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State highways in Kentucky are maintained by the Kentucky Transportation Cabinet, which classifies routes as either primary or secondary. Some routes, such as Kentucky Route 80, are both primary and secondary, with only a segment of the route listed as part of the primary system. Despite the name, there is no difference in signage between ...
State law requires the removal of tolls once the cost of construction is recouped; all parkways are toll-free. The system is built at or near-to interstate standards, and it provides access to portions of Kentucky not serviced by interstates. Several parkways have been or are planned to be re-designated as mainline or spur interstate highways.
The Kentucky Revised Statute 177.020(1) provides that the Department of Highways, a part of the Kentucky Transportation Cabinet, is responsible for the establishment and classification of a State Primary Road System which includes the state primary routes, interstate highways, parkways and toll roads, state secondary routes, rural secondary routes and supplemental roads.
KY 200. Tennessee state line as a continuation of Caney Creek Road in Pickett County, TN. KY 167 at Number One. KY 201. US 23 north of Paintsville. KY 1 in Webbville. KY 202. US 421 north of New Castle. KY 389 at the confluence of Drennon Creek at the Kentucky River.
8.06. I-275 in Highland Heights, Kentucky. I-471 at the Ohio state line. 01981-01-01. 1981. current. Interstate 471 begins at Interstate 275 near Highland Heights and passes Newport before crossing the Ohio River to terminate at its parent route, Interstate 71, in Cincinnati, Ohio . I-569. 38.446.
900–999. 1000–1499. 1500–1999. 2000–2499. 2500–2999. 3000–3499. 3500–6999. Kentucky supplemental roads and rural secondary highways are the lesser two of the four functional classes of highways constructed and maintained by the Kentucky Transportation Cabinet, the state-level agency that constructs and maintains highways in Kentucky.
Kentucky Route 2. Kentucky Route 2 is an east–west state highway extending 36.887 miles (59.361 km) across northeast Kentucky. The western terminus of the route is at U.S. Route 60 (US 60) in Olive Hill, Carter County. The eastern terminus is at Kentucky Route 2541 in Greenup, Greenup County a short distance east of US 23 .
Kentucky Route 428 is a 5.402-mile-long (8.694 km) rural secondary highway in western Meade County. The highway begins at US 60 (Owensboro Highway) south of Guston. KY 428 heads northwest along Guston Road, which meets the southern end of KY 710 (Old State Road) and intersects a CSX rail line in the hamlet of Guston.