the District of Columbia; some signs referring to I-695, however, still read "To I-295" along I-395, and some remaining "To I-395" signage can still be found along I-695 westbound. The new signs designate I-695 as extending from the point where I-395 branches off from the Southeast Freeway, with I-695 continuing along the Southeast Freeway and over the new 11th Street Bridge to the interchange with I-295. Some commentators contend the new signage is confusing and that the Southeast Freeway is often confused with
Baltimore's Beltway, a highway with the same route designation. In January 2021, as part of an effort to eliminate driver confusion in the area of the
Center Leg Freeway, the
American Association of State Highway and Transportation Officials (AASHTO) approved a request by the District of Columbia to eliminate the I-695 designation and renumber it as an extension of I-395. I-395's previous route along the Center Leg Freeway will be renumbered as a new I-195. The
Federal Highway Administration (FHWA) approved the request of resigning I-695 as I-395 on April 23, 2021; though some printed and digital maps have made the change, no progress was made in physical re-signing . ==Exit list==