Madison Beltline Study - Beltline information

​Madison Beltline inform​​ation

  • The Beltline was originally constructed in the 1950s as a two-lane rural highway bypassing downtown Madison. Since then, it has been steadily evolving and improving to meet growing local and regional transportation needs.
  • As a principal arterial highway that is fed by nearly every other major route in southwest Wisconsin, as well as numerous major local and county roads, the Beltline is used by a significant portion of local and regional travelers in the Madison urban area.
  • The Beltline is also a primary long truck route, and the portion from Verona Road to I-39/90 is part of the Wisconsin Backbone System.
  • The Beltline links southwest Wisconsin to the nation, and provides an important connection between neighborhoods, businesses, communities, and regions.
  • Madison and surrounding community residents use the Beltline daily to travel to jobs, school, retail, businesses and home.

Madison B​​eltline Challenges

  • Today, the Beltline is a multi-lane urban freeway passing through neighborhoods, natural areas and business districts.
  • Numerous sections of the Beltline have crash rates higher than the state average for similar urban highways in Wisconsin.
  • According to Wisconsin's Department of Administration, Dane County is on pace to add about 120,000 residents between 2010 and 2040; there is no capacity remaining on the Beltline to serve this growth.
  • The Beltline can be difficult for bicycles and pedestrians to cross, creating a barrier for alternative transportation.
  • Frequent congestion occurs, resulting in unreliable travel times.