Kentucky Route 1928

Kentucky Route 1928 (KY 1928) was a state highway in the city of Lexington in Fayette County, Kentucky. The highway ran 0.170 miles (0.274 km) along Jefferson Street from U.S. Route 60 (US 60) east to US 25 and US 421.

Kentucky Route 1928
Jefferson Street
Route information
Maintained by KYTC
Length0.170 mi[1] (0.274 km)
Major junctions
West end US 60 in Lexington
East end US 25 / US 421 in Lexington
Location
CountiesFayette
Highway system
KY 1927KY 1929

Route description

KY 1928 mostly consisted of a four-lane viaduct across a parking lot for Rupp Arena to the southeast. The highway's western terminus was a right-in/right-out intersection with westbound US 60 (High Street). There was no direct access to and from eastbound US 60, which followed Maxwell Street in the U.S. Highway's one-way pair. KY 1928's only intermediate intersection was with KY 1681 (Manchester Street), which entered the three-legged intersection on its own bridge segment. KY 1928's northern terminus was Main Street, on which US 25 and US 421 run concurrently. Jefferson Street continued east as a municipally maintained street through the Western Suburb Historic District. The Kentucky Transportation Cabinet classified KY 1928 as a state secondary highway.[1][2]

History

The Kentucky Transportation Cabinet reclassified KY 1928 from a primary state highway to a secondary state highway through a January 23, 2011, official order.[3]

On November 16, 2017, the Kentucky Transportation Cabinet and the Lexington-Fayette County Urban Government reached an agreement to swap several streets in the Lexington metro area. KY 1928 was turned over to the city on March 16, 2018, resulting in its decommission. The decommissioning was centered around the city's desire to demolish the Jefferson Street bridge over a parking lot.[4] The swap also gave the section of KY 1681 from KY 922 to Jefferson Street (former KY 1928), all of KY 1723, the section of US 27 along South Limestone, Winslow, Upper, and Bolivar Streets (US 27 was rerouted on Virginia Street (which was formerly part of KY 1723, but this section of KY 1723 was decommissioned by 1980) and following US 68 instead), the section of KY 1974 from KY 4 to South Limestone (the former route of US 27), and the section of US 60 along High Street and Maxwell Street (US 60 was rerouted on Oliver Lewis Way) to the city. As part of the swap, KY 1878 was created, following Citation Boulevard from US 421 to KY 922. The bridge was closed down on the week of October 23, 2018, and is now demolished.[5]

Major intersections

The entire route was in Lexington, Fayette County.

mi[1]kmDestinationsNotes
0.0000.000 US 60 west (High Street)Western terminus; no direct access to eastbound US 60
0.0400.064 KY 1681 west (Manchester Street)
0.1700.274 US 25 (Main Street) / US 421 / Jefferson Street eastEastern terminus
1.000 mi = 1.609 km; 1.000 km = 0.621 mi
gollark: This can be disrupted somewhat by the random choice player, but they'll cooperate with me so meh.
gollark: Which means that, after mine finishes executing, the next 5 RNG calls should return 0.
gollark: Er, the maximum being 5.
gollark: But *I* bruteforced all possible random seeds to find one which produced a string of 0s when used in `(random 50)` for the maximum number of iterations, and got one.
gollark: `(random-seed)` returns it I think.

References

  1. Division of Planning (n.d.). "Official Milepoint Route Log Extract (Fayette County)". Highway Information System. Kentucky Transportation Cabinet. Retrieved October 1, 2017.
  2. Department of Planning (July 2017). "State Primary Road System Maps". Frankfort, KY: Kentucky Transportation Cabinet. Retrieved October 1, 2017.
  3. Department of Planning (March 20, 2014). "Fayette County State Primary Road System" (PDF). Frankfort, KY: Kentucky Transportation Cabinet. Retrieved October 1, 2017.
  4. "Disputed road swap finalized, clearing way for possible bridge demolition near Rupp". Musgrave, Beth. Lexington Herald-Leader. November 16, 2017. Retrieved August 24, 2018.
  5. "Demolition process to begin this week on Lexington bridge".
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.