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Here's what America's highways would look like as a subway map

Graham Rapier   

Here's what America's highways would look like as a subway map
Transportation2 min read

US Routes NorthEast subway map cameron booth

Cameron Booth

A detailed cutout of the Northeast

There are over 164,000 miles of highway spanning almost every inch of the United States.

Such a vast and sprawling highway network used to take up hundreds of pages in a cumbersome paper atlas. Now, its on every smartphone. 

Cameron Booth is a Australian graphic designer based in Portland, Oregon who makes maps in his spare time - but not just any maps. He specializes in turning intricate systems into simple, easy to read cartography.

"It's really about taking a complex network and simplifying it down as much as possible," he told Business Insider. "Normally with road maps there's every twist and wiggle of the road."

But it's not easy. On this particular map, Booth estimates he spend 200 total hours over several months and generated multiple drafts to get it perfect.

"This is the most complex network that I have yet attempted," he said. "Not only are there far more numbered routes than in the Interstate system, but there are also historical extensions and branches of many routes to consider."

The hardest area to map wasn't a massive metropolis like Los Angeles with its freeways. It was Memphis, TN. With eight highways intersecting, it's easy to see why FedEx chose the historic cotton capital on the Mississippi as the location for their headquarters.

US Highways as a subway map cameron booth

Cameron Booth

US HIghways as a subway map

A larger, zoomable version of this massive project is available on his website

Other similar projects by Booth include a map of Amtrak's passenger services nationwide; and a map similar to this one, featuring only the Interstate Highway System. You can even purchase a highway map of your favorite state.

While Booth is well traveled and immigrated to the United States just eight years ago, he sticks to designing maps and graphics, and not the system themselves.

He says "you wouldn't believe how many people ask me directions from the airport to the city." 

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