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Arkansas Highway 264 is a designation for three state highways in Benton County, Arkansas. [2] The eastern route begins at US 71B and runs 7.75 miles (12.47 km) east to terminate at Beaver Lake . [ 2 ]
US 62/AR 94 in Rogers: US 71B/AR 94 in Rogers 1980 [19] 2010 [20] Partially renumbered AR 12: US 62B: 3.0: 4.8 US 62 in Eureka Springs: US 62/AR 23 in Eureka Springs c. 1970: 1990 [21] Former US 62C US 62B: 0.442 [22] 0.711 US 62/US 412 in Yellville: US 62/US 412/AR 14 in Yellville c. 1980: current
The Arkansas Highway System is made up of all the highways designated as Interstates, U.S. Highways and State Highways in the US state of Arkansas.The system is maintained by the Arkansas Department of Transportation (ArDOT), known as the Arkansas State Highway Department (AHD) until 1977 and the Arkansas State Highway and Transportation Department (AHTD) from 1977 to 2017.
U.S. Route 64 Business (Hwy. 64B or US 64B) is an east–west highway in Alma. The route connects US 64 to Highway 162 along a former alignment of US 64 in the city. The route was designated by the Arkansas State Highway Commission on July 28, 1965. [8] Major intersections. The entire route is in Alma, Crawford County.
Arkansas Highway 265 (AR 265) is a designation for three state highways in Northwest Arkansas. The southern segment of 19.70 miles (31.70 km) runs from Highway 170 near Strickler north to Interstate 49 (I-49) in Fayetteville . [ 3 ]
Arkansas Highway 43 (AR 43) is a designation for three state highways in Arkansas. One segment runs from Highway 264 in Siloam Springs north to the Missouri state line. [3] A second segment of 29.5 miles (47.5 km) runs from Highway 21 at Boxley north to Highway 7 in Harrison.
Highway 204 Spur (AR 204S, Ark. 204S, Hwy. 204S, and Lincoln Street) was a 0.75-mile-long (1.21 km) roadway just north of Siloam Springs. Its western terminus was AR 43 and its eastern terminus was AR 59 approximately one mile north of U.S. Route 412. In the mid-1990s Highway 204 was redesignated as an extension of Highway 264.
Highway 263 was created by the Arkansas State Highway Commission between Rushing and Timbo on July 10, 1957. [1] During another period of highway system expansion in 1963, the highway was extended north from Timbo through Onia, and a second segment was created from Brownsville to the Cleburne-Stone county line. [ 14 ]