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State highway in Utah, United States From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
State Route 270 is a short north–south thoroughfare that sits completely within Salt Lake City in Salt Lake County, entirely along South West Temple Street. The southern terminus is at West 900 South, with ramps to and from I-15/I-80 at exit 305D; its northern terminus is at US-89 (West 400 South, formerly SR-186).
After its southern terminus, SR-270 heads north for its entire course, having a dual intersection with SR-269, one eastbound and one westbound. Afterwards it terminates at US-89.
The State Road Commission (now known as the Utah Department of Transportation) designated SR-270 in 1960 as a branch from proposed I-15 to former SR-176 (West 900 South) at South West Temple Street. In 1969, the state legislature extended it north to SR-186 (West 400 South, now US-89).[2]
The entire route is in Salt Lake City, Salt Lake County.
mi[1] | km | Destinations | Notes | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
0.000 | 0.000 | I-15 south / I-80 east – Provo, Cheyenne | Interchange | ||
0.000 | 0.000 | West Temple Street south | Interchange; no southbound entrance | ||
0.006 | 0.0097 | 900 South | Former SR-176 | ||
0.457 | 0.735 | SR-269 east (600 South) | One-way eastbound only | ||
0.607 | 0.977 | SR-269 west (500 South) to I-15 south / I-80 west | One-way westbound only | ||
0.749 | 1.205 | US 89 (400 South) | Formerly SR-186 | ||
1.000 mi = 1.609 km; 1.000 km = 0.621 mi |
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