Tennessee State Route 174
State Route 174 (SR 174) is a secondary east–west state highway in northern Middle Tennessee. It traverses northern Davidson and much of Sumner counties.
Route information | ||||
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Maintained by TDOT | ||||
Length | 40.9 mi[1] (65.8 km) | |||
Major junctions | ||||
West end | ||||
East end | ||||
Location | ||||
Counties | Davidson, Sumner | |||
Highway system | ||||
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Route description
SR 174 begins in Davidson County in Goodlettsville at an intersection with the US 41/US 31W/SR 41. From that point to the Gallatin city limit, road bears the name Long Hollow Pike. It goes east as a 4-lane undivided highway to have an interchange with I-65 (Exit 97) before entering Sumner County. SR 174 then narrows to a 2-lane highway as it leaves Goodlettsville and enters rural areas. The highway then passes through Shackle Island, where it has an intersection with SR 258. The highway continues east to enter Gallatin, where comes to an intersection and becomes concurrent with SR 386. SR 174/SR 386 then passes through several neighborhoods as a 4-lane undivided highway to an interchange with SR 109. SR 386 becomes unsigned at this interchange and they continue east through neighborhoods as they narrow 2-lanes. They then become concurrent with SR 25 and turn southeast as Red River Road before entering downtown and coming to an intersection with US 31E/SR 6, where SR 386 ends and SR 174 splits off of SR 25 to follow US 31E/SR 6 north. They go northeast as Gallatin Pike as a 4-lane undivided highway through a business district before SR 174 splits off of US 31E/SR 6 as North Water Avenue. SR 174 turns to a northerly path and passes through more neighborhoods as a 2-lane highway before leaving Gallatin and continuing north as Dobbins Pike through rural areas. It then passes through the Highland Rim, where it passes through Graball, before entering farmland and passing through Oak Grove, where it has an intersection with SR 52. It then winds its way northeast as Fairfield Road to pass through Fairfield before and before becoming Kentucky Route 3521 (KY 3521) at the Kentucky state line.[2][3]
Major Intersections
County | Location | mi | km | Destinations | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Davidson | Goodlettsville | 0.0 | 0.0 | Western terminus | |
I-65 Exit 97 | |||||
Sumner | Shackle Island | ||||
Gallatin | Western end of SR 386 concurrency | ||||
Diamond interchange; SR 386 becomes unsigned | |||||
Western end of SR 25 concurrency | |||||
North Blythe Avenue (Old SR 109)[4] | |||||
Eastern end of SR 25 concurrency; western end of US 31E/SR 6 concurrency; eastern terminus of unsigned SR 386 | |||||
South Water Street (Old SR 109)[4] | |||||
Eastern end of US 31E/SR 6 concurrency; SR 174 changes cardinal directions from east-west to north south | |||||
Oak Grove | |||||
| Old Highway 31E south - Westmoreland | ||||
| 40.9 | 65.8 | Northern terminus at the Kentucky state line; road continues into Allen County, Kentucky as KY 3521 | ||
1.000 mi = 1.609 km; 1.000 km = 0.621 mi
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References
- 40.0 miles in Sumner County, 0.9 in Davidson County. Source: Tennessee Department of Transportation (2000). Highway maps for Sumner and Davidson Counties.
- Tennessee Department of Transportation (2000). Sumner County Highway Map (PDF) (Map). Nashville: Tennessee Department of Transportation. Grid numbers 491SW, 491SE, and 457NE.
- Tennessee Department of Transportation (2015). Official Tennessee Highway Map (Map). Nashville: Tennessee Department of Transportation.
- Tennessee Department of Transportation (2000). Gallatin City Map (PDF) (Map). Nashville. Tennessee Department of Transportation. Grid number 451SE.