Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The original path of the road near the Houlton Airport did not turn around what is now the north–south runway, instead going straight on what is now Old Woodstock Road, over the eventual path of the runway, and crossing Airport Drive just south of the exit, meeting at the old U.S. Customs station, 200 yards (180 m) due south of the current ...
Maine has one primary Interstate highway, I-95, within its borders, as well as four related routes: I-195, I-295, I-395, and the unsigned I-495. All Interstate highways in Maine are part of the National Highway System and, as such, receive some degree of federal funding.
US 2 is an east–west highway that runs through North Dakota's northern tier of larger cities: Williston, Minot, Devils Lake, and Grand Forks. US 2 intersects US 85 at Williston, US 52 and US 83 at Minot, US 281 at Churchs Ferry (west of Devils Lake), and the I-29/US 81 concurrency at Grand Forks. US 2 is four lanes from North Dakota's eastern ...
US 2 in Orono: US 2 / SR 43 in Old Town: 1954: current Southern segment, formerly US 2 US 2A: 43.5: 70.0 US 2 in Macwahoc Plantation: US 1 / US 2 in Houlton: 1936: current Northern segment, formerly SR 166 US 201A: 26.18: 42.13 US 2 / US 201 / SR 104 in Skowhegan: US 201 / SR 8 in Solon: 1954: current
Longest state highway in Maine, state highway designation for former New England Route 11, extended to modern length in 1933-1934 SR 15: 180.12: 289.88 Main / West Main / School Streets in Stonington: US 201 / SR 6 in Jackman: 1933: current SR 16: 189.78: 305.42 NH 16 in Wentworth Location, NH: US 2 in Orono: c. 1933: current SR 17: 130.70
Former designation of the Maine Turnpike north of the Falmouth Spur, redesignated I-95 in 2004 I-495: 4.41: 7.10 I-95 (Maine Turnpike) US 1: 2004: current Unsigned, formerly I-95 prior to 2004 renumbering; known as the Falmouth Spur
Much of the Theodore Roosevelt International Highway's alignment was used to form U.S. Route 2 when the United States Numbered Highway System was formed in 1926. There are, however, several key differences between the Roosevelt Highway and US-2; the Roosevelt Highway was built to run from Portland, Maine to Portland, Oregon, while US-2 passes through neither of those cities.
State Route 212 (SR 212) is part of Maine's highway system, running from SR 11 in Moro Plantation to U.S. Route 2 (US 2) in Smyrna (within the community of Smyrna Mills), where a local road continues to serve the town of Oakfield. The route also provides access to the town of Merrill. [2] SR 212 is 10.26 miles (16.51 km) long.