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[1] [8] The only at-grade intersection in this stretch is a junction with Great Western Drive, near milepost 321. [1] SR 89A north of Cottonwood. As SR 89A moves to the northeast, it begins to ascend the Black Hills mountain range. [1] [8] ADOT has designated this section of SR 89A as the Mingus Mountain Scenic Road by ADOT. [9]
The same principle applies with business routes for all other Interstates in Arizona. [3] Designations listed under Highway Logs and GIS data however, use the Arizona Transportation Information System (ATIS) nomenclature. The ATIS designation for a non-suffixed state route is "S (Number)". The number at the end is always three digits long.
The remainder of US 80 was decommissioned in Arizona on October 6, 1989. [11] The highway remained part of US 89 until August 21, 1992, when the designation was truncated to Flagstaff. [12] SR 79 was designated as a segment of Historic U.S. Route 80 by the Arizona Department of Transportation in September 2018. [13]
U.S. Route 191 (US 191) is a north–south U.S. Highway in eastern Arizona.The highway runs for 516.50 miles (831.23 km), making it Arizona's longest numbered highway. The highway begins at State Route 80 near Douglas and crosses over the Utah state line near Mexican Water in the Navajo Nat
Yarnell, Arizona, along SR 89. This highway was a segment of US 89 between Ash Fork at I-40 and US 93 northwest of Wickenburg until June 13, 1992 when the US 89 designation was removed south of US 89's current southern terminus with Interstate 40 in Flagstaff. [2]
The total length of US 93 in Arizona is 199.38 miles (320.87 kilometres). Between Wickenburg and Interstate 40 (I-40), part of US 93 is designated as the Joshua Forest Scenic Byway . While most of US 93 is a four-lane divided highway , sections of the highway between Wickenburg and I-40 are still narrow two-lane roads, gradually being upgraded ...
While the mile markers indicate a start in Gila Bend, the highway is not actually part of the State Highway System until 11 miles (17.70 km) west of the Maricopa/Pinal County line near the Goodyear neighborhood of Mobile, at Mile Marker 24. The road west of this point is actually a county route.
U.S. Route 89T (US 89T or US 89X) was the designation for Navajo Route 20 (N20), a road running mostly parallel to US 89 in Coconino County, Arizona. Added to the Arizona state highway system in 2013, US 89T served as a temporary detour for a closed section of US 89. The route was 46.17 miles (74.30 km) long. [10]