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The north route was redesignated on August 21, 1923, as State Highway 1A, and in 1932 was designated US 80N (later U.S. Highway 80 Alternate), [23] [24] [25] On March 16, 1927, SH 1 was rerouted on the direct route between Sulphur Springs and Greenville, and the old route became part of SH 39 and SH 11. [26]
1.9: 3.1: To SH 3 / Sarah Deel Drive / NASA Parkway: Westbound exit and entrance: 2.4: 3.9: FM 270 (Egret Bay Boulevard) / El Camino Real: Westbound exit and entrance; east end of freeway: Houston–Nassau Bay line: 3.1: 5.0: Point Lookout Drive: Access to Space Center Houston: 3.2: 5.1: Saturn Lane: Access to Johnson Space Center: 4.5: 7.2 ...
Loop 82 crosses Texas State Highway 80 before the route turns to the east, with both directions using University Drive. The route passes San Marcos City Park and crosses the San Marcos River, then passes through the eastern part of the Texas State University campus as Aquarena Springs Drive. Loop 82 reaches its northern terminus at I-35 exit 206.
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U.S. Route 1 or U.S. Highway 1 (US 1) is a major north–south United States Numbered Highway that serves the East Coast of the United States. It runs 2,370 miles (3,810 km) from Key West , Florida , north to Fort Kent, Maine , at the Canadian border , making it the longest north–south road in the United States. [ 2 ]
The EDSA Carousel, also known as Route 1 and formerly and still referred to as Route E, is a bus rapid transit (BRT) system, part of several bus routes in Metro Manila. [2] It is situated along EDSA and other roads, running on a dedicated right-of-way called the EDSA Busway, separated from normal road traffic in most of its stretch by concrete barriers and steel bollards on the innermost lane.
FM 1 was designated on April 23, 1941, and was the first Farm to Market Road to be so designated in Texas. Connecting a sawmill owned by Temple Lumber Company to US 96 and obviating the need to use the Pendelton Ferry, [3] it had been designated shortly after being upgraded from a dirt road to a paved road at the request of Temple and two gas companies. [4]
It was later named the seat of Colorado County, and had developed as a center of business and trade for surrounding areas. Cattle ranching was big business by the late 19th century. Some merchants and ranchers did very well, and built fine houses in the city, such as the house built by Robert E. Stafford.