Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
New Jersey Route 184; New Mexico State Road 184; New York State Route 184; North Carolina Highway 184; Ohio State Route 184; Pennsylvania Route 184; South Carolina Highway 184; Tennessee State Route 184; Texas State Highway 184. Farm to Market Road 184 (Texas) Utah State Route 184 (1935-1963) in Provo; Utah State Route 184 (1963-2007) in Salt ...
Pennsylvania Route 184 (PA 184, designated by the Pennsylvania Department of Transportation as SR 184) is an 9.68-mile-long (15.58 km) state highway located in Lycoming County in Pennsylvania. The western terminus is at PA 287 in Brookside .
Missouri Route 190; New Mexico State Road 190; New York State Route 190; Ohio State Route 190; Pennsylvania Route 190 (former) Tennessee State Route 190; Texas State Highway 190. Texas State Highway Spur 190; Farm to Market Road 190 (Texas) Utah State Route 190; Virginia State Route 190; Wisconsin Highway 190; Wyoming Highway 190; Territories ...
Main page; Contents; Current events; Random article; About Wikipedia; Contact us
Since the policy on numbering and designating US Highways was updated in 1991, AASHTO has been in the process of eliminating all intrastate U.S. Highways under 300 miles (480 km) in length, "as rapidly as the State Highway Department and the Standing Committee on Highways of the American Association of State Highway and Transportation Officials ...
State Route 184 (SR 184) is a 10.14-mile (16.32 km) long east–west state highway in northwestern Ohio, a U.S. state.The western terminus of SR 184 is at the U.S. Route 23 (US 23) freeway in Sylvania, at a five-ramp parclo AB-3 interchange that also serves as the southern terminus of US 223, as well as the northern terminus of SR 51.
The Hawaiʻi Belt Road is a modern name for the Māmalahoa Highway and consists of Hawaiʻi state Routes 11, 19, and 190 that encircle the Island of Hawaiʻi. The southern section, between Hilo and Kailua-Kona is numbered as Route 11 .
Route 184 originated as a prefixed spur of Route 4 (currently an alignment of U.S. Route 9), New Jersey State Highway Route S-4, first defined in 1927. The highway was an alignment from the new Outerbridge Crossing to Route 4. [3] It was eventually extended from Route 4 to the recently built Route 4 Parkway (now the Garden State Parkway) in 1951.