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Under the leadership of the Oklahoma secretary of transportation and ODOT executive director, the department maintains public infrastructure that includes highways and state-owned railroads and administers programs for county roads, city streets, public transit, passenger rail, waterways and active transportation.
SH-41, which was an east-west route across west-central Oklahoma that began at the intersection of S.W. 29th and May Avenue in Oklahoma City and veered southwest to Mustang, Union City and Minco before continuing west through Binger, Eakly, Cordell and Sayre and then crossing the Texas border near Sweetwater, was redesignated as SH-152 over its ...
The Chickasaw Turnpike, also designated State Highway 301 (SH-301), is a controlled-access toll road in the rural south central region of the U.S. state of Oklahoma.A two-lane freeway, it stretches for 13.3 miles (21.4 km) [1] from north of Sulphur to just south of Ada.
Another map published by ODOT of Stroud implies that the route extends north of the ramps to and from I-44 to at least the bridge over the turnpike. [7] The US-377 highway log shows US-377 ending at I-44. [4] The inset strip map of the Turner Turnpike on the ODOT state map omits US-377 entirely. [5]
These changes to the U.S. route system precipitated the truncation of SH-8 in 1936. On 1936-03-13, the section of the route between Anadarko and the state line was dropped. However, a new road between Anadarko and Cyril had been built; this became part of SH-8 and set the highway's southern terminus at its present location. [4]
U.S. Highway 77 (US-77) in Oklahoma is a 267.21-mile-long (430.03 km) U.S. Highway in the U.S. state of Oklahoma.It travels from south to north, paralleling Interstate 35 (I-35), connecting Texas to Kansas through the central part of the state.
Spanning across the central part of the state, SH-9 begins at the Texas state line west of Vinson, Oklahoma, and ends at the Arkansas state line near Fort Smith, Arkansas. State Highway 9 is a major highway around the Norman area. At 348.1 miles (560.2 km), [1] [2] [3] SH-9 is Oklahoma's second-longest state highway (second to State Highway 3).
It is a one-mile (1.6 km) stretch of two-lane road signed as State Highway 344. The extension currently runs from West 51st Street to West 41st Street South at the 5600 block in West Tulsa. The Extension connects the community of Berryhill and the newer developments along West 41st Street South to Interstate 44.