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NC 94 was established in 1930 as a new primary spur routing from NC 91, in Swindell Fork to Fairfield. [2] In 1931, NC 94 was extended north on new primary routing to NC 90 , in Columbia . [ 3 ] In 1935, NC 94's southern terminus was rerouted to US 264 , in Rose Bay ; the reroute was a swap with NC 6 . [ 4 ]
First form; became part of NC 94 NC 6 — — US 264 east of Swanquarter: NC 94 southwest of Fairfield: 1934: 1942 Second form; former portion of NC 94; decommissioned when NC 94 was rerouted over the bridge (the old route is now secondary road 1305); now Turnpike Road (secondary road 1304) NC 6 — — US 52 in New London: NC 49
Typically, North Carolina highway route numbers do not share numbers with any U.S. Highway or Interstate Highway in the state. If a new highway is established that would have the same number as a state highway, the state highway number usually changes. North Carolina grants exceptions to this rule in limited cases.
There are 22 Interstate Highways—9 primary and 13 auxiliary—that exist entirely or partially in the U.S. state of North Carolina.As of January 2020, the state had a total of 1,410 miles (2,270 km) of Interstates and 70 miles (110 km) of Interstate business routes, all maintained by the North Carolina Department of Transportation (NCDOT).
County Route 94 (Westchester County, New York) North Carolina Highway 94; Ohio State Route 94; Oklahoma State Highway 94; Pennsylvania Route 94; Rhode Island Route 94; South Carolina Highway 94 (pre-1937) (former) Tennessee State Route 94; Texas State Highway 94. Farm to Market Road 94; Texas State Highway Spur 94 (former) Utah State Route 94 ...
The Pigeon River damaged or destroyed the eastbound lanes of Interstate 40 in several places after the remnants of Hurricane Helene dropped historic amounts of rain on Western North Carolina.
Blue Star Memorial Highway: official North Carolina honorary name of I-95 throughout the state (approved on June 13, 1980). [5] [6] [7] Congressman G K Butterfield Highway: official North Carolina name of I-95 from exit 173, in Roanoke Rapids, to the Virginia state line. It honors the U.S. Congressman who served from 2004 to 2022; it was ...
Originally established as North Carolina Highway 260 in 1935, it was renumbered in 1940 to match the older Virginia State Route 93. In 1977, NC 93 was rerouted in Piney Creek to its current routing; abandoning Pugh Road and extending NC 113 further north to its current northern terminus. [3] NC 93 existed two times before it current routing: