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Nevada DOT has been attempting to remove some urban routes from the state highway system since the 1990s, preferring to transfer control of these roadways to local municipalities. This is especially apparent in Carson City , where all of the city's state routes have been gradually removed since 2011.
The Nevada Department of Transportation (Nevada DOT or NDOT) is a government agency in the U.S. state of Nevada.NDOT is responsible for maintaining and improving Nevada's highway system, which includes U.S. highways and Interstate highways within the state's boundaries.
The Nevada Department of Transportation adopted the name in official highway logs, and placed custom Highway 50 markers along the route. [ 33 ] The Nevada Commission on Tourism sponsors a promotion where visitors can stop at several designated locations along the route and have the passport section of a state issued "survival guide" marked with ...
State Route 439 (SR 439) is a four-lane state highway in Lyon, Storey and Washoe Counties in Nevada.Better known as USA Parkway, the route connects U.S. Route 50 (US 50) in Silver Springs to Interstate 80 (I-80) in Clark via the Tahoe Reno Industrial Center (TRIC).
Approximately 20 miles (32 km) of SR 431 was designated as the Mount Rose Nevada Scenic Byway by the Nevada Department of Transportation on June 27, 1996. [4] Rapid growth in the Reno area has put strain on the corridor served by the highway. This has prompted environmentalists to push for restrictions on future development along the corridor. [5]
State Route 338 (SR 338) is a state highway in Lyon County, Nevada, United States. It connects the towns of Smith and Wellington to the California state line north of Bridgeport, California. Much of the route has served as a road through this section of Nevada since at least 1919, and was known as State Route 22 from the 1920s until the late 1970s.
In 1976, Nevada began a renumbering of its state highways. In the route reassignment process, the portion of SR 10 concurrent with US 6 no longer carried a state highway number; the remainder of the highway north of Basalt became State Route 360. This action took place on July 1, 1976, and was first seen on state maps with the 1978 edition. [8] [9]
This is one of the oldest highways in Nevada. The route was first part of the lesser used Sonora Pass branch of the California Trail. [2] The route appeared as a highway on maps since at least as far back as 1919. [3] The highway was first numbered as a portion of State Route 3, a designation in use by 1929.