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Interstate 15
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===California=== {{Main|Interstate 15 in California}} North of its junction with [[California State Route 91|SR 91]] in [[Corona, California|Corona]], the route roughly follows the former routes of State Route 31. North of [[Devore, California|Devore]], the highway follows the approximate alignment of historic [[U.S. Route 66|US Route 66]] along with [[U.S. Route 91|US 91]] and [[U.S. Route 395|US 395]]. US 395 breaks away at Hesperia and the route continues on a direct path to [[Barstow, California|Barstow]] {{convert|35|mi|km|0}} to the north. Meanwhile, the old alignments of US 91 and US 66 follow the [[Mojave River]] from [[Victorville, California|Victorville]] to Barstow along the [[National Old Trails Road|National Trails Highway]]. At that point, I-15 follows the old route of US 91 exclusively as US 66 turned east toward [[Needles, California|Needles]]. For many parts of the highway, high-voltage [[electric power transmission|powerline]]s, such as [[Path 46]] and [[Path 27]], almost all originating from the [[Hoover Dam]], follow the freeway. Many of these link distant power stations to the [[Los Angeles]] metropolitan area. The southern starting point of I-15 was in 1957 planned to be in [[San Bernardino, California|San Bernardino]], at the interchange with the San Bernardino Freeway (then US 70/US 99, now [[Interstate 10|I-10]]). This was logical as I-15 was following the old alignment of the historic Route 66 which passed through San Bernardino. The segment was completed accordingly. In 1964, legislation was later passed to extend the Interstate to [[San Diego]]. Instead of extending the existing freeway from the I-10 interchange south, however, the [[California Department of Transportation]] drew a new segment in Devore that "branched" off of the original alignment and bypassed San Bernardino altogether. This segment's alignment is generally northeast to southwest for about {{convert|13|mi|km|0}}. Then, in [[Rancho Cucamonga, California|Rancho Cucamonga]], its directional alignment shifts to north–south where it eventually meets with I-10 (about {{convert|15|mi|km}} west of the original interchange in San Bernardino). The segment that had been built from Devore to San Bernardino was retained as an Interstate, but was renumbered as [[Interstate 215 (California)|I-215]]. Note that during the construction of I-15's present alignment, and for some time afterward, I-215 was numbered as I-15E, and its actual mileage would begin at I-10. I-15 runs for a total of {{convert|287|mi|km|0}} in California.
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