When.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Michigan State Trunkline Highway System - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Michigan_State_Trunkline...

    The Michigan State Highway Department (MSHD) was created in 1905, and the department paid counties and townships to improve roads to state standards. On May 13, 1913, the State Reward Trunk Line Highways Act was passed, creating the State Trunkline Highway System. The MSHD assigned internal highway numbers to roads in the system, and in 1919 ...

  3. M-11 (Michigan highway) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/M-11_(Michigan_highway)

    M-11 is a state trunkline highway in the US state of Michigan in the Grand Rapids metropolitan area. The highway runs through the western and southern sides of the metro area, starting over the border in Ottawa County at an interchange with Interstate 96 (I-96). It runs through both rural woodlands and busy commercial areas before it terminates ...

  4. Michigan Department of Transportation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Michigan_Department_of...

    www.michigan.gov /mdot. The Michigan Department of Transportation (MDOT) is a constitutional government principal department of the US state of Michigan. The primary purpose of MDOT is to maintain the Michigan State Trunkline Highway System which includes all Interstate, US and state highways in Michigan with the exception of the Mackinac Bridge.

  5. M-1 (Michigan highway) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/M-1_(Michigan_highway)

    Like other state highways in Michigan, the section of Woodward Avenue designated M-1 is maintained by MDOT. In 2021, the department's traffic surveys showed that on average, 68,359 vehicles used the highway daily south of 14 Mile Road in Royal Oak and 15,909 vehicles did so each day in north of Chicago Boulevard in Detroit, the highest and lowest counts along the highway, respectively. [5]

  6. M-54 (Michigan highway) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/M-54_(Michigan_highway)

    In the early 20th century, the highway was a part of the Dixie Highway through the area. [18] When the state signed its highway system in 1919, [19] Saginaw Road was part of M-10; [12] later it was used as a section of US 10 in 1926. [20] In August 1926, the Flint City Council renamed the former Western Road after Josiah Dallas Dort, a partner ...

  7. M-6 (Michigan highway) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/M-6_(Michigan_highway)

    M-6, or the Paul B. Henry Freeway, is a 19.7-mile-long (31.7 km) east–west freeway and state trunkline highway in the United States that serves portions of southern Kent and eastern Ottawa counties south of Grand Rapids, Michigan. Although the freeway is named for Paul B. Henry, local residents and the press continue to use the original name ...

  8. M-29 (Michigan highway) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/M-29_(Michigan_highway)

    M-29 (Michigan highway) Bus. M-28. M-29 is a state trunkline highway in the US state of Michigan that runs in a south–north direction from Chesterfield Township to Marysville. It generally runs along the shore of Lake St. Clair and the St. Clair River . The M-29 designation has been used twice in Michigan starting in 1919.

  9. M-10 (Michigan highway) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/M-10_(Michigan_highway)

    M-10. Bus. US 10. M-10 is a state trunkline highway in the Metro Detroit area of Michigan in the United States. Nominally labeled north-south, the route follows a northwest-southeast alignment. The southernmost portion follows Jefferson Avenue in downtown Detroit, and the southern terminus is at the intersection of Jefferson and M-3 (Randolph ...