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Established 1950 and removed 1955. Became part of KY 512. Old route of KY 512 is now Benson Creek Road KY 50: Armstrong Mill Road in Lexington: Palumbo Drive east of Lexington: Established 1973 and removed 1980 KY 52: US 62 in Boston: KY 30 near Jackson: KY 53: KY 555 near Willisburg: US 42 in Oldham County: KY 54: KY 2831 in Owensboro: US 62 ...
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.
Kentucky population density by census tract (2010), showing the concentration of settlement around Jefferson, Fayette and Kenton counties. The two-class system went into effect on January 1, 2015, following the 2014 passage of House Bill 331 by the Kentucky General Assembly and the bill's signing into law by Governor Steve Beshear.
US 60 (Versailles Road) I-75: 1975 Surface road serving as partial southern beltway around Lexington. Constructed by the Kentucky Transportation Cabinet, the unnumbered portion is maintained by the city KY 1425: 0.987 1.588 I-75: US 60 (Winchester Road) New Circle Road KY 4: 19.3 31.0 Beltway around Lexington 1950
It is a designated Kentucky Scenic Byway and an American Byway. US 25: 177.3: 285.3 US 25W/US 25E at North Corbin: US 42/US 127 at Covington: 1926: current US 25W: 28: 45 US 25W at the TN state line: US 25/US 25E at North Corbin: 1926: current US 25E: 65.9: 106.1 US 25E at the TN state line: I-75 at North Corbin: 1926: current US 27: 190.78
I-69/Pennyrile Parkway in Henderson, KY: US 60 in Owensboro, KY: proposed — Proposed for designation along Audubon Parkway once upgraded to Interstate standards: I-471: 5.01: 8.06 I-275 in Highland Heights, Kentucky: I-471 at the Ohio state line 1981: current
List of state highways in Kentucky (2000–2999) List of state highways in Kentucky (3000–5999) List of Kentucky supplemental roads and rural secondary highways; List of Kentucky supplemental roads and rural secondary highways (1–199) List of Kentucky supplemental roads and rural secondary highways (200–299)
Despite ranking 37th in size by area, Kentucky has 120 counties, fourth among states (including Virginia's independent cities). [1] The original motivation for having so many counties was to ensure that residents in the days of poor roads and horseback travel could make a round trip from their home to the county seat in a single day, as well as ...