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The Kansas Department of Transportation (KDOT) is a state government organization in charge of maintaining public roadways of the U.S. state of Kansas. Funding issues [ edit ]
The State Highways in Kansas are the state highways owned and maintained by the Kansas Department of Transportation (KDOT) in the U.S. state of Kansas. They are numbered with a K- prefix, e.g. K-10 or K-66 .
The Kansas Department of Transportation removed K-230 from the state highway system through a 1995 resolution and is now known as North 279th Street West. K-230 was a former section of K-96 before K-96 was rerouted to a new alignment.
The route leaves Kansas for Missouri by crossing the Missouri River at Atchison. Most of the route climbs the cuestas of the Osage prairie, [2] while north of the Kansas River, it cuts through the glaciated region. [3] Almost the entire length of US-59 in Kansas is maintained by the Kansas Department of Transportation (KDOT).
Before state highways were numbered in Kansas, there were auto trails. The southern terminus was part of the former South West Trail and Meridian Highway. K-49 was first designated as a state highway by the Kansas State Highway Commission, now known as the Kansas Department of Transportation, in 1927. At that time it ran from US-81 in Caldwell ...
The Kansas Department of Transportation (KDOT) tracks the traffic levels on its highways, and in 2019, they determined that on average the traffic varied from 220 vehicles per day slightly north of the junction with K-140 to 495 vehicles per day slightly south of the junction with K-140. [6]
The Kansas Department of Transportation (KDOT) tracks the traffic levels on its highways. On K-42 in 2020, they determined that on average the traffic varied from 325 vehicles per day near the western terminus to 16,500 vehicles per day near the eastern terminus.
On June 24, 1984, the Kansas Department of Transportation (KDOT) announced that construction would begin in June 1986, on a new alignment of US-56 north of the city of Marion. The Kansas Department of Transportation authorized the addition of K-256 to the state highway system in a November 8, 1985 resolution.