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California State Route 271; Florida State Road 271 (former) Georgia State Route 271; Hawaii Route 271 (former) K-271 (Kansas highway) (former) Kentucky Route 271; Minnesota State Highway 271; Montana Secondary Highway 271; New Mexico State Road 271; New York State Route 271; Oklahoma State Highway 271A; Pennsylvania Route 271; South Dakota ...
The I-271/I-480 section was the only instance of a concurrency of two three-digit Interstate Highways in the nation until 2022, when a concurrency between I-587 and I-795, and I-840 and I-785 in North Carolina was established with the designation of I-587, I-785, and I-840. [2]
U.S. Route 271 (US 271, US-271) is a north–south United States highway. Never a long highway, it went from bi-state route (Arkansas and Oklahoma) to a tri-state route (Arkansas, Oklahoma and Texas). Its southern terminus is in Tyler, Texas, at an intersection with State Highway 31 and SH 155.
SR 271 was a state highway through east-central Ohio. When it was first designated in 1932, it ran from Coshocton to North Salem taking over a part of SR 95. [2] [4] In 1935, the route was vastly expanded west to include all of the former SR 309 from Tunnel Hill to Coshocton, unnumbered roads from New Guilford to Tunnel Hill, and part of SR 206 from Martinsburg to New Guilford.
The southern portion of SR 271 begins at an interchange with US 101 in the community of Cummings. SR 271 winds through the forest, paralleling US 101 and intersecting it twice on its northwest journey. The highway eventually comes into the southern area of Leggett, where SR 271 comes to another grade-separated interchange with US 101.
Follows the East Coast of the United States, longest north-south US Highway US 2: 2,112: 3,399 I-5/SR 529 in Everett, WA: I-75 in St. Ignace, MI: 1926: current Western segment US 2: 460: 740 US 11 in Rouses Point, NY: I-95 in Houlton, ME: 1926: current Eastern segment US 3: 273: 439 Route 2A/Route 3 in Cambridge
Typically, even-numbered Interstates run east–west, with lower numbers in the south and higher numbers in the north; odd-numbered Interstates run north–south, with lower numbers in the west and higher numbers in the east. Route numbers divisible by 5 usually represent major coast-to-coast or border-to-border routes (ex.
US 1 / US 25 / US 78 / US 278 / SR 10 / SR 121 at the Georgia state line south of North Augusta: US 21 / SC 322 in Rock Hill: 1964: current Third form; northern part of a multi-state highway that also exists in Florida and Georgia SC 122 — — SC 2 in Cayce: US 1 / US 21 / SC 2 / SC 5 / SC 43 / SC 215 in West Columbia: 1942