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State Route 71 (SR 71) is a 15-mile (24 km) state highway in the U.S. state of California. Serving Riverside , San Bernardino , and Los Angeles counties, it runs from SR 91 in Corona to the Kellogg Interchange with I-10 and SR 57 on the border of Pomona and San Dimas .
Florida State Road 71. County Road 71A (Gulf County, Florida) Georgia State Route 71; Idaho State Highway 71; Illinois Route 71; Indiana State Road 71; K-71 (Kansas highway) Kentucky Route 71 (former) Louisiana State Route 71 (former) Maryland Route 71 (1927–1956) (former) Maryland Route 71 (1956–1959) (former) Massachusetts Route 71; M-71 ...
Interstate 80 (I-80) is a part of the Interstate Highway System that runs from San Francisco, California, to Teaneck, New Jersey. I-80 enters Illinois from Iowa in the west, southwest of Rapids City , and runs generally eastward through East Moline , LaSalle , and Joliet , before entering Indiana in Lansing .
Illinois Route 71 is a 66-mile-long (106 km) southwest-to-northeast state highway in north central Illinois. It runs from the end of Interstate 180 in Hennepin to U.S. Route 34 in Oswego . This is a distance of 69.37 miles (111.64 km).
I-80/I-94/US 6 in Lansing: 1932: current Grand Army of the Republic Highway US 12: 85.14: 137.02 US 12 near Richmond: US 12/US 20/US 41 in Chicago: 1928: current US 14: 69.55: 111.93 US 14 near Harvard: US 41 in Chicago: 1933: current Ronald Reagan Highway / Northwest Highway US 20: 233.93: 376.47 US 20 in East Dubuque
For example, the I-80/I-580 concurrency, known as the Eastshore Freeway, is only listed under Route 80 in the highway code while the definition of Route 580 is broken into non-contiguous segments. When a highway is broken into such segments, the total length recorded by Caltrans only reflects those non-contiguous segments and does not include ...
Illinois's state route numbers originated in 1918 as State Bond Issues 1 through 46, used to finance the new roads. The numbers of the bond issues were then used to mark the highway routes along the way. Another series of bond issues were authorized in 1924 (47–185) and again were used to mark the roads they paid for.
The state highway system of the U.S. state of California is a network of highways that are owned and maintained by the California Department of Transportation (Caltrans). Each highway is assigned a Route (officially State Highway Route [1] [2]) number in the Streets and Highways Code (Sections 300–635).