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State highways in Kentucky are maintained by the Kentucky Transportation Cabinet, which classifies routes as either primary or secondary. Some routes, such as Kentucky Route 80, are both primary and secondary, with only a segment of the route listed as part of the primary system. Despite the name, there is no difference in signage between ...
The Kentucky Revised Statute 177.020(1) [1] [2] provides that the Department of Highways, a part of the Kentucky Transportation Cabinet, is responsible for the establishment and classification of a State Primary Road System which includes the state primary routes, interstate highways, parkways and toll roads, state secondary routes, rural secondary routes and supplemental roads.
Kentucky Route 24 was a state highway running from US 62 east of Sardis to KY 2 in Carter. By 1976, KY 24 was decommissioned (because of I-24): the section from US 62 to KY 11 was renumbered KY 324, the section from KY 11 to the Fleming County Line was given to the county (now Hord Pike) the section from there to KY 673 became KY 2509 (given to the county in November 1982), the section from KY ...
Kentucky Route 800 is a 18.919-mile-long (30.447 km) rural secondary and state supplemental highway in Christian County. The highway begins at KY 109 (Dawson Springs Road) north of Era . KY 800 heads east along Crofton–Dawson Road, which curvaceously winds its way east toward Crofton , during which the highway crosses Brushy Fork of the ...
The Rural Secondary System includes highways of local importance, such as farm-to-market roads and urban collectors. Supplemental Roads are the set of highways not in the first three systems, including frontage roads, bypassed portions of other state highways, and rural roads that only serve their immediate area.
Kentucky Route 462 is a 11.783-mile-long (18.963 km) rural secondary highway mostly in far eastern LaRue County but with short segments on either side in Taylor and Nelson counties. The highway begins at KY 210 (Campbellsville Road) at Badger in northwestern Taylor County. KY 462 follows Attilla Road along the top of a ridge that forms the ...
Kentucky Route 2001, also known as Spout Springs Road, is a 3.816-mile long (6.141 km) rural secondary highway in Estill and Powell Counties. It begins at an intersection with KY 82 in eastern Estill County, in which it travels for 0.693 miles, then crosses into Powell County and ends at an intersection with KY 1057 approximately 2.5 miles south of Clay City.
Kentucky Route 6140 (KY 6140) is a 0.795-mile-long (1.279 km) supplemental road in Warren County that begins at KY 626 north along a frontage road on the west side of I-165 and the east side KY 6139. As of then the highway ends at the ending of state maintenance. The KYTC assigned KY 6140 as a non-public highway in 2016.