State: | UT |
Type: | SR |
Route: | 260 |
Section: | 131 |
Map Custom: | yes |
Length Mi: | 4.179 |
Length Round: | 3 |
Length Ref: | [1] |
Established: | 1992 as SR-170; renumbered 1993 |
Direction A: | South |
Terminus A: | south of Aurora |
Direction B: | North |
Terminus B: | north of Aurora |
Previous Type: | SR |
Previous Route: | 259 |
Next Type: | SR |
Next Route: | 261 |
State Route 260 is a highway within Sevier County in central Utah that connects SR-24 to US-50 while passing through the town of Aurora in a span of four miles (6 km).
From its southern terminus at SR-24, the route goes northeast until entering Aurora, where it turns north. It continues this general direction until reaching the northern terminus of US-50.
The state legislature designated State Route 256 in 1955, running south from SR-63 (now US-50) west of Salina through Aurora to SR-11 (US-89, now SR-24).[2] The route was removed from the state highway system in 1969,[3] but the Utah Transportation Commission restored it in 1992, soon after I-70 was completed in the area. At one of the meetings relating to disposition of the former alignment of US-89, Sevier County proposed that the state take over the road, used locally as a shortcut to reach I-15 via US-50. Early plans had it becoming part of SR-24, with the present SR-24 to Salina (old US-89) being given to the county, but this did not happen, and a new designation - State Route 170 - was used for the connection.[4] About 1.5 years later, in October 1993, the commission realized that placing SR-170 and I-70 in close proximity might cause confusion, and changed the number to SR-260.[5] [6]