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The county name is within the dividing line, the mileage from the county line is in the lower half and the inventory or route number in the upper. Number series vary between IDOT Districts, in some areas the number used on otherwise unnumbered routes are a derivative of the former number (i.e.: "913" used on a section of former IL 13) or a ...
Bridge weight plates refer to SBI numbers instead of posted route numbers as well. For example, bridge plates along old US-66 refer to the route as "SBI-4" When the United States Numbered Highway System was started in 1926, the US numbers were just tacked onto the existing IL/SBI number unless the US Route was routed along a new route.
1di and 2di highways: [[Category:State highways in Illinois|0xx]] where xx is the number of the route; 3di highways: [[Category:State highways in Illinois|y|xx]] where yxx is the number of the route; The category for each county the route runs through, i.e. Category:Tazewell County, Illinois. Avoid categories for each individual city on the route.
Number Length (mi) Length (km) Southern or western terminus Northern or eastern terminus Formed Removed Notes Temp. US 6 — — Moline: Joliet — — US 6 Bus. — — Lansing: Illinois–Indiana state line — — City US 12 — — — — 1938: 1960 Served Chicago: US 12 Bus. — — — — 1960: 1968 Served Chicago: US 20 Bus. — —
The DeKalb County Highway System is a county-maintained system of arterial county highways in DeKalb County, Illinois, United States. They are marked with the standard M1-6 [ 1 ] pentagon-shaped highway marker on the base of traffic signals at intersections with other county highways.
Illinois Route 59 in Naperville: CR 14 (Plainfield-Naperville Road) in Bolingbrook: 111th Street, Hassert Boulevard — — CR 74: 12.382: 19.927 US 52 in Joliet: East Will-Cook county line in Frankfort: Laraway Road — — CR 77: 1.320: 2.124 US 6 in Channahon: I-55 in Channahon: West Bluff Road — — CR 79: 2.024: 3.257 South Kankakee-Will ...
The Illinois Department of Transportation (IDOT), Illinois State Toll Highway Authority (ISTHA), and Skyway Concession Company (SCC) are responsible for maintaining these highways in Illinois. The Interstate Highway System in Illinois consists of 13 primary highways and 11 auxiliary highways which cover 2,248.93 miles (3,619.30 km). [2]
The shorter auxiliary routes branch from primary routes; their numbers are based on the parent route's number. All of the supplement routes for Interstate 95 (I-95) are designated with a three-digit number ending in "95": I-x95. With some exceptions, spur routes are numbered with an odd hundreds digit (such as I-395), while bypasses and ...