Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
A mountainous mostly unpaved route existed from 1949-1986 following what is today Old Hwy. 2 and forest roads that included a westward extension to Fort Oglethorpe over former county roads and what was previously GA 148. Another portion along Warwoman Road in Rabun County was built for GA 2, but did not become part of the route. SR 3: 351.00: ...
Each Interstate has a hidden state route number; for example, Interstate 75 (I-75) is also State Route 401 (SR 401) and Interstate 16 (I-16) is also State Route 404 (SR 404, the Jim Gillis Historic Savannah Parkway). This highway system uses the Georgia Peach Pass for toll lanes.
South Carolina state line on Augusta, Georgia–North Augusta, South Carolina city line 1961 [citation needed] 1969 [citation needed] US 25 Bus. 1.4 [35] 2.3 US 1 / US 25 / US 78 / US 278 / SR 10 / SR 28 / SR 121 in Augusta: US 25 Bus.
I-285 is Atlanta, Georgia's perimeter route and I-575 connects counties in North Georgia to I-75. [8] The Georgia Department of Transportation maintains only 16% of the roads in the state. The other 84% are the responsibility of the counties and cities; 75% of those roads are county roads. [9] All of Georgia's Interstate highways are as follows ...
According to the 2010 United States census, Georgia was the 8th most populous state with 9,688,681 inhabitants and the 21st largest by land area spanning 57,513.49 square miles (148,959.3 km 2) of land. [1] Georgia is divided into 159 counties and contains 535 municipalities consisting of cities, towns, consolidated city-counties, and ...
Interstate 95 (I-95), the main Interstate Highway on the East Coast of the United States, serves the Atlantic Coast of the US state of Georgia.It crosses into the state from Florida at the St. Marys River near Kingsland and travels to the north past the cities of Brunswick and Savannah to the South Carolina state line at the Savannah River near Port Wentworth.
U.S. Highway 1 (US 1) in the U.S. state of Georgia, which is concurrent for almost its entire length with State Route 4 (SR 4), is a highway traversing south–north through portions of Charlton, Ware, Bacon, Appling, Toombs, Emanuel, Jefferson, and Richmond counties in the southeastern and east-central parts of the state.
The State Routes in the U.S. state of Georgia (typically abbreviated SR) are maintained by the Georgia Department of Transportation (GDOT). Routes from 400 to 499 are mostly unsigned internal designations for Interstate Highways. Some of the Governor's Road Improvement Program (GRIP) [1] corridors are numbered from 500 to 599.