词条 | North Carolina Highway 69 |
释义 |
|state=NC |type=NC |route=69 |map=NC 69 map.svg |length_mi=3.876 |length_round=3 |length_ref=[1] |direction_a=South |terminus_a={{jct|state=GA|GA|515|GA|17}} at the GA line |junction={{Jct|state=NC|US|64}} near Hayesville |direction_b=North |terminus_b={{jct|state=NC|US-Bus|64|dab1=Hayesville}} in Hayesville |counties=Clay |established=1941 |previous_type=NC |previous_route=68 |next_type=US |next_route=70 }} North Carolina Highway 69 (NC 69) is a {{convert|3.876|mi|km|adj=mid|-long}} primary state highway in the U.S. state of North Carolina. It runs north–south from the Georgia state line to Hayesville, west of Chatuge Lake. Route descriptionNC 69 runs from the Georgia border south of Hayesville and along the western shore of Chatuge Lake. The route crosses U.S. Route 64 (US 64) before entering downtown Hayesville, where it meets its northern terminus at a roundabout with US 64 Bus. NC 69 is also part of Corridor A, in the Appalachian Development Highway System (ADHS), which is part of Appalachian Regional Commission (ARC).[2] History{{refimprove section|date=January 2016}}The second and current NC 69 was established in 1941 as a renumbering of NC 287, traversing from Georgia state line, along Myers Chapel Road, to US 64 (Chatuga Dam Road), south of Hayesville. In 1942, NC 69 was rerouted to its current alignment west of its former, most of which now under Chatuge Lake. The first NC 69 was an original state highway that began at NC 20, in Marshall, to NC 26, in Twin Oaks. Its routing took NC 69 through Burnsville, Spruce Pine, Cranberry, Banner Elk, Boone and West Jefferson. In 1928, NC 69 was extended south to the South Carolina state line, in concurrency with US 25, taking it through Asheville, Arden and Hendersonville; this replaced most of NC 29 and its old routing to Marshall became NC 213. In 1930, NC 69 was rerouted at Cranberry towards Elk Park and the Tennessee state line, in concurrency with US 19E; its old alignment north was broken up with NC 194 between Cranberry and Villas, NC 60 between Villas and Boone, and NC 691 between Boone Twin Oaks.[3] In 1932, NC 69 was placed on new routing between Arden and Asheville, its old alignment became NC 69A, though remained part of US 25. In 1934, NC 69 was decommissioned in favor of US 25, US 19 and US 19E. {{-}}North Carolina Highway 287{{Infobox road small|state=NC |type=NC 1945 |route=287 |location=GA State Line–Hayesville, NC |formed=1923 |deleted=1941 |length_mi= |length_ref= }}North Carolina Highway 287 (NC 287) was established in 1923 as a renumbering of part of NC 109. It traversed from the Georgia state line (along Myers Chapel Road) to NC 28 (Chatuga Dam Road), near Hayesville. In 1941, NC 287 was renumbered to NC 69.[4]{{-}} FutureNCDOT plans to upgrade NC 69 into a divided four-lane expressway, from the Georgia state line to US 64; which would complete a gap in Corridor A. At an estimated cost of $43.7 million, it is currently unfunded.[5]Junction list{{Jcttop|state=NC|county=Clay|length_ref=[6]}}{{NCint|location=none |mile=0.00 |road={{jct|state=GA|GA|515|GA|17|dir1=south|dir2=south|city1=Hiawassee}} |notes=Georgia state line }}{{NCint |location=Hayesville |lspan=2 |mile=3.53 |road={{jct|state=NC|US|64|city1=Murphy|city2=Franklin}} }}{{NCint |mile=3.85 |road={{jct|state=NC|US-Bus|64|dab1=Hayesville|city1=Hayesville}} |notes=Roundabout }}{{jctbtm}} Special routesArden–Asheville alternate route{{Infobox road small|state=NC |type=NC 1945 |route=69A |location=Arden–Asheville, NC |length_mi= |length_ref= |formed=1932 |deleted=1934 }} North Carolina Highway 69 Alternate (NC 69A) was a renumbering of NC 69 between Arden and Asheville, connecting the communities of Skyland and Biltmore; it was in complete concurrency with US 25. In 1934, NC 69A was decommissioned in favor of US 25. {{-}}See also
References1. ^{{cite web|url=http://www.ncdot.gov/it/gis/DataDistribution/DOTData/default.html |title=NCDOT GIS Data Layers |publisher=North Carolina Department of Transportation |year=2012 |accessdate=December 28, 2012}} 2. ^{{cite web |publisher= Appalachian Regional Commission |url= http://www.arc.gov/noindex/programs/transp/adhs_status_report_2013/ADHSFY2013StatusReportNorthCarolina.pdf |format= PDF |title= Status of Corridors in North Carolina |date= September 30, 2013 |accessdate= July 11, 2014}} 3. ^{{cite map |publisher= North Carolina Department of Transportation |url= http://dotw-xfer01.dot.state.nc.us/imgdot/DOTStateTravelMapHistoric/STM1930.pdf |format= PDF |title= State Highway System of North Carolina |cartography= NCDOT |year= 1930 |accessdate= July 11, 2014}} 4. ^{{cite map |publisher= North Carolina Department of Transportation |url= http://dotw-xfer01.dot.state.nc.us/imgdot/DOTStateTravelMapHistoric/STM1940.pdf |format= PDF |title= North Carolina Primary Highway System |cartography= NCDOT |year= 1940 |accessdate= July 11, 2014}} 5. ^{{cite web |publisher= North Carolina Department of Transportation |url= https://connect.ncdot.gov/projects/planning/STIResults/H090005-C.pdf |format= PDF |title= SPOT ID: H090005-C |date= May 30, 2014 |accessdate= July 11, 2014}} 6. ^{{cite map|publisher=Yahoo Maps|url=http://maps.yahoo.com/#mvt=m&lat=35.013046&lon=-83.82281&zoom=13&q1=34.987393%2C-83.826406&q2=35.034647%2C-83.820645&q3=35.038591%2C-83.817684|title=Overview Map North Carolina Route 69|accessdate=January 27, 2010}} External links{{Attached KML|display=title,inline}}
2 : State highways in North Carolina|Transportation in Clay County, North Carolina |
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