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Pullman–Moscow Regional Airport (IATA: PUW, ICAO: KPUW, FAA LID: PUW) is a public airport in the northwest United States, located in Pullman, Washington, four miles (6 km) west of Moscow, Idaho. The airport is near State Route 270 , and has a single 7,101-foot (2,164 m) runway , headed northeast–southwest (5/23), which entered service in ...
It connects the city of Pullman to U.S. Route 195 (US 195) at its west end and Idaho State Highway 8 near Moscow, Idaho, at its east end. The 10-mile-long (16 km) highway is one of the main roads in Pullman and connects the campuses of Washington State University and the University of Idaho.
View from west of Pullman–Moscow Regional Airport. Pullman is located near the junction of U.S. Route 195 (US 195) and State Route 27, which both travel north towards the Spokane area and serve towns in the Palouse. [34] US 195 also continues south towards Lewiston, Idaho. [35]
U.S. Route 195 (US 195) is a north–south United States Highway, of which all but 0.65 miles of its 94.02 miles (1.05 of 151.95 km) are within the state of Washington.
Tri-Cities Airport: P-S 395,348 Pullman / Moscow, Idaho: PUW: PUW KPUW Pullman–Moscow Regional Airport: P-N 66,669 Seattle: BFI: BFI KBFI King County International Airport (Boeing Field) P-N 18,586 Seattle / Tacoma SEA: SEA KSEA Seattle–Tacoma International Airport: P-L 24,024,908 Spokane: GEG: GEG KGEG Spokane International Airport (Geiger ...
The highway extends eastward from the Port of Almota on the Snake River to an intersection with U.S. Route 195 (US 195) west of Pullman. SR 194 was established in 1991, although the roadway has appeared on maps as early as 1933 and the Almota area being home to a ferry as early as 1893.
State Route 27 (SR 27) is a 90-mile-long (145 km) state highway serving Whitman and Spokane counties, located in the eastern region of the U.S. state of Washington.The highway travels generally north from U.S. Route 195 (US 195) through Pullman, Palouse, Tekoa, and Spokane Valley to SR 290 north of an interchange with Interstate 90 (I-90).
The Washington primary and secondary state highway system was adopted by the Washington State Legislature on March 17, 1937, and the three highways that comprise the present route of US 2 were included in the system as Primary State Highway 15 (PSH 15) from Everett to Peshastin, PSH 2 from Peshastin to Spokane, and PSH 6 from Spokane to the ...