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Looking northeast along SH 10 east of Walsenburg. State Highway 10 (SH 10) is a 71.968-mile-long (115.821 km) state highway in the US state of Colorado. SH 10's western terminus is at Interstate 25 (I-25) and U.S. Route 160 (US 160) in Walsenburg, and the eastern terminus is at US 50 in La Junta.
The longest of these highways is U.S. Highway 160 (US 160), which spans 497.223 miles (800.203 km) [1] across southern Colorado. The standards and numbering for the system are handled by the American Association of State Highway and Transportation Officials (AASHTO) while the routes in the state are maintained by the Colorado Department of ...
Nicknamed the Valley Highway through Denver, the Monument Valley Highway in Colorado Springs, and the John F. Kennedy Memorial Highway in Pueblo. It is also part of the unofficial Pan-American Highway [6] I-70: 449.589 [12] 723.543 I-70 at the Utah state line: I-70 at the Kansas state line 1956 [1] current Longest interstate in Colorado.
Download as PDF; Printable version; ... State highways in Colorado (1 C, 140 P) Streets in Colorado (10 P) T. ... at 10:38 (UTC).
The numbered highways within the state begin at 1 and increase, with exception of numbers already designated as United States Numbered Highways or Interstate Highways. In 1953, many highways were decommissioned or lost mileage. Before the 1968 Colorado state highway renumbering, highways were cosigned with U.S. Highways and Interstate Highways ...
1955 map showing planned Interstate Highways around Denver. The Colorado Department of Highways originally planned to use a single number, I-25E, for the entirety of Denver's eastern loop. [21] The designation was changed to I-225 following correspondence with the American Association of State Highway Officials and split, with the northern leg ...
The entire route was paved by 1946. In 1954, SH 111 was changed, leaving SH 12's terminus without another state highway. [3] In 1970, SH 12 was extended to US 160, and the segment was paved a year later. The route was designated a Colorado Scenic and Historic Byway in 1989. [4]
These byways follow existing roads or highways and are signed with a Colorado blue columbine (the Colorado state flower) logo denoting the route. The Colorado Scenic and Historic Byways Program was established in March 1989, and is one of the oldest state scenic byway programs.