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The Kentucky Transportation Center (or KTC) is a university transportation research center within the University of Kentucky College of Engineering. Founded in 1941 as the Division of Research of the Kentucky Department of Highways, KTC became part of the university in 1981. KTC is a hub of applied multidisciplinary transportation research.
Kentucky is served by six major interstate highways (I-24, I-64, I-65, I-69, I-71, I-75), seven parkways, and six bypasses and spurs.The parkways were originally toll roads, but on November 22, 2006, Governor Ernie Fletcher ended the toll charges on the William H. Natcher Parkway and the Audubon Parkway, the last two parkways in Kentucky to charge tolls for access. [1]
The Kentucky Transportation Cabinet headquarters in Frankfort, Kentucky. KYTC maintains 63,845 lane miles (102,749 lane kilometers), [ 4 ] or over 27,600 centerline miles (44,400 centerline kilometers), [ 5 ] of roadways in the state.
Three people have died after a medical helicopter on its way to pick up a patient crashed in Kentucky.. The air ambulance crew had left its base in Grant County when the Bell 206 aircraft struck a ...
The Transit Authority of River City (TARC) is the major public transportation provider for Louisville, Kentucky and parts of southern Indiana, including the suburbs of Clark County and Floyd County. TARC is publicly funded and absorbed private mass-transit companies in Louisville, the largest of which was the Louisville Transit Company.
The Transkentucky Transportation Railroad, Inc. (reporting mark TTIS) [2] is a 50-mile rail transport line purchased from Louisville and Nashville Railroad in 1979 with the goal of transporting coal produced in Eastern Kentucky to the Ohio River. It is a Class III railroad [3] that operates freight service between Paris and Maysville. [4]
The Transit Authority of Northern Kentucky (TANK) is the public transit system serving the Northern Kentucky suburbs of Cincinnati, Ohio, located in Kenton County, Boone County and Campbell County, United States. In 2023, the system had a ridership of 2,092,600, or about 6,500 per weekday as of the third quarter of 2024.
The Wendell H. Ford Regional Training Center (WHFRTC) is a training ground located near Greenville in Muhlenberg County, Kentucky, and is the primary training center for the Kentucky National Guard. [ 1 ] [ 2 ] Named for Wendell Ford , U.S. Senator and 53rd Governor of Kentucky , the site began in 1969 with 29 acres (12 ha), and as of 2017 ...