Interstate 75

{{Short description|Interstate Highway from Michigan to Florida}}

{{Use mdy dates|date=September 2019}}

{{Use American English|date=April 2022}}

{{Infobox road

|country=USA

|type=I

|route=75

|established=1957

|map={{maplink|frame=yes|plain=yes|frame-align=center|frame-width=290|frame-height=340|type=line|from=Interstate 75.map}}

|map_custom=yes

|map_notes=I-75 highlighted in red

|length_mi=1786.47

|length_ref={{cite web |first= Tony |last= DeSimone |date= October 31, 2002 |url= https://www.fhwa.dot.gov/planning/national_highway_system/interstate_highway_system/routefinder/table01.cfm?redirect |title= Table 1: Main Routes of the Dwight D. Eisenhower National System Of Interstate and Defense Highways as of October 31, 2002 |work= Route Log and Finder List |publisher= Federal Highway Administration |access-date= October 2, 2007 |archive-date= April 22, 2012 |archive-url= https://web.archive.org/web/20120422220808/http://www.fhwa.dot.gov/reports/routefinder/table1.cfm |url-status= live }}

|direction_a=South

|terminus_a={{jct|state=FL|SR|826|Toll|924}} in Miami Lakes, FL

|junction={{plainlist|1=

}}

|direction_b=North

|terminus_b=Canadian border on Int'l Bridge at the Sault Sainte Marie Border Crossing

|states=Florida, Georgia, Tennessee, Kentucky, Ohio, Michigan

}}

Interstate 75 (I-75) is a major north–south Interstate Highway in the Great Lakes and Southeastern regions of the United States. As with most Interstates that end in 5, it is a major cross-country, north–south route, traveling from State Road 826 (SR 826, Palmetto Expressway) and SR 924 (Gratigny Parkway) on the HialeahMiami Lakes border (northwest of Miami, Florida) to Sault Ste. Marie, Michigan, at the Canadian border. It is the second-longest north–south Interstate Highway (after I-95) and the seventh-longest Interstate Highway overall.[https://www.popularmechanics.com/technology/infrastructure/g2827/7-of-the-longest-us-interstates/ 7 of the Longest U.S. Interstates That Are Worth the Road Trip] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20221226011135/https://www.popularmechanics.com/technology/infrastructure/g2827/7-of-the-longest-us-interstates/ |date=December 26, 2022 }}, Popular Mechanics, July 19, 2022

I-75 passes through six different states. The highway runs the length of the Florida peninsula from the Miami area and up the Gulf Coast through Tampa. Farther north in Georgia, I-75 continues on through Macon and Atlanta before running through Chattanooga and Knoxville and the Cumberland Mountains in Tennessee. I-75 crosses Kentucky, passing through Lexington before crossing the Ohio River into Cincinnati, Ohio. In Ohio, the highway runs up the western side through Dayton and Lima before crossing into Michigan north of Toledo. I-75 runs northeasterly along the Lake Erie shoreline and Detroit River into the city of Detroit before turning northwesterly to Flint and northward to the Mackinac Bridge where the freeway crosses the strait between Lakes Huron and Michigan. Farther north, I-75 approaches the Canadian border at Sault Ste. Marie, downriver from Lake Superior, {{convert|1786.5|mi|km}} from its origins near the subtropical Atlantic Ocean.

Route description

{{lengths table|length_ref=}}

|-

|FL || 470.88 || 757.81

|-

|GA || 355.11 || 571.49

|-

|TN || 161.86 || 260.49

|-

|KY || 191.78 || 308.64

|-

|OH || 211.30 || 340.05

|-

|MI || 395.54 || 636.56

|-

|Total || 1786.47 || 2875.04

|}

{{multiple image

| align = right

| direction = vertical

| width = 250

| image1 = Southern terminus of Interstate 75.jpg

| caption1 = Southern terminus of I-75 at the interchange with SR 826, locally known as the Palmetto Expressway

| image2 = I75I85Atlanta.JPG

| caption2 = I-75 cosigned with I-85 in Downtown Atlanta, Georgia

| image3 = Chattahoochee at I-75.jpg

| caption3 = I-75 as it crosses the Chattahoochee River in Atlanta, Georgia

| image4 = Cleveland, TN Scenic View.jpg

| caption4 = Scenic view along I-75 near Cleveland, Tennessee

| image5 = TN I75 North-Exit 49.jpg

| caption5 = I-75 north at exit 49 in McMinn County, Tennessee, in 2009

| image6 = Interstate 75 in Kentucky.JPG

| caption6 = I-75 north of Lexington

| image7 = Downtown Dayton, Ohio.jpg

| caption7 = Aerial view of I-75 and Dayton, Ohio

| image8 = Mackinac Bridge.jpg

| caption8 = Mackinac Bridge in Michigan

| image9 = Soo Locks International Bridge 2010-04 USACE.jpg

| caption9 = Soo Locks and Sault Ste. Marie International Bridge, linking the Upper Peninsula of Michigan to Ontario

}}

=Florida=

{{Main|Interstate 75 in Florida}}

I-75 starts at an interchange with SR 924 and SR 826 on the HialeahMiami Lakes border in suburban Miami. After an intersection with the Homestead Extension of Florida's Turnpike and an interchange with I-595 and the Sawgrass Expressway (SR 869), the Interstate leaves the Miami metropolitan area and turns westward to travel through the Everglades along the tolled Alligator Alley, which brings the highway to the Gulf Coast and Naples, where it again heads north. Passing through Bonita Springs, Fort Myers, and Sarasota, I-75 is six lanes all the way to Georgia. The freeway enters the Tampa Bay area before the interchange with I-275 northbound, which handles St. Petersburg-bound traffic. Within the Tampa metro are three more major junctions: one with the Lee Roy Selmon Expressway which carries traffic into Downtown Tampa, one with I-4 (a turbine interchange) which carries traffic across the center of the state to the East Coast, and another as I-275 traffic defaults back onto northbound. The freeway proceeds to enter suburban portions of Pasco, Hernando, and Sumter counties on its way to Ocala and Gainesville. At Lake City, Florida, I-10, intersects with I-75. Afterward, the northmost stretch of I-75 in Florida exits the Sunshine State into southern Georgia.

=Georgia=

{{Main|Interstate 75 in Georgia}}

I-75 enters Georgia near Lake Park, and it continues northward through the towns of Valdosta, Tifton, and Cordele until it reaches the Macon area, where it intersects with I-16 eastbound toward I-75's route. After Macon, it passes the small town of Forsyth. The freeway reaches no major junctions again until in the Atlanta metropolitan area. The first metropolitan freeway met is I-675, then followed by I-285, Atlanta's only beltway dubbed as the Perimeter Beltway. It crosses inside the I-285 beltway and heads north several miles toward Downtown Atlanta. I-75 then runs concurrently with I-85 due north over the Downtown Connector through the central business district of Atlanta, where it intersects with I-20. The areas where I-85 and I-75 run concurrently are some of the most traffic-prone Interstate Highways in the nation. After the two Interstates split, I-75 diverts from I-85 and heads toward the northwest suburbs of Atlanta, with the major cities being Marietta and Kennesaw that it bypasses. To the northwest of Marietta, the highway runs concurrently with I-575. After the interchange with I-575, the highway leaves the Atlanta metro area and traverses the Blue Ridge Mountains in the north Georgia region as it heads toward Chattanooga.

=Tennessee=

{{Main|Interstate 75 in Tennessee}}

The freeway enters Tennessee directly in the Chattanooga metropolitan area, where it intersects with I-24. Exiting Chattanooga to the northeast, I-75 passes through an area known for dense fog. Twelve people were killed and 42 were injured in a 1990 I-75 fog disaster on that stretch of I-75 in heavy fog on December 11, 1990.{{Cite news |author= Staff |title= Safety Recommendation in reply to H-92-92 |publisher= National Transportation Safety Board |date= October 28, 1992 |url= https://www.ntsb.gov/recs/letters/1992/H92_92.pdf |archive-url=https://ghostarchive.org/archive/20221009/https://www.ntsb.gov/recs/letters/1992/H92_92.pdf |archive-date=2022-10-09 |url-status=live |access-date= December 28, 2008 }} I-75 does not meet any other freeways until it overlaps I-40 near Farragut and heads eastbound. Together, they enter the outskirts of Knoxville, where I-75 overlaps itself with a different road, this time I-640, but only for a short time. When the two meet I-275, I-75 encounters some of its highest points of elevation through the Cumberland Mountains, cutting through the uppermost peaks and ridges.

=Kentucky=

{{Main|Interstate 75 in Kentucky}}

I-75 continues northbound through the hilly terrain of the Cumberland Plateau region of Kentucky, passing through London and Richmond and eventually reaching Lexington, where it briefly runs concurrently with I-64 before splitting off in the direction of Georgetown. Afterward, the route heads in the direction of Ohio. Near Walton, I-71 runs concurrently with I-75 for the next {{Convert|20|mi|km}} or so and heads toward Cincinnati. The two concurrent Interstates then make an interchange with I-275, the Cincinnati beltway. After passing through Covington, the I-71/I-75 highway traverses the Ohio River via the lower level of the Brent Spence Bridge and continues into Downtown Cincinnati.

=Ohio=

{{Main|Interstate 75 in Ohio}}

Immediately after entering Cincinnati, I-75 diverges from I-71, remaining generally due north through the Cincinnati metro area while I-71 curves more to the east and northeast through downtown Cincinnati and its surrounding suburbs. I-74, Ohio State Route 562, and Ohio State Route 126 all intersect the freeway as it makes its way northward. After another interchange with the I-275 beltway, the freeway continues within the metro area, passing through Middletown and heading toward Dayton, where I-675, I-70, and U.S. Route 35 have interchanges with I-75. The interchange of I-75 with I-70 is known as the Freedom Veterans Crossroads.{{cite press release |first= Brian |last= Keeter |date= October 25, 2004 |url= https://www.fhwa.dot.gov/pressroom/fhwa0418.cfm |title= Nation's Top Highway Official Dedicates Key Dayton, Ohio, Interstate Interchange to State's Military Personnel |publisher= Federal Highway Administration |access-date= March 26, 2011 |archive-date= June 24, 2011 |archive-url= https://web.archive.org/web/20110624000517/http://www.fhwa.dot.gov/pressroom/fhwa0418.htm |url-status= live }} After exiting the city of Dayton, I-75 makes its way northbound through Ohio, passing through smaller cities of Troy, Sidney, Wapakoneta, Lima, Findlay and Bowling Green before finally reaching Toledo located on the western shore of Lake Erie and the border of Michigan. I-75 meets the I-475 interchange in the southern suburbs of Toledo in Perrysburg and then I-80, I-90, and the Ohio Turnpike. As the interstate highway passes through downtown Toledo, I-475 meets with I-75 again just north of the downtown area of Toledo. It then continues through some industrial areas as it progresses north before approaching I-280, which is the last major junction in Ohio. I-75 then passes by the Lake Erie neighborhoods of Shoreland and Point Place, just before entering the US state of Michigan with the sign welcoming motorists to Michigan.

=Michigan=

{{Main|Interstate 75 in Michigan}}

Upon entering Michigan, I-75 follows the northwestern shore of Lake Erie, passing through the residential neighborhoods of Toledo and Luna Pier until about Monroe in which it then heads northeast to enter Detroit. The freeway makes an interchange with I-275 in northern Monroe County. On a further note, it does not meet with any major junctions until in Downtown Detroit. Once near downtown, I-75 meets several interchanges: an interchange that leads into Canada via the Ambassador Bridge (international bridge border crossing) to Windsor, Ontario; an interchange with I-375; I-94; I-96; M-10; M-8. I-696 also intersects I-75 in the northern metro area. When the freeway reaches Pontiac, there is a junction with M-59 and in Flint further northward. It meets I-475 and I-69 and overlaps U.S. Route 23 (US 23). The Interstate then heads north toward Saginaw where I-675 acts as a spur route into the city. Further north in Bay City, US 10 provides access to Midland as well as downtown Bay City. When it nears Standish, US 23 diverts from I-75 to Lake Huron, where it heads further north. The last major interchange in the state of Michigan before it crosses the international border into Canada is at 4 Mile Road just south of Grayling where US 127 ends with traffic merging onto northbound I-75 and southbound taking drivers through the center of the state. At Mackinaw City, I-75 makes an interchange with US 31 and US 23 before crossing the Mackinac Bridge to reach the Upper Peninsula of Michigan. I-75 is the only Interstate located in the Upper Peninsula of Michigan and it continues until it crosses the Canadian border via the Sault Ste. Marie International Bridge.

History

This limited access highway that was planned in the 1950s roughly follows the general route of many older at-grade highways, including US 2, US 27, US 25, and US 41, among others. Some of these older US Highways (several of which are still in existence) previously had replaced the eastern route of the old Dixie Highway.{{citation needed|date=July 2024}}

I-75 was planned to end in Tampa, Florida, in the original plan for {{convert|41,000|mi|km}} of Interstate Highways. However, beginning in the 1960s, there was a huge growth in the population of Southwest Florida (Sarasota, Fort Myers, Naples, Cape Coral, etc.), hence the need for new highways, especially a north–south freeway, as well as one connecting Florida's Gulf Coast to South Florida.{{cite news |title= West Coast Turnpike Study Ordered By Kirk |work= St. Petersburg Times |date= April 20, 1967 |page= 1B}} At first, Florida state legislators proposed a toll in the new highway, and, by 1968, it was decided that the federal government would pay 90 percent toward the extension of I-75 to southwestern and southeastern Florida.{{cite news |title= I-75 Extension Should Kill Toll Road - Cramer |work= Daytona Beach Morning Journal |date= August 16, 1968 |page= 16}} This included subsuming a toll highway from Naples to the Fort Lauderdale area, the Alligator Alley, and furthermore to connect this expressway with I-95 in North Miami—though due to some local opposition, I-75 presently ends a few miles short of I-95.

I-75 was completed in Kentucky in 1970. The last segment in Michigan opened to traffic on November 1, 1973.{{cite news |url = https://www.newspapers.com/clip/21756812/around_the_state_west_branch/ |title = Around the State: West Branch |work = Traverse City Record-Eagle |agency = United Press International |date = November 2, 1973 |page = 3 |access-date = July 10, 2018 |oclc = 30098364 |via = Newspapers.com |archive-date = July 11, 2018 |archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20180711065438/https://www.newspapers.com/clip/21756812/around_the_state_west_branch/ |url-status = live }} The last section of I-75 in Tennessee was completed on December 20, 1974.{{cite news |author = |title = Dunn Opens 96 Interstate Miles |url = https://www.newspapers.com/newspage/111605241/ |page = 32 |work = The Tennessean |location = Nashville |date = December 21, 1974 |access-date = April 18, 2018 |via = Newspapers.com |archive-date = June 14, 2019 |archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20190614103543/https://www.newspapers.com/newspage/111605241/ |url-status = live }} On December 21, 1977, I-75 was completed from Tampa to Sault Ste. Marie with its final segment opening between northern Marietta, Georgia, and Cartersville, Georgia. It was estimated to have cost $3.5 billion in 1977 dollars (equivalent to ${{formatprice|{{inflation|US-GDP|3500000000|1977}}}} in {{inflation-year|US-GDP}}{{inflation-fn|US-GDP}}) to build the original section.{{cite news |last=Ayres |first=B. Drummond |date=December 22, 1977 |title=I-75 Link Opens First Full Interstate Route |page=14 |url=https://www.nytimes.com/1977/12/22/archives/i75-link-opens-first-full-interstate-route.html |work=The New York Times |accessdate=December 4, 2021 |archive-date=December 4, 2021 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20211204103657/https://www.nytimes.com/1977/12/22/archives/i75-link-opens-first-full-interstate-route.html |url-status=live }} The final stretch of I-75 in South Florida was completed in 1986 in Miami-Dade and Broward counties, and the last stretch to receive the signs for I-75 was the reconstructed (rebuilt and widened) Alligator Alley on November 25, 1992.{{cite web |author= Staff |url= https://highways.dot.gov/highway-history/interstate-system/50th-anniversary |title= Previous Interstate Facts of the Day |work= Celebrating the Eisenhower Interstate Highway System |publisher= Federal Highway Administration |access-date= May 11, 2010 |archive-date= April 26, 2006 |archive-url= https://web.archive.org/web/20060426084506/http://www.fhwa.dot.gov/interstate/previousfacts.cfm |url-status= live }}

On September 7, 2024, the Interstate 75 Kentucky Shooting occurred near London, Kentucky in which multiple shots were fired at cars passing by, injuring 5.

Junction list

;Florida

: {{jct|state=FL|FL|826|Toll|924}} on the HialeahMiami Lakes city line

: {{jct|country=USA|I|595|dab1=Florida}} on the DavieSunrise-Weston tripoint

: {{jct|country=USA|US|27}} in Weston

: {{jct|country=USA|US|17}} on the SolanaCleveland CDP line

: {{jct|country=USA|US|301}} in Ellenton

: {{jct|country=USA|I|275|dab1=Florida}} east-northeast of Terra Ceia

: {{jct|country=USA|US|301}} in Palm River-Clair Mel

: {{jct|country=USA|I|4}} in Mango

: {{jct|country=USA|I|275|dab1=Florida}} on the LutzWesley Chapel CDP line

: {{jct|country=USA|US|98}} west-northwest of Ridge Manor

: {{jct|state=FL|FLTP}} southeast of Ocala

: {{jct|country=USA|US|27}} in Ocala

: {{jct|country=USA|US|441}} in Alachua

: {{jct|country=USA|US|41|US|441}} in Ellisville

: {{jct|country=USA|US|90}} in Lake City

: {{jct|country=USA|I|10}} west-northwest of Five Points

: {{jct|country=USA|US|129}} north-northeast of Suwannee Springs

;Georgia

: {{jct|country=USA|US|84|US|221}} in Valdosta

: {{jct|country=USA|US|41}} northwest of Valdosta. The highways travel concurrently to Hahira.

: {{jct|country=USA|US|82}} in Tifton

: {{jct|country=USA|US|41}} in Tifton

: {{jct|country=USA|US|280}} in Cordele

: {{jct|country=USA|US|41}} in Unadilla

: {{jct|country=USA|US|41}} in Perry

: {{jct|country=USA|US|341}} in Perry

: {{jct|country=USA|I|475|dab1=Georgia}} southwest of Macon

: {{jct|country=USA|US|41}} in Macon

: {{jct|country=USA|US|80}} in Macon

: {{jct|country=USA|I|16}} in Macon

: {{jct|country=USA|US|23}} northwest of Macon

: {{jct|country=USA|I|475|dab1=Georgia}} northwest of Bolingbroke

: {{jct|country=USA|I|675|dab1=Georgia}} in Stockbridge

: {{jct|country=USA|US|19|US|41}} west of Morrow

: {{jct|country=USA|I|285|dab1=Georgia}} in Forest Park

: {{jct|country=USA|US|19|US|41}} on the AtlantaHapeville city line

: {{jct|country=USA|I|85}} in Atlanta. The highways travel concurrently through Atlanta.

: {{jct|country=USA|I|20}} in Atlanta

: {{jct|country=USA|US|29|US|78|US|278}} in Atlanta

: {{jct|country=USA|I|85}} in Atlanta. End of the concurrency with I-85.

: {{jct|country=USA|US|41}} in Atlanta

: {{jct|country=USA|US|41}} in Atlanta

: {{jct|country=USA|I|285|dab1=Georgia}} in Cumberland

: {{jct|country=USA|I|575}} north-northwest of Marietta

: {{jct|country=USA|US|411}} in Cartersville

: {{jct|country=USA|US|41}} in Resaca

: {{jct|country=USA|US|41|US|76}} in Dalton

: {{jct|country=USA|US|41|US|76}} southeast of Ringgold

;Tennessee

: {{jct|country=USA|US|41|US|76}} in East Ridge

: {{jct|country=USA|I|24}} on the East Ridge–Chattanooga city line

: {{jct|country=USA|US|11|US|64}} in Chattanooga. The highways travel concurrently to north of [[Collegedale, Tennessee|

Collegedale]].

: {{jct|country=USA|US|74}} in Cleveland

: {{jct|country=USA|US|321}} in Lenoir City

: {{jct|country=USA|I|40}} west of Farragut. The highways travel concurrently to Knoxville.

: {{jct|country=USA|I|140|dab1=Tennessee}} in Knoxville

: {{jct|country=USA|US|11|US|70}} in Knoxville

: {{jct|country=USA|I|40|I|640}} in Knoxville. I-75/I-640 travels concurrently through Knoxville.

: {{jct|country=USA|US|25W}} in Knoxville. The highways travel concurrently through Knoxville.

: {{jct|country=USA|I|275|dab1=Tennessee|I|640|US|25W}} in Knoxville

: {{jct|country=USA|US|441}} in Rocky Top

: {{jct|country=USA|US|25W}} in Rocky Top. The highways travel concurrently to Caryville.

: {{jct|country=USA|US|25W}} in Jellico

;Kentucky

: {{jct|country=USA|US|25W}} in Goldbug

: {{jct|country=USA|US|25W}} in Corbin

: {{jct|country=USA|US|25}} east-southeast of Mount Vernon

: {{jct|country=USA|US|25}} in Mount Vernon

: {{jct|country=USA|US|25}} in Richmond

: {{jct|country=USA|US|25|US|421}} south-southeast of Lexington. The highways travel concurrently to Lexington.

: {{jct|country=USA|US|60}} in Lexington

: {{jct|country=USA|I|64}} in Lexington. The highways travel concurrently through Lexington.

: {{jct|country=USA|US|27|US|68}} in Lexington

: {{jct|country=USA|US|460}} in Georgetown

: {{jct|country=USA|US|62}} in Georgetown

: {{jct|country=USA|I|71}} in Walton. The highways travel concurrently to Cincinnati, Ohio.

: {{jct|country=USA|US|42|US|127}} in Florence

: {{jct|country=USA|I|275|dab1=Ohio–Indiana–Kentucky}} in Erlanger

: {{jct|country=USA|US|25|US|42|US|127}} in Fort Mitchell

: {{jct|country=USA|US|25|US|42|US|127}} in Covington

;Ohio

: {{jct|country=USA|US|22|US|27|US|42|US|52|US|127}} in Cincinnati

: {{jct|country=USA|US|50}} in Cincinnati

: {{jct|country=USA|US|27|US|52|US|127}} in Cincinnati. I-75/US 27/US 52 travel concurrently through Cincinnati.

: {{jct|country=USA|I|74|US|27|US|52|US|127}} in Cincinnati

: {{jct|country=USA|I|275|dab1=Ohio–Indiana–Kentucky}} in Sharonville

: {{jct|country=USA|I|675|dab1=Ohio}} southeast of Miamisburg

: {{jct|country=USA|US|35}} in Dayton

: {{jct|country=USA|I|70}} in Vandalia

: {{jct|country=USA|US|40}} in Vandalia

: {{jct|country=USA|US|36}} in Piqua

: {{jct|country=USA|US|33}} in Wapakoneta

: {{jct|country=USA|US|68}} in Findlay

: {{jct|country=USA|US|224}} in Findlay

: {{jct|country=USA|US|6}} in Bowling Green

: {{jct|country=USA|I|475|dab1=Ohio|US|23}} in Perrysburg. I-75/US 23 travels concurrently through Perrysburg.

: {{jct|country=USA|US|20|US|23}} in Perrysburg

: {{jct|country=USA|I|80|I|90}} in Rossford

: {{jct|country=USA|US|24}} in Toledo

: {{jct|country=USA|I|475|dab1=Ohio}} in Toledo

: {{jct|country=USA|I|280|dab1=Ohio}} in Toledo

;Michigan

: {{jct|country=USA|I|275|dab1=Michigan}} north-northeast of Monroe

: {{jct|country=USA|US|24}} in Taylor

: {{jct|country=USA|I|96}} in Detroit

: {{jct|country=USA|I|375|dab1=Michigan}} in Detroit

: {{jct|country=USA|I|94}} in Detroit

: {{jct|country=USA|I|696}} on the FerndaleHazel ParkRoyal OakMadison Heights city line

: {{jct|country=USA|US|24}} west-northwest of Clarkston

: {{jct|country=USA|I|475|dab1=Michigan}} west of Grand Blanc

: {{jct|country=USA|US|23}} south-southwest of Flint. The highways travel concurrently to southwest of Standish.

: {{jct|country=USA|I|69}} in Flint

: {{jct|country=USA|I|475|dab1=Michigan}} west of Beecher

: {{jct|country=USA|I|675|dab1=Michigan}} east of Saginaw

: {{jct|country=USA|I|675|dab1=Michigan}} north-northwest of Zilwaukee

: {{jct|country=USA|US|10}} west of Bay City

: {{jct|country=USA|US|127}} south of Grayling

: {{jct|country=USA|US|31}} north-northeast of Carp Lake

: {{jct|country=USA|US|23}} in Mackinaw City

: {{jct|country=USA|US|2}} in St. Ignace

: Sault Ste. Marie International Bridge at the Canada–United States border in Sault Ste. Marie

{{cite book |author = Rand McNally |year = 2014 |title = The Road Atlas |edition = Walmart |location = Chicago |publisher = Rand McNally |pages = 26–29, 43, 50–51, 78, 80, 95|isbn = 978-0-528-00771-2}}

Auxiliary routes

References

{{Reflist}}

{{refbegin}}

  • {{cite map |author= Rand McNally |author-link= Rand McNally |title= The Road Atlas |location=Chicago |publisher= Rand McNally |year= 2005 |edition= 2005 |isbn= 9780886408473}}
  • {{cite web |author= Transportation Statistics Office |url= http://www.dot.state.fl.us/planning/statistics/gis/default.htm |archive-url= https://web.archive.org/web/20070206112520/http://www.dot.state.fl.us/planning/statistics/gis/default.htm |title= GIS Data / Map Directory |publisher= Florida Department of Transportation |archive-date= February 6, 2007}}
  • {{cite web |author= Pavement Management Office |date= February 2, 2007 |url= http://www.dot.state.fl.us/PavementManagement/pcs/pcs_rpts.htm |title= Pavement Management Reports |publisher= Florida Department of Transportation |archive-url= https://web.archive.org/web/20070203002808/http://www.dot.state.fl.us/pavementmanagement/pcs/pcs_rpts.htm |archive-date= February 3, 2007 }}
  • {{cite report|author=Office of Transportation Data |publisher=Georgia Department of Transportation |title=Interstate Mileage Report (438 Report) |year=2003 |url=http://www.dot.state.ga.us/DOT/plan-prog/transportation_data/400reports/2003/dpp438_2003.pdf |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20060218010013/http://www.dot.state.ga.us/DOT/plan-prog/transportation_data/400reports/2003/dpp438_2003.pdf |archive-date=February 18, 2006 }}

{{refend}}