The Asheville Citizen-Times continues to do a great job covering all the angles of the Interstate 40 Haywood County rock slide. An article in Sunday's edition provides a strong historical perspective on how the Pigeon River routing of Interstate 40 came about. And perhaps most strikingly, in an article that ran just prior to the highway's opening in the fall of 1968, how engineers from both Tennessee and North Carolina warned "...that slides would probably be a major problem along the route for many years." On February 12, 1969, not long after the Interstate opened, the first rock slide that would close I-40 occurred. Like many other Interstates within North Carolina, Interstate 40 through the mountains has a history prior to formation of the Interstate Highway System and was also a heated political battle between local communities. The discussion for a road that would eventually become Interstate 40 dates back to the 1940's as the idea for interregional high
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Kudos for asking us what we think.
Raspberry for the way some of the viewing options make my eyes hurt.
Raspberry for the way some of the viewing options don't show the posting dates.
Raspberry for the way the sidebar cuts off the titles of the posts.
Raspberry to me for not coming up with a better way to list the pluses and minuses.
Overall score: liked the old look better.