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In Paincourtville, LA 70 intersects LA 1 via Louisiana Highway 70 Spur, a 1.6-mile-long (2.6 km) connector road. LA 70 then continues northeastward through rural Ascension Parish as a two-lane, undivided road. LA 70 widens to a four lane, undivided road at an intersection with LA 3089. LA 70 then crosses the Mississippi River via the Sunshine ...
Entire route co-signed with US 167; only U.S. highway in Louisiana with same number as a current state route US 65: 100.77: 162.17 US 425/LA 15 in Clayton: Arkansas state line north of Lake Providence: 1926 [1] current US 71: 231.099: 371.918 US 190 west of Krotz Springs: Arkansas state line at Ida: 1926 [1] current US 79: 88.246
Louisiana Highway 21 (LA 21) is a state highway in Louisiana that serves St. Tammany and Washington Parishes. It spans 51.76 miles (83.30 km) and is signed north and south. It spans 51.76 miles (83.30 km) and is signed north and south.
The Interstate Highway System in Louisiana consists of 933.84 miles (1,502.87 km) [4] of freeways constructed and maintained by the Louisiana Department of Transportation and Development (La DOTD). The system was authorized on June 29, 1956 when President Dwight D. Eisenhower signed into law the Federal Aid Highway Act of 1956 . [ 1 ]
2008-style state highway marker on eastbound LA 1064 in Natalbany. After months of posting the black-and-white shields without a line border, La DOTD began posting some state shields with a white border, as in this photo taken on January 14, 2010. This marker is located on LA 21 between Covington and I-12.
Louisiana Highway 50 (LA 50) runs 0.85 miles (1.37 km) in a north–south direction along Almedia Road in St. Rose, St. Charles Parish. [50]The route heads northward from an intersection with LA 48 (River Road) at the Mississippi River, crossing both the Canadian National Railway (CN) and Kansas City Southern Railway (KCS) tracks at grade, to a point on US 61 (Airline Highway) just east of an ...
The western segment of Flora-Natchez Road, including its intersection with LA 478, was relocated by La DOTD in the 1980s to accommodate the I-49 interchange. The resulting 0.37-mile (0.60 km) road segment is state-maintained and internally designated as a frontage road for I-49, the remainder being the parish-maintained PR 620.
The Creole Nature Trail is an All-American Road that is designated primarily along stretches of LA 27 and LA 82 in Cameron and Calcasieu parishes, located in the southwestern corner of the state. Like most of Louisiana's Scenic Byways, it does not follow a linear route but instead consists of a network of existing state-maintained highways.