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Alabama state line: Augusta: proposed — Proposal for the Fourteenth Amendment Highway I-16: 166.81: 268.45 I-75 in Macon: Montgomery Street in Savannah: 1966 [3] current SR 404 I-20: 201.21: 323.82 I-20 at Alabama state line: I-20 at South Carolina state line 1963 [4] current SR 402 I-24: 4.10: 6.60 I-24 at Tennessee state line: I-24 at ...
In 2006, the Virginia General Assembly directed the Secretary of Transportation to initiate a study to determine the interest of affected states in the construction of a new Interstate highway (I-99). [23] [24] [25] I-99 would allow long-distance travelers to bypass the I-95 bottleneck in the Baltimore–Washington metropolitan area.
Serves two states: Illinois, Wisconsin I-42: 190: 310 I-35 in Noble County, Oklahoma: I-49 in Springdale, Arkansas: proposed — Future Interstate; will serve two states: Oklahoma, Arkansas I-42: 31.5: 50.7 I-40/US 70 in Garner, North Carolina: US 70 in Goldsboro, North Carolina: 2024: current Unfinished in North Carolina; North Carolina only I ...
Interstate 289; Interstate 490 (Illinois) Interstate 491; Interstate 92 (Michigan) Interstate 92 (New England) Interstate 494 (Illinois 1950s–1960s) Interstate 494 (Illinois 1960s–1970s) Interstate 694 (Illinois) Interstate 195 (Delaware) Interstate 195 (District of Columbia) Interstate 195 (North Carolina) Interstate 395 (Delaware ...
The Interstate Highway System of the United States, in addition to being a network of freeways, also includes a number of business routes assigned by the American Association of State Highway and Transportation Officials (AASHTO). These routes connect a central or commercial district of a city or town with an Interstate bypass.
U.S. Route 441 (US 441) in the U.S. state of Georgia is a 354.2-mile-long (570.0 km) north–south United States Highway through the east-central portion of the state. It travels from the Florida state line near the Fargo city area to the North Carolina state line, in the northern part of Dillard.
The State Highway Department was created on August 16, 1916 by an act of the Georgia General Assembly. In 1918 came the creation of the Georgia State Highway Commission, which made surveys and oversaw plans for road projects. [3] Finally, in 1972, came the creation of the Georgia Department of Transportation by Governor Jimmy Carter. [4]
0–9. Interstate 3; Interstate 16; Interstate 20 in Georgia; Interstate 420 (Georgia) Interstate 520; Interstate 24; Interstate 59; Interstate 75 in Georgia