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The Interstate Highways in Virginia are a total of 1,118 miles (1,799 km) of Interstate Highways in the U.S. state of Virginia. Virginia consists of six primary interstate highways, and 10 auxiliary interstates. In addition, 3 more primary and one auxiliary route are planned or under construction.
I-95. Interstate Highways, totaling 1118 miles (1799 km) in Virginia, [1] are freeways designated by the Federal Highway Administration and numbered by the American Association of State Highway and Transportation Officials.
US 52 at the West Virginia state line 1935: current US 58: 507.40: 816.58 US 58 TN 383 at the Tennessee state line: US 60 in Virginia Beach: 1932: current US 60: 302.69: 487.13 US 60 at the West Virginia state line: 5th Street in Virginia Beach: 1926: current US 117 — — — — 1926: 1933 Replaced by US 158: US 121 —
Primary State Routes receive more funding than Secondary State Routes and are numbered as U.S. Routes or State Routes with numbers from 1 to 599. State Route 785 and State Route 895 are also primary routes, numbered as Interstate Highway spurs. Former numbers are reused often; only 29 of the numbers from 1 to 421 are not in use, with only seven ...
State routes with numbers that conflicted with U.S. Routes were renumbered, and the unsigned concurrencies were dropped. The numbers from 2 to 9 were again assigned (1 was not because of U.S. Route 1): [3] State Route 2: State Route 50; State Route 3: State Routes 37 and 827; State Route 4: Many routes, including part of State Route 17
U.S. Route 11 (US 11) is a north–south United States Numbered Highway in western Virginia. At 339 miles (546 km), it is the second longest numbered route (after US 58 ) and longest primarily north–south route in the state.
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At Lexington, the newer Interstate route swings north, concurrent with I-81 to Staunton where it again turns east. The variation between the routes was largely due to terrain for the crossing of the Blue Ridge Mountains. U.S. 60 crosses at White's Gap; I-64 uses Rockfish Gap. East of the Blue Ridge, the two pathways gradually converge, meeting ...