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Ohio & Erie Canalway Scenic Byway: June 2005: 110 180 Ohio River Scenic Byway: Located along the Ohio River along US 50, US 52, and SR 7. June 1998: 452 727 Old Mill Stream Scenic Byway: 2006: 52 84 Presidential Pathways Scenic Byway June 2009: 52 84 Scenic Olentangy Heritage Corridor: Byway located on SR 315 from I-270 to US 23. 2000: 10.5 16. ...
For designation as a National Scenic Byway a road must have one of six intrinsic qualities. To be designated an All-American Road, a road must have at least two of the six qualities. [5] Scenic quality is the heightened visual experience derived from the view of natural and manmade elements of the visual environment of the scenic byway corridor ...
Byway follows original Central Pacific railway grade west of Promontory Summit, the site of the completion of the First transcontinental railroad at Golden Spike National Historic Site. Also a Utah Scenic Byway. [15] [91] [92] I Wild Rivers Back Country Scenic Byway: New Mexico: 13 21 La Junta Point in Rio Grande del Norte National Monument
The 124-mile Highway 12 Scenic Byway passes through plenty of the glorious canyon land for which southern Utah is famous, including Red Canyon, Bryce Canyon National Park, Petrified Forest State ...
The Ohio & Erie Canalway Scenic Byway is a 110-mile (177 km) scenic byway located within the Ohio & Erie Canalway National Heritage Area in Northeast Ohio. The scenic byway begins in Cleveland and ends in New Philadelphia, with a spur connecting Massillon and Canton. [1] Between Cleveland and Cuyahoga Valley National Park, the byway is split ...
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The byway is recognized as a state scenic byway by both New York and Pennsylvania (the latter designation coming in 2003) and was named a National Scenic Byway in two stages. In New York, the Seaway Trail became one of the first byways in the nation to be declared a National Scenic Byway when it received the distinction in 1996.
Several agencies of the United States federal government are authorized to designate and manage scenic byways. The National Scenic Byway Foundation, a not-for-profit organization, was founded in 2003 to support efforts for development, management and marketing of scenic byways by the Federal Highway Administration and byway organizations.