State: | LA |
Type: | LA |
Route: | 96 |
Map: | LA 96 map.svg |
Map Notes: | Route of LA 96 highlighted in red |
Length Mi: | 19.543 |
Length Ref: | [1] |
Established: | 1955 renumbering |
Tourist: |
|
Direction A: | West |
Terminus A: | in Broussard |
Junction: | in St. Martinville |
Direction B: | East |
Terminus B: | east of Catahoula |
Parishes: | Lafayette, St. Martin |
Previous Type: | LA |
Previous Route: | 95 |
Next Type: | LA |
Next Route: | 97 |
Louisiana Highway 96 (LA 96) is a state highway located in southern Louisiana. It runs 19.54miles in an east–west direction from LA 182 in Broussard to LA 352 east of Catahoula.
The route passes through St. Martinville, the seat of St. Martin Parish, located on Bayou Teche. It connects the city with U.S. Highway 90 (US 90), the main highway through the Teche region, just southeast of Lafayette. East of St. Martinville, LA 96 travels to the small community of Catahoula, which is located on Catahoula Lake at the edge of the Atchafalaya Basin.
From the west, LA 96 begins at an intersection with LA 182 (Old Spanish Trail) in an area within the Broussard city limits known as Billeaud. This intersection is located about 300feet from an interchange with US 90, connecting with the larger adjacent city of Lafayette as well as New Iberia. LA 96 heads east on Terrace Highway and initially passes a few small industrial establishments before entering an area of light suburban development. After 1miles, the highway crosses from Lafayette Parish into St. Martin Parish. Soon afterward, LA 96 crosses over a small coulee as the surroundings become rural. The route makes a sharp dip to the south before proceeding in a southeast direction into the small city of St. Martinville.[2] [3] [4]
LA 96 follows West Port Street through town to an intersection with LA 31 (Main Street), the main north–south thoroughfare. It then turns north to follow LA 31 for one block, flanked by a series of historic storefronts and a large Catholic church. Signs direct motorists to continue straight ahead on LA 31 to reach the Longfellow-Evangeline State Historic Site while LA 96 turns east onto East Bridge Street. Shortly afterward, the highway crosses a swing bridge over Bayou Teche dating from 1942. Two blocks east of the bayou, LA 96 intersects LA 347 (Cemetery Road), signed as the truck route through town. The two highways run concurrent for one block past the local cemetery, and LA 347 turns north onto Resweber Street.[3] [4]
LA 96 continues straight ahead out of St. Martinville and becomes known as Catahoula Highway. It then curves to the northeast at an intersection with LA 345, which heads south toward Loreauville. Less than 2miles later, LA 96 intersects LA 679, which heads through an area known as Coteau Holmes. Over the next 7miles, LA 96 continues in a general northeast direction, curving here and there through rural farmland mixed with light suburban development. Along the way, it passes through points known as Isle Labbe and Catahoula Cove. LA 96 then enters the small community of Catahoula and serves as its main thoroughfare. The route curves to the southeast and briefly parallels a wide section of a bayou called Catahoula Lake. It then turns northeast to cross a bridge over the waterway and proceeds a short distance to its terminus at LA 352, known as Catahoula Levee Road to the north and Bayou Benoit Levee Road to the south. Straight ahead across the levee are the vast wetlands of the Atchafalaya Basin.[3] [4]
LA 96 is generally classified by the Louisiana Department of Transportation and Development (La DOTD) as a rural major collector west of St. Martinville, an urban minor arterial through town, and a rural minor collector east of town. Daily traffic volume in 2013 averaged between 6,500 and 8,100 vehicles west of St. Martinville, peaking at 10,100 at the Bayou Teche bridge. The lighter traveled portion of the route between St. Martinville and Catahoula averaged 2,200 vehicles daily.[5] The posted speed limit is generally 55abbr=onNaNabbr=on, reduced to 25abbr=onNaNabbr=on through St. Martinville and Catahoula.
The portion of LA 96 between St. Martinville and Catahoula is part of the Bayou Teche Byway in the state-designated system of tourist routes known as the Louisiana Scenic Byways.[6]
In the original Louisiana Highway system in use between 1921 and 1955, the modern LA 96 was part of two separate routes.
State: | LA |
Type: | LA 1924 |
Route: | 479 |
Length Mi: | 7.4 |
Formed: | 1928 |
Deleted: | 1955 |
Location: | Billeaud–St. Martinville |
The section from the western terminus to the present intersection with LA 31 in St. Martinville was designated as State Route 479.[7] [8] It was added to the state highway system in 1928 by an act of the state legislature.[9] At this time, the Broussard city limits encompassed a much smaller area, and the location of the western terminus was known as Billeaud. The western terminus was also originally a junction with US 90, which was co-signed throughout the state with the pre-1955 State Route 2. LA 182 now follows the former route of US 90 through the area. The legislative description for Route 479 also reflects the fact that the route originally ended at the Duchamp Plantation Road a few miles west of St. Martinville with State Route 235 continuing the route into town. Road maps from the era generally show the entire length as Route 479, possibly due to a necessary lack of detail at that scale. However, the entire route between Billeaud and St. Martinville was officially designated as Route 479 sometime before the 1955 Louisiana Highway renumbering with Route 235 truncated to the modern intersection of LA 96 and Duchamps Road.[8]
State: | LA |
Type: | LA 1924 |
Route: | 86 |
Length Mi: | 12.1 |
Formed: | 1921 |
Deleted: | 1955 |
Location: | St. Martinville–Catahoula |
The remainder of the present route of LA 96 from St. Martinville to Catahoula was designated as State Route 86 in the pre-1955 system.[8] Route 86 was created in 1921 by an act of the state legislature as one of the original 98 state highway routes.[10] The present swing bridge across Bayou Teche in St. Martinville was built in 1942, replacing an older movable span at that location.[11] [12] On the opposite end of the route, the highway originally ended at the west bank of Lake Catahoula. By the time of the 1955 renumbering, a road had been constructed along the nearby Atchafalaya Basin levee. A bridge was built to connect Route 86 to this road, which was not part of the state highway system at this time.[8] Route 86 otherwise remained the same during the pre-1955 era.
LA 96 was created in 1955 as a collective renumbering of former State Routes 86 and 479.[13] With the 1955 renumbering, the state highway department initially categorized all routes into three classes: "A" (primary), "B" (secondary), and "C" (farm-to-market).[14] This system has since been updated and replaced by a more specific functional classification system.
The route of LA 96 has remained the same since the 1955 renumbering, although the route designations of the highways at both termini have changed.[15] [16] Around 1969, US 90 was moved onto its present four-lane alignment between the Broussard (or Billeaud) interchange and New Iberia. LA 182 was extended over the former route of US 90 and became the new western terminus of LA 96 at this time.[17] [18] At the opposite end of the route, the bridge across Catahoula Lake was replaced by the current span in 1994.[19] In the early 2000s, the road along the Atchafalaya Basin levee marking the eastern terminus of LA 96 had been added to the state highway system as a southern extension of LA 352, which had formerly terminated in Henderson.[20] [21]