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Virginia state line: Jolo — — WV 705: 3.5: 5.6 US 19 in Morgantown: US 119 in Morgantown — — WV 707 — — WV 279 in McAlpin: WV 131 in McAlpin proposed — Proposed upgrade of CR 707 (FBI Center Road) WV 807: 0.35: 0.56 Ohio state line: St. Marys — — WV 817: 26.12: 42.04 St. Albans: Fraziers Bottom: 2008: current WV 857 — — US ...
US 33 near Harrisonburg, Va. 1937: current US 35: 22.6: 36.4 I-64 at Teays Valley: US 35 near Beech Hill: 1934: current US 40: 16: 26 US 40 at Wheeling: US 40 near West Alexander, Pa. 1926: current US 48: 143: 230 West Virginia Route 93 near Davis: US 48 near Lebanon Church, Va. 2002: current Under construction as part of Corridor H
The West Virginia State Highway System is an integrated system of numbered roads in the U.S. state of West Virginia. These highways were coordinated by the West Virginia Department of Transportation, Division of Highways.
The Rhode Island Department of Transportation (RIDOT) is a Rhode Island state government agency charged with design, construction, maintenance and inspection of a wide range of transportation infrastructure. These include 3,300 lane miles of state roads and highways, 1,162 bridges, 777 traffic signals, and six rail stations. Additionally, RIDOT ...
I-64 at the Kentucky state line near Ashland, Ky. I-64 at the Virginia state line near White Sulphur Springs: 1956: current I-68: 31.5: 50.7 I-79 in Morgantown: I-68 at the Maryland state line near Friendsville, Md. 1991: current I-70: 14.45: 23.26 I-70 at the Ohio state line in Wheeling: I-70 at the Pennsylvania state line near Wheeling: 1963
The U.S. state of Rhode Island has 70 state highways, coordinated and signed by the Rhode Island Department of Transportation (RIDOT). Most of these are partly or fully state highways, roads owned and maintained by RIDOT.
Category: Lists of roads in West Virginia. 1 language. ... List of state routes in West Virginia; U. List of U.S. Highways in West Virginia This page was ...
While West Virginia was once crisscrossed with commercial and passenger railroad networks, the decline of the coal and timber industries, coupled with the rise of the automobile, led to a sharp drop in track mileage in the state. Many of the former railroad grades are used as trails for hiking and biking throughout the state's numerous woodlands.