U.S. Route 64 in New Mexico explained

Country:USA
Type:US
Route:64
Map Custom:yes
Map Notes:US 64 highlighted in red
Maint:ADOT and NMDOT
Length Mi:429.912
Length Notes:4.157miles in Arizona[1]
425.755miles in New Mexico[2]
Established:November 11, 1926[3]
History:AZ: Designated December 2, 1988
NM: Designated November 11, 1926
Direction A:West
Terminus A: in Teec Nos Pos, AZ
Junction:
Direction B:East
Terminus B: at the Oklahoma state line
Counties:AZ: Apache
NM: San Juan, Rio Arriba, Taos, Colfax, Union
System1:
State:AZ
System2:
State:NM

U.S. Route 64 (US 64) is a U.S. Numbered Highway that runs from the Four Corners area in Arizona to the east coast of North Carolina. In Arizona, the highway starts at U.S. Route 160 (US 160) heading southeast for 4.5miles before entering New Mexico near the town of Beclabito. Through New Mexico the highway passes through Shiprock, Bloomfield, Tierra Amarilla and Taos, sharing a short concurrency with I-25 near Raton, before heading east through Clayton to the Oklahoma state line.

Route description

U.S. Route 64 (US 64) starts at an intersection with US 160 at Teec Nos Pos on the Navajo Nation. The highway then heads southeast passing an intersection with Bureau of Indian Affairs Route 5028 (BIA 5028) at the edge of town across the highway from the Teec Nos Pos Trading Post. The highway then cuts through a mesa before making a slight curve south by southeast. Past the mesa, US 64 passes through sparse ranch land, intersecting BIA 5111 before turning slightly eastward. After passing an intersection with BIA 5113, US 64 crosses the New Mexico state line.

Entering from Arizona, US 64 continues into the town of Beclabito, traveling to Shiprock. There US 64 makes a concurrency with US 491 for 0.5miles. US 64 continues east into the city of Farmington, where it is multiplexed with unsigned State Road 5001 between junctions with US 64 Business. Then it passes through Bloomfield, followed by the towns of Blanco and Navajo City. After entering the Rocky Mountains, US 64 has a concurrency with US 84 from Chromo Mountain to Tierra Amarilla.

The highway then passes through Tres Piedras before crossing via the Rio Grande Gorge Bridge and heading into Taos. US 64 continues through the towns of Eagle Nest and Cimarron before eventually reaching I-25. The two highways bring up a short concurrency before US 64 turns northwest off of I-25 in Raton, then continuing to travel east, this time bringing up a concurrency with US 87 through the towns of Capulin, Des Moines, Grenville, and Mount Dora. The two highways split in Clayton, and US 64 forms another new concurrency with US 56 and US 412. The three highways barely touch the Texas Panhandle before continuing into Oklahoma.

History

When originally designated on November 11, 1926, U.S. Route 64 (US 64) had its western terminus at US 385 in Capulin, New Mexico. In 1933, US 64 had been extended to end at US 85 in Santa Fe, New Mexico, replacing all of the previously designated US 485 between Raton and Santa Fe, through Taos.[4] On November 11, 1972, US 64 was truncated from Santa Fe to Taos, then extended west through Tres Piedras, Brazos, Monero and Bloomfield to US 550 in Farmington. The new routing replaced all of New Mexico State Road 111 (NM 111) and NM 553 between Taos and Tierra Amarilla. US 64 now shared a concurrency with US 84 between Tierra Amarilla and a highway junction 4miles east of Monero. US 64 then replaced all of NM 17 between US 84 and US 550 in Farmington.[5] On December 2, 1988, or sometime after that date, US 64 was further extended over Arizona State Route 504 and New Mexico State Road 504 to a junction with US 160 in Teec Nos Pos, Arizona near Four Corners. Today, the western terminus of US 64 remains at Teec Nos Pos.

New Mexico State Road 5001

Country:USA
State:NM
County:San Juan
Type:NM
Route:5001
Location:Farmington, New Mexico
Length Mi:3.244
Length Ref:[6]

State Road 5001 (NM 5001) is an unsigned 3.244adj=midNaNadj=mid state highway. For its entire length, NM 5001 is multiplexed with US 64, and is also known as Murray Drive. NM 5001's western terminus is at US 64 Bus. (Main Street) in Farmington, and the eastern terminus is at US 64 Bus. (Broadway Avenue) in Farmington. NM 5001 is one of only three four-digit state highways in New Mexico (the others being NM 1113 and NM 6563).[2]

Future

Several plans involve safety improvements in US 64 at its intersection with NM 68.[7]

Related route

Farmington business loop

State:NM
Type:US-Bus
Route:64
Location:Farmington, New Mexico
Length Mi:3.1
Length Round:1

U.S. Route 64 Business (US 64 Bus.) goes through downtown Farmington, via Main Street and Broadway Avenue. Mainline US 64 is signed as both Bypass and Truck route, going south around Farmington, via Murray Drive.[8]

Notes and References

  1. Web site: 2013 ADOT Highway Log . Arizona Department of Transportation . Arizona Department of Transportation . Arizona Department of Transportation . July 1, 2019 .
  2. Web site: Posted Route–Legal Description . 20 . . March 16, 2010 . October 17, 2018 .
  3. . . November 11, 1926 . United States System of Highways Adopted for Uniform Marking by the American Association of State Highway Officials . 1:7,000,000 . Washington, DC . . 32889555 . November 7, 2013 . . amp .
  4. New Mexico State Highway Department . New Mexico Department of Transportation . Official Road Map of New Mexico . 1933 . 1:1,584,000 . New Mexico State Highway Department . B.C. Broome . Santa Fe . August 2, 2019 . University of New Mexico Digital Collections .
  5. New Mexico State Highway Department . Official Road Map of New Mexico . 1973 . 1:1,267,200 . Rand McNally & Co. . Rand McNally & Co. . Chicago .
  6. Web site: New Mexico Department of Transportation . New Mexico Department of Transportation . Posted Route: Legal Description . 91 . New Mexico Department of Transportation . March 16, 2010 . October 25, 2018 .
  7. Web site: District 5 . n.d. . District 5 Projects . dead . New Mexico Department of Transportation . https://web.archive.org/web/20160813192056/http://dot.state.nm.us:80/en/ProjectsD5.html . August 13, 2016 . December 22, 2015 .
  8. Web site: Riner . Steve . May 21, 2010 . U.S. Highways in New Mexico . Steve Riner . March 2, 2011 .