Utah State Route 24 Explained

State:UT
Type:SR
Route:24
Alternate Name:Capitol Reef Scenic Byway
Section:108
Length Mi:160.294
Length Round:3
Established:1910 as a state highway; 1927 as SR-24
Direction A:West
Terminus A: in Salina
Junction: in Sigurd
at Plateau Junction
near Fish Lake
near Loa
in Torrey
in Hanksville
Direction B:East
Terminus B: near Green River
Counties:Sevier, Piute, Wayne, Emery
Previous Type:SR
Previous Route:23
Next Type:SR
Next Route:25
Map Custom:yes
Map Notes:Map of State Route 24

State Route 24 (SR-24) is a state highway in south central Utah which runs south from Salina through Sevier County then east through Wayne County and north east through Emery County. At a total of 163.294 miles (262.796 km), it is the longest contiguous state route in Utah. A portion of the highway has been designated the Capitol Reef Scenic Byway as part of the Utah Scenic Byways program.[1]

Route description

The highway starts at US-50 near Salina and ends at I-70 near Green River, taking a 163miles scenic route between the Fishlake and Dixie National Forests then through Capitol Reef National Park, along the eastern side of the San Rafael Reef passing Goblin Valley State Park and meeting I-70 again near Green River. Along the way, it passes through the towns of Loa, Lyman, Bicknell, Torrey and Hanksville.

The Mars Society established the Mars Desert Research Station just outside Hanksville, due to its Mars-like terrain .

The north easterly section past the San Rafael Reef is open desert with distant views of the Henry and La Sal Mountains.

Traffic volume

The Average Daily Traffic (AADT) for SR-24 is at its greatest between Salina and Sigurd, where it varies between 3,085 down to 1,500 at the Junction with SR-118. Past that point, the volume of traffic varies greatly, reaching peaks where the highway coincides with the main streets in the several towns through which it passes. In Loa, the AADT reaches 2,080, in Torrey, it peaks at 1,230. Then the traffic dies down to 295 by the time SR-24 arrives back at I-70.

History

The road from SR-11 (by 1926 US-89) at Sigurd southeast and east to Hanksville became a state highway in 1910 (Wayne County) and 1912 (Piute and Sevier Counties).[2] The number was assigned in 1927 by the state legislature,[3] and in 1935 it was extended northeast from Hanksville to US-6 near Green River.[4]

A realignment in 1961 bypassed Capitol Reef Road between Fruita and Caineville; as part of the construction of I-70, the east end was moved west to that highway's exit 149 in 1964. SR-24 was extended north from its west end over former US-89 to present-day US-89 in 1969, and cut back slightly to its current end at US-50 in the 1977 renumbering.[2] (The 1969 extension was signed as part of US-89 until 1992, soon after I-70 was completed.[5])

For a time in the 1950s and 1960s, there was also a State Route 24A, which was a short spur of SR-24 from Sigurd southwest along Main Street to SR-11/US-89.[6] [7]

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Capitol Reef Scenic Byway . Utah.com . 2013-10-18.
  2.  , updated September 2007, accessed May 2008
  3. 1927. 24. From Sigurd southeasterly via Plateau Junction, Loa and Fruita to Hanksville..
  4. 1935. Route 24. From Sigurd southeasterly via Plateau Junction, Loa and Fruita to Hanksville, thence northeasterly to Green River on route 8..
  5.  , updated November 2007, accessed May 2008
  6. 1963. 163. Route 24-A. From route 24 in Sigurd southwesterly to route 11..
  7. Web site: USGS Topographic Map. . Historic Aerials . USGS . 25 May 2019 . 1969.