List of roads in Lexington, Kentucky explained

The roads of Lexington, Kentucky include Interstate 64 and Interstate 75, as their junction is near the city. There are five U.S. highways serving the city. A beltway surrounds central Lexington, while numerous state routes and connector roads fill in the transportation gap. The zero milestone[1] for Lexington is the intersection of East and West Main Streets and North and South Limestone Streets. A camel sculpture dating to 1926 marks the point for the AAA.

Interstate Highways

Note: Lexington's urban services boundary is adjacent to the junction of I-64 and I-75. The city's downtown, however, is not served by any controlled-access facilities.

U.S. Highways

Route numberLocal street name(s)
Georgetown Road, Newtown Pike, West Main Street, East Main Street, East Vine Street, Richmond Road, Old Richmond Road
Nicholasville Road, South Limestone, Virginia Avenue, Broadway, Paris Pike
Versailles Road, Oliver Lewis Way, West Main Street, West Vine Street, East Vine Street, Midland Avenue, Winchester Road
Harrodsburg Road, Broadway, Paris Pike
Note: Its intersection at New Circle Road has been redesigned as a "diverging diamond" to alleviate traffic congestion and reduce accidents.
Leestown Road, West Main Street, East Main Street, East Vine Street, Richmond Road, Old Richmond Road

Kentucky state highways

City and county routes

Unbuilt

The East-West Expressway was a primary feature of the Wilbur Smith Plan of 1962. The interstate-quality highway would have connected the western fringe of downtown to the eastern edge, and have been located between High and Maxwell Streets.[5] The plan also included a widened 2nd Street, which would have been a six-lane thoroughfare north of the central business district. Another proposal included a freeway in the Vine Street corridor after the removal of the Chesapeake and Ohio Railway tracks.[6] The design alternatives included a depressed, at-grade, and elevated highway. Each proposal was discarded as impractical, as each plan included insufficient ramp access, blockage of downtown traffic, and a necessity to renovate adjoining buildings to raise the floor levels.

External links

Notes and References

  1. http://siris-artinventories.si.edu/ipac20/ipac.jsp?uri=full=3100001~!332479!0 Zero Milestone Sculpture
  2. Web site: Liberty/Todds Road Improvement Project. July 8, 2013. August 12, 2008. dead. https://web.archive.org/web/20130623005142/http://www.lexingtonky.gov/index.aspx?page=1389. June 23, 2013.
  3. Honeycutt, Valarie. "LEXINGTON TO GET $24 MILLION FOR ROADS STATE TO HELP CITY LAUNCH MORE THAN A DOZEN PROJECTS." Lexington Herald-Leader, September 5, 1986. January 10, 2007.
  4. Davis, Merlene. "SEVERAL PROJECTS HELPING TO EASE AREA'S TRAFFIC WOES." Lexington Herald-Leader, January 27, 1985. January 10, 2007.
  5. Book: Design Plan for Downtown Lexington, Kentucky . City County Planning Commission . 1966 .
  6. Book: The Lexington Downtown Plan . Lexington and Fayette County, Kentucky Planning Commission . 1966 .