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U.S. Route 89 in Utah

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

U.S. Route 89 marker

U.S. Route 89

Map
US 89 highlighted in red
Route information
Maintained by UDOT
Length502.577 mi[1] (808.819 km)
Existed1926–present
Tourist
routes
Logan Canyon Scenic Byway
Major junctions
South end US 89 towards Flagstaff, AZ
Major intersections
North end US 89 towards Montpelier, ID
Location
CountryUnited States
StateUtah
CountiesKane, Garfield, Piute, Sevier, Sanpete, Utah, Salt Lake, Davis, Weber, Box Elder, Cache, Rich
Highway system
  • Utah State Highway System
SR-88 US 89A

U.S. Route 89 (US 89) in the U.S. state of Utah is a north-south United States Highway spanning more than 502 miles (807.891 km) through the central part of the state, making it the longest road in Utah. Between Provo and Brigham City, US-89 serves as a local road, paralleling (and occasionally concurring with) Interstate 15, but the portions from Arizona north to Provo and Brigham City northeast to Wyoming serve separate corridors. The former provides access to several national parks and Arizona, and the latter connects I-15 with Logan, the state's only Metropolitan Statistical Area not on the Interstate.[2]

When US-89 was established in the state in 1926, the road initially extended north to US-91 in Spanish Fork. Following the extension of the former to the Canada–US border, Interstate 15 was constructed roughly paralleling US-89 to the west and replacing US-91 south of Brigham City. During this process, US-89 was rerouted in southern Utah and northern Arizona, with the old roadway becoming US-89A.

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Transcription

Route description

Arizona border to I-70

U.S. Route 89 at the border of Arizona and Utah

US-89 enters Utah from the south inside the Glen Canyon National Recreation Area, about 7 miles (11 km) north of the Glen Canyon Dam, where it crosses the Colorado River near Page, Arizona. After leaving the recreation area and passing the small town of Big Water, the highway curves west through the Grand Staircase–Escalante National Monument. US-89 stays near the monument's southern boundary,[3] crossing the East Clark Bench and The Cockscomb and passing south of the Vermilion Cliffs of the Grand Staircase. At the city of Kanab, US-89 meets the north end of US-89A, an alternate route south into Arizona, and abruptly turns north and begins climbing the staircase. Here the Mount Carmel Scenic Byway begins; one of the Utah Scenic Byways, it stretches north to SR-12 at Bryce Canyon Junction.[4] The Vermilion Cliffs are ascended via the canyon carved by Kanab Creek. Near the White Cliffs, US-89 meets SR-9 at Mt. Carmel Junction, where travelers can turn to reach Zion National Park. The final "step" is the Pink Cliffs, where the highway follows alongside the Virgin River to the highest point on US-89 in southern Utah and the east end of SR-14, a summit at Long Valley Junction (elevation 7450 feet/2300 m).[5]

Looking south from Sevier towards the Marysvale Canyon

North from Long Valley Junction, US-89 descends through the valley of the Sevier River, meeting SR-12, a scenic highway that leads to Bryce Canyon National Park, at Bryce Canyon Junction, SR-143 in Panguitch (which leads to Cedar Breaks National Monument), and SR-20 at Bear Valley Junction. As the highway continues north, the valley narrows significantly into the Circleville Canyon before opening out near the town of Circleville. In this part of the valley, the Sevier River is dammed to create the Piute Reservoir, and US-89 meets SR-62 near Kingston. North of Marysvale, the valley again narrows into the Marysvale Canyon, which carries the river to its confluence with Clear Creek and US-89 to its overlap with Interstate 70, beginning at Sevier.[5]

I-70 to the Wasatch Front

Although US-89 follows the I-70 freeway from Sevier to Salina, the old alignment can still be driven, and is state-maintained north of Elsinore as SR-258, SR-118 (which overlaps I-70 Business through Richfield), SR-24, and US-50. Both highways stay mainly in the west half of the Sevier River's valley, with the faster I-70/US-89 bypassing the surface road's communities. Just south of Salina, I-70 curves to the east, rising alongside Salina Creek, and US-89 exits into downtown Salina, where it rejoins its pre-freeway alignment. US-50 overlaps US-89 between I-70 and Salina, following I-70 east and a separate alignment northwest from the area; the short Interstate 70 Business also uses this roadway as a business spur from I-70 to the city. North of Salina, US-89 bypasses Redmond (SR-256 follows the former route through the town) and passes through Centerfield to Gunnison, where it meets SR-28 and finally turns away from the Sevier River.[5]

At Gunnison, US-89 turns east before curving northeast into the Sanpete Valley, formed by the San Pitch River, a tributary of the Sevier River. Along US-89 in this valley are several small cities: Manti, Ephraim, Mount Pleasant, and Fairview. Between Ephraim and Mount Pleasant, US-89 meets the south end of SR-132 at Pigeon Hollow Junction. SR-132 was formerly US-189, connecting US-89 with US-91 in Nephi. Beyond Fairview, where the scenic SR-31 turns east, US-89 climbs out of the valley, reaching a summit at Hill Top (elevation 6400 feet/2000 m). Thistle Creek parallels the next leg of the highway, descending through a canyon to the junction with US-6 near the ghost town of Thistle, flooded by a landslide in 1983. Thistle Creek and Soldier Creek, paralleled by US-89 and US-6, merge near this junction to form Spanish Fork, which the overlapped routes follow northwest through Spanish Fork Canyon into the Utah Valley at Moark Junction. US-89 splits to the north from US-6 there, skirts the west edge of Mapleton, and merges with SR-51 - the old Arrowhead Trail (US-91) - south of downtown Springville.[5]

Southern Wasatch Front

State Street approaching the Utah State Capitol; northbound US-89 turned left here until 2007

From Springville north to Salt Lake City, US-89 parallels—and for a distance overlapsInterstate 15, following the old Arrowhead Trail, once the main highway from Salt Lake City to Los Angeles, through several downtowns. Numerous state highways connect US-89 to I-15, including SR-77 in Springville, SR-114 in Provo, SR-52 in Orem, SR-180 and SR-145 in American Fork, and SR-73 in Lehi. In Provo, US-89 meets US-189, its only branch, which heads northeast through Provo Canyon to Heber City, connecting to I-80 and bypassing Salt Lake City. North of Lehi, US-89 merges with I-15 (at exit 282), which has been built on or near the old road through a gap in the Traverse Mountains (elevation 4800 feet/1500 m) into the Salt Lake Valley. The routes split in Draper, formerly with a direct interchange north of SR-71, but US-89 traffic must now exit at SR-71 (exit 291), turn east to Factory Outlet Drive, and follow this frontage road to the location of the former split. From here to downtown Salt Lake City, US-89 is marked along State Street, a major north–south street that ends at the Utah State Capitol. After passing through Sandy, Midvale, Murray, Millcreek Township, and South Salt Lake, State Street enters Salt Lake City at the intersection with SR-201 (2100 South).

Until 2007, US-89 followed State Street to North Temple (100 North), two blocks from the capitol, but now it turns at 400 South, following the former alignment of SR-186 and SR-176 west and north on 300 West, and rejoining its pre-2007 route at North Temple. In this area, modern US-89 runs for one block with the UTA TRAX Red Line in its median before crossing the TRAX line in Main Street's median, then passing the Frank E. Moss United States Courthouse, Pioneer Park, the historic Warehouse District at Pierpont Avenue, Japantown, Vivint Arena, the Arena TRAX station, the Triad Center, and West High School. As it leaves downtown, 300 West curves northwesterly and becomes Beck Street, meeting the modern terminus of SR-186 at Victory Road at the back side of Capitol Hill.

Northern Wasatch Front

Route 89 passes by the Logan Tabernacle in downtown Logan, Cache County
US-89 through Logan Canyon, a National Scenic Byway

US-89 leaves Salt Lake City at exit 312 of I-15, where it acts as I-15's frontage roads. Just south of I-15's junction with I-215, US-89 splits to the northeast, passing through Bountiful and Woods Cross. A northerly curve onto 500 West removes the highway from Bountiful's Main Street, and it merges with I-15 at exit 317 to bypass Centerville and Farmington, where the old road (former US-91, but never US-89) is SR-106, through the narrow strip of land that separates Farmington Bay from the Wasatch Mountains. US-89 leaves I-15 at exit 324, where the Legacy Parkway also ends, and proceeds north on a freeway. This portion of US-89 is the only one to include exit numbers based on its mileage, as opposed to the overlapping I-15 or I-70. The freeway ends after US-89 crosses SR-273, the former surface alignment of US-91 in both directions, and heads north as a four-lane road along the Wasatch foothills, to the east of Layton and Hill Air Force Base. This portion is planned to be upgraded to freeway status by 2023.[6] After crossing I-84 in Uintah, US-89 enters Ogden, which it traverses via Washington Boulevard, rejoining old US-91 (now SR-26) south of downtown. Beyond Ogden, US-89 continues in a general northerly direction along the thin strip between Willard Bay and the Wasatch Mountains to Brigham City, where it finally turns east away from the I-15 corridor.[5]

Wasatch Front to Idaho border

US-89 meets the current alignment of US-91 in the southern outskirts of Brigham City, turning east for an overlap on the city's southeast bypass. (SR-13 and SR-90 are the former alignment through Brigham City.) The two routes head east up Box Elder Canyon in the southern Wellsville Mountains, finally leaving the valley of the Great Salt Lake into a small valley that contains Mantua Reservoir (elevation 5200 feet/1585 m). US-89/US-91 turns north there, bypassing the town of Mantua to the west, and continues to ascend through Dry Canyon to Sardine Summit (elevation 5900 feet/1798 m). Another small valley leads to Wellsville Canyon, where the four-lane roadway again turns east and descends into the Cache Valley. In that valley, US-89/US-91 heads northeast, bypassing Wellsville to the east, into downtown Logan. US-91 continues northerly from Logan into Idaho, but US-89 splits to the east, beginning a long climb of the Bear River Range through Logan Canyon. The Logan Canyon Scenic Byway, a Utah and National Scenic Byway, begins at Logan and follows US-89 up the canyon, past the access road to the Beaver Mountain ski area, to Garden City and on to the state line.[4][7] Bear Lake Summit (elevation 7800 ft/2377 m), at the top of the range, is the highest point on US-89 in Utah,[citation needed] from which it descends the east slope via horseshoe curves to Garden City on the shore of Bear Lake (elevation 5900 ft/1798 m). The final segment of US-89 to the Idaho state line follows the lake's west shore, its location constrained by the Bear River Range just to the west.[5]

History

Manti Utah Temple along US-89 at the north edge of Manti.

When US-89 was created in 1926, it only went as far north as Springville, where travelers could continue to Salt Lake City via US-91.[8][9] The highway was extended north to the Canada–US border near Glacier National Park in the mid-1930s,[10][11][12] though a dispute between Utah and Idaho on the one side and Wyoming on the other was not settled until 1938. The American Association of State Highway Officials decided in favor of Utah and Idaho, placing US-89 on or near US-91 between Springville and Logan, where it split northeasterly to Yellowstone National Park. (US-89 only left US-91 twice: between Farmington and Ogden, where it still travels today, and via an all-weather route from Brigham City into the Cache Valley, now SR-38 and SR-30.[13]) Wyoming's preferred routing, which left US-91 at Provo, instead became US-189.[14] Beginning in the 1950s, Interstate 15 was constructed, replacing US-91 for through traffic south of Brigham City, and leading to that route's truncation there in 1974.[15] On the other hand, US-89 follows independent corridors south of Spanish Fork and north of Logan. It has not been truncated and mostly follows US-91's final alignment, except between Farmington and Ogden (where old US-91 is now I-15, SR-126, and SR-26).

US-89 between Junction and Marysville

The southern part of US-89, running northerly from Kanab, mostly follows a succession of linear valleys. The Denver and Rio Grande Western Railroad opened a branch (later the Marysvale Branch) from its main line at Thistle to Manti in 1890, and extended it (through a subsidiary, the Sevier Railway), to Salina in 1891, Belknap in 1896, and Marysvale in 1900.[16] No rail line ever reached farther south,[17] and so residents of towns such as Junction, Panguitch, Alton, Glendale, and Kanab had to travel north to the railhead at Marysvale. The old county road through Circleville Canyon was poorly constructed, with steep grades and a rough surface.[18] The State Road Commission designated the highway from Nephi east through Salt Creek Canyon and then south through these valleys to Kanab as a state road in or soon after 1910.[19] Initially, the route from the summit at Long Valley Junction to Kanab went through Alton and Johnson Canyon, entering Kanab from the east. A more direct route via Long Valley was considered, serving the communities of Glendale, Orderville, and Mt. Carmel, but this would have required difficult construction over a mesa covered in loose sand to reach Kanab. In summer 1912, the commission added a branch from Long Valley Junction to Mt. Carmel, allowing these communities access to the state road system, along with a connection west from the junction to Cedar City.[18] Several years later, in December 1915, the commission added the Mt. Carmel-Kanab road over the sand hills to the system and began construction of a sand-clay road in 1916.[20] A connection from Pigeon Hollow Junction north to Thistle was also added in 1912, following the rail line through a canyon and providing another route to Salt Lake City.[21]

In 1919, the state legislature redefined the state road system to include only a short list given in the law and any federal aid projects. The route from Kanab north was kept, including both approaches to Kanab and the two roads to Nephi and Thistle. In addition, a short extension from Kanab south to Arizona was added.[22] An amendment in 1923 removed most of the original route through Johnson Canyon, but added a second route to Alton from the west, effectively forming a large triangular loop through that town.[23] (The old route from Alton south to Kanab would be re-added to the state road system in 1933 as SR-136.[24]) In the early 1920s, the State Road Commission assigned numbers to several major state roads; the route from Arizona northerly through Kanab and Richfield to Nephi became State Route 11.[25][26] The numbers were officially adopted by the legislature in 1927, with both the main route and the loop through Alton being defined as SR-11; a new State Route 32 followed the branch to Thistle.[27] The Alton loop was removed from SR-11 in 1941, with the south half remaining in the system as part of SR-136.[28] Despite these designations, the majority of SR-11 and all of SR-32 were instead marked as US-89, with the remainder of SR-11 between Pigeon Hollow Junction and Nephi marked as US-189 from about 1930 until 1938.[8][9][12][29]

State Route 1, which became U.S. Route 91 in 1926, ran north–south through central and northern Utah in the 1920s. State Route 2 left SR-1 at Logan and ran east through Logan Canyon to Garden City; this had been built with federal aid as a forest road in about 1918.[30] The road north from Garden City to Idaho was added to the system in 1921,[31] and became part of State Route 3.[26] In 1927, the legislature added State Route 49, an alternate southern entrance to Ogden that left SR-1 at Farmington and merged with SR-5 (US-30S) at Uintah.[32] (Present SR-60 was numbered as a branch of SR-49 until 1935.[33]) State Route 69, stretching from US-191 (now SR-13) just north of Brigham City north and east to US-91 in Logan, became a state highway in 1931.[34] The 1930s extension of US-89 took it north from Thistle along US-50 (SR-8) to Springville, US-91 (SR-1 and SR-106, later all SR-1) to Farmington, SR-49 to Uintah, US-30S (SR-5) to Ogden, US-91 (SR-1) to Brigham City, SR-69 to Logan, SR-2 to Garden City, and SR-3 to Idaho.[13] US-89 was removed from SR-69 and overlapped with US-91 between Brigham City and Logan in the mid-1950s.[35][36]

In 1957, one year after construction began on the Glen Canyon Dam, the legislature designated a new State Route 259, heading east and southeast from SR-11 in Kanab to Arizona en route to the dam and adjacent bridge.[37] This replaced about eight miles (13 km) of SR-136 (the original state highway from the 1910s) at its south end,[38] but the remainder was a new roadway, through an area not previously served by improved roads.[36] The route passed the dam was initially designated as an alternate route of US-89,[39] but when completed on 20 February 1959, it instead became US-89's mainline, as it was a better route during all weather, and the old route (SR-11 south of Kanab) became U.S. Route 89 Alternate.[40]

Major numbering changes were made in Utah's state highway system in the 1960s and 1970s, beginning with the construction of Interstate Highways and culminating in the 1977 renumbering, where state route numbers concurrent with other types were dropped entirely. However, most of these changes were not visible to the public, as signs continued to display US-89 and other U.S. Routes and Interstates. The following changes were made to state routes related to US-89:[41]

Route Pre-1962 Changes Post-1977
SR-1[42] Aligned with US-91 (not signed) 1962: moved to I-15 (no signage changes); specific changes are listed below Became I-15
SR-259[37] Arizona to SR-11 (US-89A) in Kanab (signed as US-89) no changes Replaced by US-89
SR-11[19] Arizona to Nephi (mostly US-89; only signed north of Pigeon Hollow Junction) 1969: cut back to SR-4 (future I-70) at Sevier (SR-11 signs were replaced with SR-132 signs north of Pigeon Hollow Junction); specific changes are listed below Arizona to Kanab
SR-258[43] Loop off US-89 through Central 1969: moved west to replace SR-11 (US-89) between Elsinore and SR-120 (signs were removed from the old route) Remained as temporary US-89
SR-120[44] N/A 1969: created as a business loop for future I-70 through Richfield, replacing SR-11 (US-89) (no signage changes) Remained as temporary US-89
SR-119[45] SR-11 (US-89) east to SR-24 1969: extended southwest over SR-11 (US-89) to SR-120 (no signage changes) SR-120 east to SR-24
SR-135[46] N/A 1969: replaced SR-11 (US-89) between SR-119 and SR-24 (no signage changes) Remained as temporary US-89
SR-24[47] SR-11 (US-89) southeast and northeast to I-70 1969: extended north over SR-11 (US-89) to SR-28 in Salina (no signage changes) US-50 near Salina southeast and northeast to I-70
SR-28[48] SR-11 in Gunnison north to Levan 1969: extended south over SR-11 (US-89) and proposed connection to I-70 (no signage changes) US-89 in Gunnison north to Levan (1969 extension replaced by US-89)
SR-32[21] SR-11 (US-89) at Pigeon Hollow Junction north to Thistle (signed as US-89) 1969: extended south over SR-11 (US-89) to SR-28 in Gunnison (no signage changes) Replaced by US-89
SR-132[49] Lynndyl to Nephi 1969: extended southeast over SR-11 to SR-32 (US-89) at Pigeon Hollow Junction (signs changed from SR-11 to SR-132 on extension) Lynndyl to US-89 at Pigeon Hollow Junction
SR-8[50] Colorado to SR-1 (US-91) in Springville (signed as US-6, US-50, and US-89) 1962: replaced by SR-4 (I-70) near the Colorado state line (no signage changes)
1964: replaced SR-1 (US-89/91) between Springville and Lehi (no signage changes)
1969: became SR-27 south of Moark Junction (no signage changes), leaving only Moark Junction to Lehi
Replaced by US-89
SR-271[51] N/A 1964: replaced SR-1 (US-89/91) through Salt Lake City, from Draper to Becks (no signage changes) Replaced by US-89
SR-169[52] N/A 1962: replaced SR-1 (US-89/91) from Becks to north Bountiful (no signage changes) Replaced by US-89
SR-49[53] SR-1 north to SR-3 (I-80N) near Uintah (signed as US-89) 1968: replaced SR-3 from Uintah to Ogden (no signage changes) Replaced by US-89
SR-50[54] N/A 1969: replaced SR-1 (US-89/91) from Roy through Ogden to Hot Springs Junction (no signage changes) Replaced by US-89 north of Ogden; Roy to Ogden (ex-US-91) became SR-26
SR-84[55] SR-1 in Roy to SR-1 at Hot Springs Junction 1962: replaced SR-1 (US-89/91, US-191) from Hot Springs Junction to Riverside (no signage changes)
1969: replaced SR-1 (US-91) from Layton to Roy (no signage changes)
Replaced by US-89 from Hot Springs Junction to Brigham City; Layton to Hot Springs Junction became SR-126 and Brigham City to Riverside became SR-13
SR-85[56] N/A 1962: replaced SR-1 (US-89/91) from Brigham City to Idaho (no signage changes) Replaced by US-91 (partly concurrent with US-89)
SR-13[57] N/A 1962: replaced SR-2 (US-89) from Logan to Garden City (no signage changes) Replaced by US-89
SR-16[58] N/A 1962: replaced SR-3 (partly US-89) from Wyoming to Idaho (signage south of Garden City changed from SR-3 to SR-16) Wyoming to SR-30 at Sage Creek Junction (replaced by SR-30 and US-89 north of Sage Creek Junction)

In particular, SR-11 was cut back to only the roadway south from Kanab, which had become US-89A in 1959.[19]

Major intersections

CountyLocationmi[1]kmExitDestinationsNotes
Kane0.0000.000
US 89 south – Page
Continuation into Arizona
Kanab63.832102.728
US 89A south (100 E south) – Fredonia, Jacob Lake, Grand Canyon
Former SR-11
Mount Carmel Junction81.211130.696
SR-9 west – Zion National Park, Hurricane
Long Valley Junction103.684166.863
SR-14 west – Duck Creek, Cedar City
GarfieldBryce Canyon Junction124.227199.924
SR-12 east – Bryce Canyon National Park, Tropic
Panguitch131.088210.966 SR-143 (Main Street)
Bear Valley Junction141.104227.085 SR-20
Piute162.382261.328 SR-62
Junction164.282264.386 SR-153 (Center Street)
Sevier191.740308.576
I-70 west
South end of I-70 overlap; I-70 exit 23
Joseph19431225 SR-118 – Joseph, MonroeExit numbers follow I-70
Elsinore20032031Elsinore, Monroe (SR-258)
Richfield20633237
I-70 BL east (SR-120 east) – Richfield
20933640
I-70 BL west (SR-120 west) – Richfield
Sigurd21734948
SR-259 to SR-24 – Sigurd, Aurora
Salina225.362362.685

I-70 BS begins / I-70 / US 50 east – Green River
North end of I-70 overlap; I-70 exit 56; south end of US-50/I-70 Bus. overlap
227.117365.509


I-70 BS ends (Main Street) / US 50 west to SR-24 – Delta
North end of US-50/I-70 Bus. overlap
228.225367.293
SR-256 north – Redmond
Southern terminus of SR-256
Sanpete233.460375.717
SR-256 south – Redmond
Northern terminus of SR-256
Gunnison240.195386.556 SR-137 (600 South)
241.434388.550 SR-28 (Main Street)
247.806398.805 SR-137
Ephraim262.668422.723 SR-290 (Center Street)
262.794422.926 SR-290 (100 North)
Pigeon Hollow Junction267.346430.252 SR-132
271.892437.568 SR-117 – Chester, Spring City, Wales
276.346444.736
SR-117 south – Spring City
Northern terminus of SR-117
Mount Pleasant277.868447.185 SR-116 (Main Street)
Fairview284.015457.078


SR-231 north (State Street) to SR-31 east
284.131457.265 SR-31 (400 North)
Utah312.784503.377
US 6 east – Price
South end of US-6 overlap
Moark Junction322.276518.653

US 6 west to I-15 – Provo, Salt Lake, Spanish Fork
North end of US-6 overlap
Mapleton324.711522.572 SR-147 (1600 South)
325.719524.194 SR-147 (Maple Street) – Mapleton City Center
Springville327.694527.372 SR-51 – Spanish ForkInterchange; southbound left exit and northbound left entrance
328.068527.974
SR-77 (400 South) to I-15
329.778530.726
SR-75 (1400 North) to I-15
Provo334.108537.695
US 189 (University Avenue) to I-15
334.855538.897
SR-114 (Center Street) to I-15
Orem337.878543.762
SR-265 (University Parkway) to I-15
340.707548.315
SR-52 (800 North) to I-15
LindonPleasant Grove line343.976553.576 SR-129 (800 North)
Pleasant Grove344.676554.702 SR-114 (Main Street)
345.436555.925
Pleasant Grove Boulevard to I-15
Pleasant GroveAmerican Fork line346.455557.565 SR-129 (North County Boulevard)
American Fork347.360559.022
SR-180 (500 East) to I-15
347.971560.005 SR-74 (100 East)
348.811561.357

SR-145 west (Main Street west) to I-15
Lehi350.056563.361
SR-73 (Main Street) to I-15

SR-85 west
Future interchange
352.996568.092
I-15 south – Provo
South end of I-15 overlap; I-15 exit 282
355571284 SR-92 – Highland, AlpineExit numbers follow I-15
Salt LakeDraper359578288 SR-140 (14600 South)
361581289 SR-154 (Bangerter Highway)
362583

I-15 north / SR-71 west (12300 S west) – Salt Lake, Riverton
North end of I-15 overlap; I-15 exit 291; south end of SR-71 overlap
362.150582.824
SR-71 east (12300 S east) – Draper
North end of SR-71 overlap
SandyDraper line363.407584.847 SR-175 (11400 South)
Sandy366.464589.767 SR-209 (9000 South)
Midvale368.750593.446 SR-48 (7200 South)
Murray369.493594.641
I-215 east
Interchange; I-215 exit 11


Winchester Street to I-215 west
I-215 exit 10
371.216597.414 SR-173 (5300 South)
372.491599.466 SR-266 (4500 South)
South Salt Lake374.270602.329 SR-171 (3300 South)
375.559604.404 I-80Interchange; I-80 exit 124
South Salt LakeSalt Lake City line376.062605.213 SR-201 (2100 South)
Salt Lake City378.330608.863600 South (SR-269 east)One-way pair
378.480609.105


SR-269 west (500 South) to I-15 / I-80
378.552609.220 SR-186SR-186 west is former US-89 north
378.852609.703


SR-270 south (West Temple) to I-15 / I-80
379.145610.175


300 W south to I-15 south / I-80


400 S west to I-15 north
380.641612.582

SR-268 west (600 North) to I-15
381.495613.957
SR-186 east (Victory Road) – Pioneer Memorial Museum
Western terminus of SR-186
383616
I-15 north – Ogden
Northbound exit and southbound entrance; I-15 exit 312
DavisNorth Salt Lake384618
I-15 south
Southbound exit and northbound entrance; I-15 exit 312
North Salt LakeBountiful
Woods Cross tripoint
386.801622.496

SR-93 west (2600 South) to I-15
Eastern terminus of SR-93
BountifulWoods Cross line387.379623.426
SR-68 north
Interchange; northbound exit and southbound entrance; southern terminus of SR-68
Bountiful388.438625.130 SR-68 (500 South)
BountifulWest Bountiful line389.123626.233

SR-106 (400 North) to I-15 south
389.531626.889
I-15 south
South end of freeway section; south end of I-15 overlap; southbound exit and northbound left entrance; I-15 exit 317
Centerville391629319 SR-105 (Parrish Lane) – CentervilleExit numbers follow I-15
Farmington394634322 SR-227 (200 West) / Lagoon Drive – FarmingtonNorthbound exit and southbound entrance
395.586636.634
I-15 north – Ogden
North end of I-15 overlap; left exit and entrance; I-15 exit 324; exit numbers follow US-89; southbound access is via exit 395
394
SR-67 south (Legacy Parkway)
Southbound left exit and northbound left entrance; SR-67 exit 11
396.051637.382395

SR-225 (Park Lane) to I-15 north – Farmington
No northbound entrance
396.746638.501396 SR-106 (Shepard Lane)No southbound entrance
FarmingtonFruit Heights line397.549639.793397 SR-273 (Main Street) – Farmington, Kaysville
Fruit Heights399.705643.263399400 North
Layton401.411646.008401
SR-109 west (Oak Hills Drive)
402Gordon Avenue
403.221648.921403Antelope DriveOpened November 1, 2022[59]
404.296650.651404
SR-193 west – Hill AFB, Clearfield
South Weber405.729652.958405 SR-60 (South Weber Drive)Former SR-49A
Weber River406.346653.950North end of freeway
WeberUintah406.434654.092 I-84 – Morgan, Riverdale, CheyenneInterchange; I-84 exit 87
South Ogden408.379657.222 SR-203 (Harrison Boulevard)
South OgdenWashington Terrace line410.256660.243Adams Avenue Parkway
Ogden412.365663.637 SR-26 (Riverdale Road)Former US-91
413.052664.743 SR-79 (30th Street)
413.927666.151 SR-53 (24th Street)
415.425668.562 SR-39 (12th Street)
416.463670.232 SR-235 (Washington Boulevard north) / 2nd Street
Harrisville417.408671.753 SR-204 (Wall Avenue)
Pleasant View420.292676.394 SR-134 (2700 North)
Box ElderHot Springs Junction[60]423.300681.235

SR-126 to I-15 / I-84 – Salt Lake
Interchange; left exits and entrances
Willard428.771690.040

SR-315 (750 North) to I-15 / I-84
433.555697.739
US 91 south (1100 South) / SR-13 (Main Street)
South end of US-91 overlap; southern terminus of SR-13
435700 SR-90 – Brigham CityInterchange; southbound exit and northbound entrance
Mantua437703MantuaInterchange; northbound exit and southbound entrance; former SR-251
CacheWellsville449723 SR-23 (Center Street)
451726 SR-101 (Main Street)
Logan455732 SR-252 (1000 West)
457735 SR-165 (Main Street)
458737
SR-30 west (200 North)
South end of SR-30 overlap
458.970738.641
US 91 north (Main Street)
North end of US-91 overlap
487.023783.788 SR-243
RichGarden City498.512802.277
SR-30 east (Bear Lake Boulevard)
North end of SR-30 overlap
502.577808.819
US 89 north – Montpelier
Continuation into Idaho
1.000 mi = 1.609 km; 1.000 km = 0.621 mi

References

  1. ^ a b Utah Department of Transportation, Highway Reference Information. Retrieved May 2008
  2. ^ U.S. Census Bureau, Metropolitan and Micropolitan Statistical Areas and Components, December 2006. Retrieved May 2008
  3. ^ Bureau of Land Management, Grand Staircase-Escalante National Monument map. Retrieved May 2008
  4. ^ a b Utah Administrative Code, Rule R926-7: Scenic Byways Archived January 7, 2008, at the Wayback Machine, as in effect on April 1, 2008. Retrieved May 2008
  5. ^ a b c d e f Google Maps street maps and USGS topographic maps. Retrieved May 2008 via ACME Mapper
  6. ^ "US-89: Farmington to I-84". Utah Department of Transportation. Retrieved January 25, 2019.
  7. ^ National Scenic Byways Program, Logan Canyon Scenic Byway. Retrieved May 2008
  8. ^ a b Bureau of Public Roads & American Association of State Highway Officials (November 11, 1926). United States System of Highways Adopted for Uniform Marking by the American Association of State Highway Officials (Map). 1:7,000,000. Washington, DC: United States Geological Survey. OCLC 32889555. Retrieved November 7, 2013 – via Wikimedia Commons.
  9. ^ a b American Association of State Highway Officials, United States Numbered Highways, American Highways, April 1927
  10. ^ H.M. Gousha Company, Road Map: Western United States (prepared exclusively for Standard Oil Company of California), 1935: note that only Wyoming's routing is shown, and the old US-189 is present
  11. ^ Helena Independent, February 16, 1936: "U.S. 89. Closed from Canadian line to Browning."
  12. ^ a b Rand McNally & Company, Texaco Road Map: Idaho, Montana, Wyoming, 1937: note that the current routing is shown to the Utah-Idaho border, but Wyoming's preferred alignment is also labeled; the old US-189 is still present
  13. ^ a b Rand McNally Auto Road Atlas, 1946
  14. ^ Soda Springs Sun, Road Routing of U.S. 89 Settled, December 15, 1938
  15. ^ Utah Department of Transportation, Highway Resolutions: "Route 91". (19.6 MB), updated November 2007. Retrieved May 2008: includes scans of correspondence with AASHO
  16. ^ R. A. LeMassena (Sundance Publications), Rio Grande ... to the Pacific!, 1974, ISBN 0-913582-09-3, pp. 93, 255
  17. ^ C.S. Hammond & Company, 1923 Atlas of the World and Gazetteer, p. 114: Utah
  18. ^ a b Second Biennial Report of the State Road Commission to the Governor of Utah for the Year 1911 and 1912, pp. 76, 78
  19. ^ a b c Utah Department of Transportation, Highway Resolutions: "Route 11". (5.62 MB), updated January 2008. Retrieved May 2008
  20. ^ Fourth Biennial Report, State Road Commission, 1915 and 1916, p. 163
  21. ^ a b Utah Department of Transportation, Highway Resolutions: "Route 32". (15.0 MB), updated October 2007. Retrieved May 2008
  22. ^ Utah State Legislature (1919). "Chapter 57: State Road Commission". Session Laws of Utah. d From Nephi southeasterly via Salt Creek Canyon, Fountain Green, Moroni, Ephraim, Manti, Sterling, Gunnison, Centerfield, Redmond, Salina, Aurora, Vermillion, Sigurd, Venice, Richfield, Austin, Elsinore, Joseph, Sevier, Marysvale, Junction, Circleville, Orton, Panguitch, Hillsdale, Hatch to Glendale, Mt. Carmel to Kanab to Arizona line to Johnson to Alton and Hatch. From Thistle southerly via Indianola, Milburn, Fairview, Mt. Pleasant, and Spring City, intersecting the road from Nephi to Ephraim and beginning at Fairview via Connellsville to Huntington.
  23. ^ Utah State Legislature (1923). "Chapter 89: Designation of State Roads". Session Laws of Utah. ...Hatch to Glendale, Mt. Carmel to Kanab to Arizona line; from Whitney McDonald's ranch, at what is known as the Old School House to Gravel Springs via Levanger Lake and Alton.
  24. ^ Utah State Legislature (1933). "Chapter 30". Session Laws of Utah. (136) From Kanab northeasterly via Johnson canyon to Alton.
  25. ^ State Road Commission, Utah State Trunk Lines, 1923
  26. ^ a b Rand McNally Auto Road Atlas, 1926
  27. ^ Utah State Legislature (1927). "Chapter 21: Designation of State Roads". Session Laws of Utah. 11. From Nephi via Fountain Green, Pigeon Hollow Junction, Ephraim, Manti, Gunnison, Salina, Sigurd, Richfield, Sevier, Marysvale, Junction, Orton, Panguitch, Hillsdale, Long Valley Junction, Gravel Springs Junction, McDonald's Ranch, Mt. Carmel Junction and Kanab to the Utah-Arizona state line; also from Gravel Springs Junction to Alton and Alton to McDonald's Ranch." "32. From Thistle, Utah county, thence south via Fairview and Mt. Pleasant to Pigeon Hollow Junction.
  28. ^ Utah State Legislature (1941). "Chapter 34". Session Laws of Utah. Route 136. From route 11 in Kanab northeasterly via Johnson Canyon and Alton to route 11 near McDonald's Ranch.
  29. ^ Rand McNally Auto Road Atlas, 1931
  30. ^ Fifth Biennial Report, State Road Commission, 1917-1918, p. 24
  31. ^ Utah State Legislature (1921). "Chapter 62: Designation of State Roads". Session Laws of Utah. q From the Utah-Idaho state line near Swan Creek in Rich county following the west shore of Bear Lake by way of Garden City, Laketown, Randolph, Woodruff, to the Utah-Wyoming state line at a point about ten (10) miles in a southeasterly direction from Woodruff.
  32. ^ Utah State Legislature (1927). "Chapter 21: Designation of State Roads". Session Laws of Utah. 49. From Riverdale Junction to mouth of Weber canyon; also from the mouth of Weber canyon to North Farmington Junction.
  33. ^ Utah State Legislature (1935). "Chapter 37: Designation of State Roads". Session Laws of Utah. Route 49. From Uintah Junction on route 5 to North Farmington Junction on route 1." "Route 60. From Riverdale Junction on route 1 easterly to a junction with route 49."
  34. ^ Utah State Legislature (1931). "Chapter 55: Designation of State Roads". Session Laws of Utah. (69) From Brigham City northerly via Honeyville, Deweyville, Collinston, Beaver Dam Summit, and easterly to Logan.
  35. ^ Rand McNally Auto Road Atlas, 1953
  36. ^ a b Utah State Road Commission (Rand McNally), Utah Official Highway Map, 1956
  37. ^ a b Utah Department of Transportation, Highway Resolutions: "Route 259". (11.8 MB), updated November 2007. Retrieved May 2008
  38. ^ Utah Department of Transportation, Highway Resolutions: "Route 136". (869 KB), updated November 2007. Retrieved May 2008
  39. ^ New York Times, Work Starts Soon on Canyon Bridge, 10 February 1957, p. 68
  40. ^ New York Times, New Bridge Spans Canyon of the Colorado Rover, 1 February 1959, p. X23
  41. ^ Utah Department of Transportation, Highway Resolutions: "Route 89". (18.3 MB), updated October 2007. Retrieved May 2008
  42. ^ Utah Department of Transportation, Highway Resolutions: "Route 1". (35.4 MB), updated September 2007. Retrieved May 2008
  43. ^ Utah Department of Transportation, Highway Resolutions: "Route 258". (5.66 MB), updated November 2007. Retrieved May 2008
  44. ^ Utah Department of Transportation, Highway Resolutions: "Route 120". (1.62 MB), updated November 2007. Retrieved May 2008
  45. ^ Utah Department of Transportation, Highway Resolutions: "Route 119". (5.66 MB), updated November 2007. Retrieved May 2008
  46. ^ Utah Department of Transportation, Highway Resolutions: "Route 135". (5.65 MB), updated November 2007. Retrieved May 2008
  47. ^ Utah Department of Transportation, Highway Resolutions: "Route 24". (17.9 MB), updated September 2007. Retrieved May 2008
  48. ^ Utah Department of Transportation, Highway Resolutions: "Route 28". (10.0 MB), updated October 2007. Retrieved May 2008
  49. ^ Utah Department of Transportation, Highway Resolutions: "Route 132". (2.04 MB), updated November 2007. Retrieved May 2008
  50. ^ Utah Department of Transportation, Highway Resolutions: "Route 8". (16.8 MB), updated September 2007. Retrieved May 2008
  51. ^ Utah Department of Transportation, Highway Resolutions: "Route 271". (3.03 MB), updated December 2007. Retrieved May 2008
  52. ^ Utah Department of Transportation, Highway Resolutions: "Route 169". (5.59 MB), updated November 2007. Retrieved May 2008
  53. ^ Utah Department of Transportation, Highway Resolutions: "Route 49". (4.59 MB), updated October 2007. Retrieved May 2008
  54. ^ Utah Department of Transportation, Highway Resolutions: "Route 50". (5.14 MB), updated October 2007. Retrieved May 2008
  55. ^ Utah Department of Transportation, Highway Resolutions: "Route 84". (6.85 MB), updated November 2007. Retrieved May 2008
  56. ^ Utah Department of Transportation, Highway Resolutions: "Route 85". (3.24 MB), updated November 2007. Retrieved May 2008
  57. ^ Utah Department of Transportation, Highway Resolutions: "Route 13". (4.69 MB), updated February 2008. Retrieved May 2008
  58. ^ Utah Department of Transportation, Highway Resolutions: "Route 16". (2.01 MB), updated September 2007. Retrieved May 2008
  59. ^ Anderson, Mike (November 1, 2022). "New US Highway 89 interchange opens at Antelope Drive". KSL-TV. Bonneville International. Retrieved November 27, 2022.
  60. ^ "Utah Code -- Title 72 -- Chapter 04 -- Section 118 -- Designation of State Highways Act". Utah State Legislature. Retrieved August 6, 2008.

External links

KML is from Wikidata


U.S. Route 89
Previous state:
Arizona
Utah Next state:
Idaho

This page was last edited on 12 October 2023, at 16:08
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