Nebraska Highway 57

Nebraska Highway 57 (N-57) is a highway in northeastern Nebraska, United States. It is divided into two segments, which combine for a length of 58 miles (93 km). The southern segment begins northeast of Leigh at N-91 and ends at U.S. Highway 275 north of Stanton. The northern segment begins south of Carroll at N-98 and ends north of Hartington at an intersection with N-12.

Nebraska Highway 57
Nebraska Highway 57 highlighted in red
Route information
Maintained by NDOT
Length58.17 mi[1] (93.62 km)
Southern segment
Length21.73 mi[1] (34.97 km)
South end N-91 near Leigh
Major
junctions
N-32 south of Stanton
N-24 in Stanton
North end US 275 north of Stanton
Eastern segment
Length36.44 mi[1] (58.64 km)
South end N-98 south of Carroll
Major
junctions
US 20 in Belden
N-84 in Hartington
North end N-12 north of Hartington
Location
CountiesSouthern segment: Colfax, Stanton
Northern segment: Wayne, Cedar
Highway system
N-56N-58

Route description

Southern segment

The southern segment of N-57 begins northeast of Leigh at N-91. It goes north through farmland and meets N-32 before entering Stanton. While in Stanton, it intersects N-24. It continues north from Stanton and ends at U.S. 275.[1][2]

Northern segment

The northern segment of N-57 begins south of Carroll at N-98, one mile (1.6 km) west of N-98's intersection with N-35. It goes north into farmland, through Carroll, and meets U.S. Highway 20 east of Belden. It turns west with U.S. 20 to enter Belden, then turns north. Before entering Coleridge, it meets N-59. It leaves Coleridge going northwest, then turns north again before meeting N-84. N-57 and N-84 run concurrent through Hartington, where N-84 separates. N-57 continues straight north out of Hartington and ends at an intersection with N-12.[1][3]

History

Prior to November 2001, the current segment of N-57 north of its present junction with N-59 was a part of N-15. The old route for N-57 went east from its current intersection with Highway 59, then turned north at what is now the intersection of U.S. 20, N-59 and N-15 north of Laurel. The highway then went north and ended at N-12. In November 2001, the routes for Highway 57 and Highway 15 were swapped so N-15 could align with the Vermillion-Newcastle Bridge, which opened that month. The east–west segment which carried both of those highways then became Highway 59.[4]

Major intersections

CountyLocationmi[1]kmDestinationsNotes
ColfaxLeigh0.000.00 N-91 (Road W)Southern end of southern segment
Stanton8.0412.94 N-32 (828th Road)
Stanton16.5626.65 N-24 west (10th Street)
21.7334.97 US 275 (841st Road)Northern end of southern segment
Gap in route
Wayne37.7360.72 N-98 (856th Road)Southern end of northern segment
CedarBelden50.2380.84 US 20 eastSouthern end of US 20 overlap
51.2582.48 US 20 westNorthern end of US 20 overlap
54.9988.50 N-59 east (872nd Road)
Hartington66.19106.52 N-84 west (882nd Road)Southern end of N-84 overlap
66.67107.29 N-84 east (West Franklin Street)Northern end of N-84 overlap
74.17119.37 N-12 (890th Road)Northern end of northern segment
1.000 mi = 1.609 km; 1.000 km = 0.621 mi
gollark: Articles *must* be right!
gollark: It'll probably be much quicker to develop in a high-level language and port it to something faster *if* it's needed.
gollark: Well, that's reasonable, but you don't really need to use one anyway.
gollark: Also, other "low-level" languages exist. I like Rust myself.
gollark: Sorry, but it will probably never reach a point where speed matters much.

References

  1. "Nebraska Highway Reference Log Book" (PDF). Nebraska Department of Roads. 2015. pp. 152–153. Retrieved January 7, 2017.
  2. Google (2010-11-09). "Nebraska Highway 57 southern segment" (Map). Google Maps. Google. Retrieved 2010-11-09.
  3. Google (2010-11-09). "Nebraska Highway 57 northern segment" (Map). Google Maps. Google. Retrieved 2010-11-09.
  4. "The Nebraska Highways Page: Highways 31 to 60". Archived from the original on 2007-02-08. Retrieved 2008-01-20.

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