Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Nevada Department of Transportation (January 2017). "State Maintained Highways of Nevada: Descriptions and Maps" Nevada Department of Transportation, Historical Maps; University of Nevada, Reno, Nevada in Maps: Nevada Highway Maps - 1917-2005 Archived June 20, 2016, at the Wayback Machine
The following is a list of Interstate highways in the U.S. state of Nevada. All active mainline Interstates are maintained by the Nevada Department of Transportation, except for a portion of Interstate 215. Interstate business loops are only state-maintained where they overlap with an active State Route or U.S. route.
Former state routes in Nevada State State Route X (SR X) System links Nevada State Highway System Interstate US State Pre‑1976 Scenic The following is a list of state routes in Nevada longer than one mile (1.6 km) in length that have been removed from the Nevada state highway system since 1976. Several of these highways were reorganized into the state system of frontage roads. List of ...
The following is a list of past and present U.S. Routes in the U.S. state of Nevada. All active mainline and alternate routes are maintained by the Nevada Department of Transportation. Some active special routes are maintained by local municipalities, and may not be signed on the route itself.
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 interstate highway would primarily follow the US 95 corridor through central and northwestern Nevada, extending to I-80 near Reno and Sparks via Tonopah. In 2018, the Nevada Department of Transportation had initiated public outreach regarding its long-range planning efforts to narrow down options for the future I-11 corridor.
During the 1976 renumbering of Nevada's state highway system, the majority of Nevada's two-digit routes were eliminated. Most of the old two-digit routes were reassigned to one or more of the new three-digit highway numbers (State Routes 28, 88, and 140 were the only routes to keep their pre-1976 numbers).
This change in highway numbers was first seen on the 1978–79 edition of the state highway map. [9] Since its re-designation as SR 488, Lehman Caves Road has not undergone any significant changes. The Nevada Department of Transportation designated State Route 488 as a Nevada Scenic Byway on March 27, 2000, simultaneously with SR 487 and a ...