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Clearline Road Northwest in Jones Township: US 2 in Lammers Township — — CR 503 — — CSAH 5 in Jones Township: US 2 in Lammers Township — — CR 505 — — US 2 in Lammers Township: CSAH 5 in Lammers Township — — CR 507 — — CSAH 5 in Lammers Township: US 2 in Lammers Township — — CR 509 — — CSAH 22 in Buzzle Township ...
Travelers can dial 511, a three-digit telephone number, on landlines and most mobile phones. The number has also extended to be the default name of many state and provincial transportation department road conditions Web sites, such as Wisconsin's site. [1] It is an example of an N11 code, part of the North American Numbering Plan.
current TH 5 — — US 169 towards Ledyard, IA: US 2/TH 8 in Swan River: 1920: 1934 MN 5: 76.347: 122.869 MN 19/MN 22 in Gaylord: MN 120 at the Maplewood-Oakdale border 1934: current MN 6: 147.775: 237.821 MN 18 northwest of Garrison: US 71 in Big Falls: 1934: current TH 6 — — US 75 towards Rock Rapids, IA: PTH 14 towards Emerson, MB
Minnesota State Highway 27 (MN 27) is a 247.623-mile-long (398.511 km) state highway in west-central and east-central Minnesota, which runs from its intersection with MN 28 in Browns Valley and continues east to its interchange with Interstate 35 (I-35) in Moose Lake.
Minnesota State Highway 77 (MN 77) is a 11.403-mile-long (18.351 km) highway in Minnesota, which runs from its intersection with 138th Street (north of Dakota County Road 42) in Apple Valley and continues north to its northern terminus at its interchange with State Highway 62 in Minneapolis. MN 77 is also known as Cedar Avenue.
The Interstate Highways in Minnesota are all owned and operated by the US State of Minnesota. [2] The Minnesota Department of Transportation (MnDOT) provides primary maintenance for all 921.621 miles of highway. There are no tolled miles on the Minnesota Interstate, with the exception of HOV lanes governed by the E-ZPass program.
More than 4,500 sensors are embedded in and under the road surfaces to measure stresses while the test segments are in use. [1] The facility was constructed from 1990 through 1993 at a cost of $25 million [2] and opened in 1994. It earned an Award of Merit in the Federal Highway Administration's 1996 Excellence in Highway Design competition. [1]
Minnesota State Highway 1 (MN 1) is a state highway across northern Minnesota, United States, which runs from North Dakota Highway 54 (ND 54) at the North Dakota state line (at the Red River in Oslo) and continues east to its eastern terminus at MN 61 at the unincorporated community of Illgen City in Beaver Bay Township on the North Shore of Lake Superior.