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Kentucky Route 1147 (KY 1147) is a rural secondary north–south state highway located entirely in Allen County. It originates at a dead-end intersection with Follis Road on the Kentucky- Tennessee state line, and ends at a junction with U.S. Route 31E / 231 near Petroleum . [ 20 ]
Kentucky Route 700 is a 16.539-mile-long (26.617 km) rural secondary state highway in central McCreary County that runs from a boat ramp along the Big South Fork of the Cumberland River in the northern portion of the Big South Fork National River and Recreation Area to Kentucky Route 90 south of Honeybee via Marshes Siding.
Kentucky Route 932 (KY 932) is a 5.148-mile-long (8.285 km) rural secondary highway in central Letcher County.The highway begins at US 119 east of Oven Fork.KY 932 follows Poor Fork of the Cumberland River east to Upper Cumberland, where the highway meets the northern end of KY 3405 (Roberts Branch Road).
The highway continues through the village of Almo, east of which the highway crosses Clarks River. KY 464 continues along Almo Shiloh Road, which crosses Jonathan Creek before passing through Shiloh, where the highway meets the west end of KY 1551. The highway intersects KY 80 before reaching its eastern terminus at KY 94. [1] [14] [58] [17] [59]
Kentucky Route 3019 is a 1.882-mile-long (3.029 km) rural secondary highway in southern Edmonson County.The highway begins at KY 101 (Chalybeate Road) south of Rhoda.KY 3019 follows Chalybeate Road north across Beaverdam Creek, a tributary of the Green River, into the village of Rhoda.
Kentucky Route 13 is a 5.516-mile-long (8.877 km) rural secondary highway in southern Nicholas County.The highway begins at the Bourbon County line at the South Fork of the Licking River; the route does not extend into Bourbon County. [3]
Kentucky Route 328 is a 21.956-mile-long (35.335 km) rural secondary highway in southern Lincoln County, northern Pulaski County, and western Rockcastle County. The highway extends from KY 70 near Eubank east to KY 618 at Quail. KY 328 heads west from KY 70 then turns north shortly before its bridge across Pilot Creek.
Kentucky supplemental roads and rural secondary highways are the lesser two of the four functional classes of highways constructed and maintained by the Kentucky Transportation Cabinet, the state-level agency that constructs and maintains highways in Kentucky.