Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
South Carolina Highway 64 Business (SC 64 Bus.) is a business route that follows the original mainline route through downtown Walterboro, via Bells Highway, Jeffries Boulevard, Paul Street, Wichman Street, Padgett Loop and Hampton Street. [9] It was established between 1983 and 1985 when mainline SC 64 was bypassed north and east of Walterboro.
US 1 / US 25 / US 78 / US 278 / SC 121 / SR 10 at the Georgia–South Carolina state line on the northeastern edge of Augusta Gordon Highway is a 22.8-mile-long (36.7 km) major highway in the east-central part of the U.S. state of Georgia , traveling through the southern part of Columbia County and the northeastern part of Richmond County .
US 25 Bus. at the South Carolina state line on the Augusta–North Augusta line 1929 [23] [24] current Completely concurrent with US 1 except northernmost portion SR 5: 155.32: 249.96 SR 48 at the Alabama state line north-northwest of Ephesus: SR 60 / SR 68 at the Tennessee state line on the McCaysville–Copperhill line 1919 [2] current
SC 64 west (Dunbarton Boulevard) – Savannah River Site: Western end of SC 64 concurrency: 43.760: 70.425: SC 70 east (Allen Street) / Dunbarton Boulevard – Denmark: Western terminus of SC 70: 44.100: 70.972: SC 64 east (Hagood Avenue) – Walterboro: Eastern end of SC 64 concurrency: 45.430: 73.112: SC 3 north (Marlboro Avenue) – Columbia
This is a combined total of 1.5 miles (2.4 km) [34] It connects the Augusta Public Transit bus station, the Augusta Canal National Heritage Area Discovery Center, the Medical District, the Sacred Heart Cultural Center, Meadow Gardon, the Morris Museum of Art, Riverwalk Augusta, the Augusta Convention Center, the Augusta Judicial Center, the ...
SC 64 Bus. in Walterboro: c. 1924: current SC 64: 73.730: 118.657 Dunbarton Boulevard / Technology Drive in Snelling: US 17 in Jacksonboro: c. 1926: current SC 64Y — — SC 64 in Round O: North of Round O: c. 1939: c. 1942: SC 65 — — US 78 near Branchville: SC 61 in Cooks Crossroads: 1929: 1952
There are 11 Interstate Highways—5 primary and 6 auxiliary—that exist entirely or partially in the U.S. state of South Carolina.As of December 31, 2013, the state had a total of 850.80 miles (1,369.23 km) of interstate and 11.80 miles (18.99 km) of interstate business, all maintained by the South Carolina Department of Transportation (SCDOT).
These routes cover the entirety of Richland and parts of Lexington counties, cross over into Newberry as well as Sumter. The regular The COMET routes are accessible by fare or pass, and most routes begin and end at COMET Central, located at Sumter and Laurel Streets. [2] Each COMET bus has a bike rack with room for two bikes.