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U.S. Route 40 Business (US-40 Bus.) is a 2.3-mile-long (3.7 km) business route through WaKeeney, Kansas, that was recommended in 1979 as substitute for the formerly proposed Interstate 70 Business Loop. It begins at exit 127 on Interstate 70/U.S. Route 40 (I-70/US-40) and travels to the north, concurrent with US-283 along
U.S. Route 40 or U.S. Highway 40 (US 40), also known as the Main Street of America (a nickname shared with U.S. Route 66), [3] [4] is a major east–west United States Highway traveling across the United States from the Mountain States to the Mid-Atlantic States. As with most routes whose numbers end in a zero, US 40 once traversed the entire ...
In the U.S. state of Kansas, US-50 is a main east–west highway serving the southwestern, central and northeastern parts of the state. Kansas City is the only metropolitan area US-50 serves in the state, but the highway does serve several other larger towns in Kansas such as (from west to east) Garden City, Dodge City, Hutchinson, Newton and ...
Concurrent with the Kansas Turnpike from the junction with I-335 in South Topeka to the junction with I-70, US-40 and K-4 in East Topeka. I-635: 8.9: 14.3 I-35 / US-69 in Overland Park: Missouri state line in Kansas City 1975: current I-670: 1.64: 2.64 I-70 / US-24 / US-40 / US-69 in Kansas City: Missouri state line in Kansas City 1968
US-40: 423.67: 681.83 Colorado state line west of Weskan: Missouri state line in Kansas City: 1926: current US 40N — — — — 1926: 1936 Replaced by US-24; planned as US 40 in 1925 US 40S — — — — 1926: 1936 Renumbered to US-40; planned as US 340 and US 46 in 1925 US-50: 447.93: 720.87 Colorado state line west of Coolidge
Route 66 at the Missouri State line east of Galena 1985: current Historic U.S. Route 66 K-67: 0.972: 1.564 US-36/K-383 near Norton: Norton Correctional Facility 1932: current K-68: 61.517: 99.002 US-75/K-31 south of Lyndon: Route 2 at the Missouri state line 1932: current K-69 — — — — 1932: 1935 Renumbered to K-65
Although current Federal law does not allow that the same number be used for an Interstate Route and a U.S. Route in the same state, in this case I-50 and U.S. 50 or I-60 and U.S. 60, Congress is free to designate the Interstate Highway with whatever number it wants by law, like it did with I-69 and U.S. 69 in Texas.
Interstate 66 (Kansas–Kentucky), a former proposed highway to connect Kansas with Kentucky U.S. Route 66 , the most common meaning. Since 1985, when US 66 was decommissioned, several states where US 66 passed have re-commissioned part of the former route in that state as a state route 66.