North Carolina Highway 163 Explained

State:NC
Type:NC
Route:163
Map Custom:yes
Map Notes:NC 163 highlighted in red
Length Mi:9.1
Length Round:1
Established:1961
Direction A:West
Terminus A: in West Jefferson
Direction B:East
Terminus B: near Glendale Springs
Counties:Ashe
Previous Type:NC
Previous Route:162
Next Type:NC
Next Route:168

North Carolina Highway 163 (NC 163) is a primary state highway in the U.S. state of North Carolina. The highway serves as a direct route from West Jefferson towards Wilkesboro.

Route description

NC 163 is a two-lane mountain highway that traverses 9.1miles from West Jefferson to NC 16. The highway travels with gliding curves through the valley area, with nearby mountains including Mount Jefferson, Round Knob and Frenches Knob along its edges. A majority of the route parallels Beaver Creek down to its confluence with the South Fork New River. At its eastern terminus, travelers can continue south on NC 16 to the Blue Ridge Parkway, located at Horse Gap (3128feet), or continue down the mountain towards Wilkesboro.

The North Carolina Department of Transportation (NCDOT) measures average daily traffic volumes along many of the roadways it maintains. In 2016, average daily traffic volumes along NC 163 varied from 2,000 vehicles per day west of the Obids Creek crossing to 5,900 vehicles per day near its western terminus.[1] No section of NC 163 is included with the National Highway System, a network of highways in the United States which serve strategic transportation facilities, nor does it connect to the system.[2]

History

Established in 1961 as a new primary routing along an existing secondary road (SR 1002), from West Jefferson to near Horse Gap; little has changed since.[3]

External links

Notes and References

  1. North Carolina Department of Transportation . 2016 . Raleigh. Ashe County, North Carolina . North Carolina Department of Transportation Management Systems and Assessments Unit . 2016 .
  2. Federal Highway Administration. September 30, 2020. Washington, DC. National Highway System: North Carolina . Federal Highway Administration Management Systems and Assessments Unit.
  3. Web site: . NC Route Changes (1961-12-07). PDF . 2 . December 7, 1961 . November 18, 2013.