Auburn Boulevard
Auburn Boulevard is the long-used street name for the highway, formerly part of U.S. Route 40 connecting downtown Sacramento to Roseville. It is a major thoroughfare carrying surface street traffic through the local communities of North Sacramento, Arden-Arcade, Foothill Farms, and Citrus Heights.
Location | Sacramento and Placer counties |
---|---|
Southwest end | El Camino Avenue in Sacramento |
Northeast end |
Auburn Boulevard road was also known as part of both the Lincoln Highway and the Victory Highway during the period from 1915 until the late 1920s when the custom of named interstate highways gave way to the convention of numbered highways in the U.S. Highway System. It served as U.S. 40 in North Sacramento until the completion of the North Sacramento Freeway in the early 1950s, and that section was redesignated Business Route U.S. 40 until the mid-1960s. The section of Auburn Boulevard east of Howe Avenue continued to carry U.S. 40 until the completion of the Roseville Freeway in 1959.
For most of its length, Auburn Boulevard is a four-lane street carrying highway traffic. It is still known for the long chain of motels, trailer parks, restaurants, and gasoline stations that exist along its length that were built in the 20th century to accommodate the travelers of the automobile age.