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After multiple weather-related delays, this section opened to traffic on September 15, 1973, [3] and was dedicated in a ceremony by Governor Winfield Dunn and Knoxville Mayor Kyle Testerman four days later. [41] [42] The University of Tennessee provided TDOT with the necessary right of way to widen Neyland Drive to four lanes in 1972. [43]
Location of Blount County in Tennessee. This is a list of the National Register of Historic Places listings in Blount County, Tennessee.. This is intended to be a complete list of the properties and districts on the National Register of Historic Places in Blount County, Tennessee, United States.
The route's alignment was approved on January 25, 1967, by the Knoxville-Knox County Highway Coordinating Committee, which allowed for it to be budgeted by the state. [12] Other alignments would have had the route terminate at I-40/75 near the interchanges with SR 131 and Cedar Bluff Road, respectively. [ 12 ]
Halls Crossroads is located in the Ridge-and-Valley Appalachians, which are characterized by long, narrow ridges that run in a northeast–southwest direction.The community is nestled between several such ridges, most notably Black Oak Ridge and Beaver Ridge, which divide Halls Crossroads from Fountain City to the south.
S.R. 60 in Georgetown at the Bradley-Hamilton-Meigs County line. The route passes through Georgetown, where it passes a few residences and businesses.A short distance past Georgetown, SR 60 passes crosses onto the Hamilton-Meigs County line, passing through more rural areas as an unnamed road and comes to a junction with SR 58.
North Knoxville is the section of Knoxville, Tennessee, USA, that lies north of the city's downtown area.It is concentrated around Broadway (), Clinton Highway (), Tazewell Pike (TN-331), Washington Pike, and adjacent roads, and includes the neighborhoods of Fountain City, Inskip-Norwood, Oakwood-Lincoln Park, Old North Knoxville, Fourth and Gill, North Hills, and Whittle Springs. [1]
SR 339 west (Jones Cove Road) – Sevierville: Eastern terminus of SR 339: US 321 north / SR 32 north (Cosby Highway) – Newport: End of US 321 and SR 32 overlap; SR 73 becomes signed as a secondary highway; SR 73 changes cardinal directions from east-west to north-south I-40 – Knoxville, Asheville: I-40 exit 440: Newport: 101.76: 163.77
Island Home Park is a neighborhood in Knoxville, Tennessee, United States, located in the southeastern part of the city along the Tennessee River.Developed as a streetcar suburb in the early 1900s, the neighborhood retains most of its original houses and streetscapes, and is home to the city's largest concentration of Bungalow-style houses. [1]