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Interstate 185 (I-185) is a 49.3-mile-long (79.3 km) auxiliary Interstate Highway in the west-central part of the US state of Georgia.I-185 also carries the unsigned State Route 411 (SR 411) and is named the Chet Atkins Parkway for its entire length.
5.2 [18] 8.4 I-75 south of Tifton: I-75 / U.S. Route 41 / SR 7 north of Tifton — — Serves Tifton: I-75 BL: 6.9 [19] 11.1 I-75 / US 280 / SR 30 / Georgia State Route 90 in Cordele: I-75 north of Cordele — — Serves Cordele: I-95 BL: 15.7 [20] 25.3 I-95 / US 17 / US 82 / SR 25 / SR 520 near Brunswick: I-95 / SR 25 Spur near Brunswick: 1990 ...
Columbus is the second most populous city in Georgia (after Atlanta), and fields the state's fourth-largest metropolitan area. At the 2020 U.S. census , Columbus had a population of 206,922, [ 6 ] with 328,883 in the Columbus metropolitan statistical area . [ 3 ]
Georgia 280 begins in western Atlanta at an intersection with Georgia 139 (Martin Luther King Jr. Drive), where the roadway continues as Hamilton E. Holmes Drive. The route travels north along Hamilton E. Holmes Drive meeting I-20 at an interchange or exit 52, then continues north to an intersection with U.S. 78 / U.S. 278 / Georgia 8 ( Donald ...
It mainly provides a freeway between the Columbus and Atlanta metropolitan areas. I-285 (SR 407) is a heavily traveled beltway around Atlanta, which helps I-75 and I-85 drivers to bypass the city. I-485 was a short freeway in Atlanta (now Freedom Parkway) that was incomplete for many years and then decommissioned due to local opposition.
At the 2020 U.S. census, the Columbus area had a population of 328,883; in 2022, the U.S. Census Bureau estimated the Columbus MSA's population to be 324,110. [3] The Columbus metropolitan area is a component of the Columbus-Auburn-Opelika (GA-AL) combined statistical area, a trading and marketing region.
Columbus will host the following teams on these dates: Montgomery Biscuits on May 20-25, July 4-6 and Sept. 2-7 Pensacola Blue Wahoos on April 15-20, July 8-13 and Aug. 19-24
The Piedmont Atlantic megaregion is a neologism created by the Regional Plan Association for an area of the Southeastern United States that contains parts of the states of Alabama, Georgia, Tennessee, South Carolina, and North Carolina.