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U.S. Highway 51 (US 51) in the U.S. state of Wisconsin runs north–south through the central part of the state. It enters from Illinois at Beloit, and runs north to its northern terminus in Hurley at a roundabout junction with US 2. Some of the route of US 51 runs concurrently with Interstate 39 (I-39).
The Wisconsin DOT is made up of three executive offices and five divisions organized according to transportation function. WisDOT's main office is located at Hill Farms State Transportation Building in Madison, and it maintains regional offices throughout the state. Wisconsin Transportation Systems
I-39/US 51 joins I-90, making US 51 one of the only toll roads in Illinois that is a U.S. Highway. US 51 exits I-39/I-90 just a mile south of the Wisconsin state line. US 51 follows Illinois Route 75 (IL 75) west to the intersection of IL 251, then turns north through South Beloit to enter Wisconsin.
Crews are scheduled to start work as soon as April on seven significant Appleton-area road projects and WisDOT wants to avoid a repeat of 2023, when distracted drivers contributed to 17 crashes in ...
State Trunk Highway 51 (often called Highway 51, STH-51 or WIS 51) was a number assigned to two different state highways in the U.S. state of Wisconsin: Highway 51 from 1917 to 1923, along the current route of U.S. Highway 63 from Turtle Lake to Spooner. Highway 51 from 1923 to 1936, currently routed as Highway 72 from Ellsworth to Downsville.
The Wisconsin Department of Transportation Traffic Management Center initially listed the closure duration as "over two hours," but Capitol Drive was still closed to traffic after five hours. At 2 ...
The state of Wisconsin maintains 158 state trunk highways, ranging from two-lane rural roads to limited-access freeways. These highways are paid for by the state's Transportation Fund, which is considered unique among state highway funds because it is kept entirely separate from the general fund, therefore, revenues received from transportation services are required to be used on transportation.
James M. Iwanicki, Town of Hilton Head Island’s Transportation Program Manager stands in the Traffic Management Center on May 20, 2024, where up to 42 intersection cameras can be live-streamed.