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Arizona Highway Department Condition Map of the State Highway System (Map). 1:1,267,200. Arizona State Highway Department – via AARoads. {{Cite ADOT map |year= 1971 |inset=Yuma |accessdate= October 15, 2019}} Photogrammetry and Mapping Division (1971). State Highway Department Road Map of Arizona (Map). No scale given. Arizona State Highway ...
The Arizona Department of Transportation (ADOT) internally recognizes Interstate Highways, U.S. Highways and Arizona Highways as all being separate types of highway designations. State highways within Arizona are referred to as Arizona State Routes or State Routes, with the prefix "SR" being used for abbreviations. [2] [3] ADOT also recognizes ...
The Arizona Department of Transportation (ADOT) is the agency responsible for building and maintaining the Interstate Highways in the Arizona State Highway System. These highways are built to Interstate Highway standards , which are freeways that have a 75-mile-per-hour (121 km/h) speed limit in rural areas and a 65 mph (105 km/h) speed limit ...
Articles about state highways in the U.S. state of Arizona. For a manually maintained list, including yet-to-be-written articles, see List of Arizona State Routes . v
In Coolidge, State Route 87 is known as Arizona Boulevard. The highway leaves Coolidge heading northwest and travels as a two-lane rural road through the Gila River Indian Community , until it reaches a junction with SR 587 on the border between the Gila River Indian Community and Chandler .
State Route 77 (SR 77) is a 253.93-mile (408.66-kilometre) long state highway in Arizona that traverses much of the state's length, stretching from its southern terminus at a junction with I-10 in Tucson to its northern terminus with BIA Route 6 at the Navajo Nation boundary just north of I-40.
The route was defined by the Arizona Department of Transportation in 1968 as State Route 99. [2] [3] A designation of the nearby State Route 377 was deleted in 1983 and added to SR 99. [4] Since then, there have not been any major realignments of the route.
The Yuma–Duncan route became part of the transcontinental Southern National Highway auto trail in 1913. In 1914, Arizona's highway system was further reorganized into a better-funded and organized network of early state highways. The Yuma–Duncan route between Globe and New Mexico was added to the newly designated Roosevelt Dam Highway.