North Carolina Highway 68

North Carolina Highway 68

NC 68 marker

NC 68
Route information
Maintained by NCDOT
Length: 28 mi (45 km)
Existed: Mid-1930s – present
Major junctions
South end: I-85 Bus. / US 29 / US 70 in Thomasville
  US 311 in High Point
I-40 / US 421 in Greensboro
Bryan Blvd in Greensboro
NC 150 in Oak Ridge
US 158 in Stokesdale
North end: US 220 near Stokesdale
Location
Counties: Davidson, Guilford, Rockingham
Highway system

North Carolina Highway System

NC 67 NC 69

NC 68 is a north–south state highway in North Carolina. It most notably serves as a connector between Interstate 40 (I-40) and Piedmont Triad International Airport (via Bryan Boulevard). On its routing from Thomasville to Stokesdale, NC 68 passes through urban High Point, the western outskirts of Greensboro, and the town of Oak Ridge. The segment from just north of the I-40 interchange to Pleasant Ridge Road in Guilford County is a limited access freeway and is planned to be partially used as part of the Interstate 73 corridor.

Contents

Route description

Beginning in the south at Business I-85/US 29/70, the route travels north out of Thomasville in Davidson County as National Highway, a name which referred to the former routing of US 29/70 (later US 29A/70A) along this segment. Crossing from Davidson County into neighboring Guilford County and the city of High Point, NC 68 is cosigned with English Road. Approximately one mile within the city limits, NC 68 turns left onto Westchester Drive, a boulevard that bypasses High Point's downtown area. Arriving at the US 311 Business (Main Street) interchange, the city's busiest, NC 68 continues onto Eastchester Drive, another boulevard. After passing Oak Hollow Mall, the US 311 Bypass (Future Interstate 74) freeway, and the Wendover Avenue interchange, NC 68 and Eastchester Drive continue north into neighboring Greensboro.

Shortly after entering Greensboro, NC 68 meets Interstate 40/US 421, and becomes a limited access freeway after a traffic signal at Triad Center Drive. Continuing north as a divided four-lane highway, NC 68 has junctions with W. Market Street (Colfax exit) and Bryan Boulevard, the exit for Piedmont Triad International Airport. The road downgrades to an undivided primary road at the Pleasant Ridge Road junction. From there, the route heads north through the heart of Oak Ridge, North Carolina, passing the Oak Ridge Military Academy at the route's intersection with NC 150. In Stokesdale, NC 68 crosses US 158 and joins NC 65 for a short one-mile (1.6 km) concurrency, before splitting to the northeast en route to its northern terminus at NC 220 in Rockingham County.

History

North Carolina Highway 68 was first commissioned by 1924 as a route running from Wilkesboro to the Virginia state line, passing through Jefferson, a routing that today is served mainly by U.S. Highway 421. Around 1928, NC 68 was rerouted to end at the Tennessee state line. The old NC 68 route was designated as NC 681 for a while before becoming the unnumbered Healing Springs Road of today. By 1928, an extension of NC 16 took all of NC 68's routing and NC 68 was decommissioned. The 68 number was recommissioned in the mid-1930s as a state highway running from east of High Point to Stokesdale. By 1938, NC 68 had changed its southern terminus to Thomasville and the northern terminus was moved northward in 1941 to its current location at US 220.

Near the I-40 junction, NC 68 used to be routed along Regional Road (formerly John Bull Road), but increased traffic between the Interstate and the international airport required a new road. A new four-lane boulevard/freeway and new I-40 interchange was built to the west of Regional Road to better accommodate the traffic; the new road was finished in 1980 and NC 68 was signed along it.

Future

Future NCDOT plans call for the construction of a new four-lane highway connector between NC 68 and US 220 to serve as the future I-73 corridor. It should be constructed between Oak Ridge and Summerfield. NC 68 is not planned to follow this new road.

Nearby points of interest

External links


Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.

Игры ⚽ Поможем написать курсовую

Look at other dictionaries:

  • North Carolina Highway 73 — NC 73 Map of southern North Carolina with NC 73 highlighted in red Route information …   Wikipedia

  • North Carolina Highway 24 — NC 24 Route information Maintained by NCDOT Length: 278 mi[2] …   Wikipedia

  • North Carolina Highway 49 — NC 49 Route information Maintained by NCDOT Length: 180 mi (290 km) Existed …   Wikipedia

  • North Carolina Highway 28 — NC 28 Route information Maintained by NCDOT Length: 81.2 mi[1] …   Wikipedia

  • North Carolina Highway 12 — NC 12 redirects here. NC 12 may also refer to North Carolina s 12th congressional district. NC 12 Route information Maintained by NCDOT Length …   Wikipedia

  • North Carolina Highway 16 — NC 16 Route information Maintained by NCDOT Length: 143.8 mi[1] …   Wikipedia

  • North Carolina Highway 10 — NC 10 redirects here. NC 10 may also refer to North Carolina s 10th congressional district. NC 10 Route information Maintained by NCDOT Length …   Wikipedia

  • North Carolina Highway 27 — NC 27 Route information Maintained by NCDOT Length: 198 mi[1] …   Wikipedia

  • North Carolina Highway 86 — NC 86 Route information Maintained by NCDOT Length: 53 mi (85 km) Existed …   Wikipedia

  • North Carolina Highway 90 — NC 90 Route information Maintained by NCDOT Length: 71.5 mi[1] …   Wikipedia

  • North Carolina Highway 62 — NC 62 Route information Maintained by NCDOT Length: 84.4 mi[1] …   Wikipedia

Share the article and excerpts

Direct link
Do a right-click on the link above
and select “Copy Link”