U.S. Route 95 Alternate (Las Vegas)

U.S. Route 95 Alternate (Alternate US 95, US 95A) was an alternate route of U.S. Route 95 in Las Vegas, Nevada that provided a bypass of the downtown area. The route was also designated as State Route 5C (SR 5C), a branch of State Route 5.


U.S. Route 95 Alternate
Charleston Boulevard & Rancho Road
US 95 Alternate highlighted in red
Route information
Length4.40 mi[1] (7.08 km)
Existedby 1953–by 1989
Major junctions
South end US 93 / US 95 / US 466 in Las Vegas
  US 91 / US 466 in Las Vegas
North end US 95 in Las Vegas
Highway system
  • Highways in Nevada

Route description

US 95A and SR 5C began at the intersection of Charleston Boulevard and Fremont Street (then US 93, US 95, US 466 and SR 5; now SR 582) in Las Vegas. From there, the highway proceeded along Charleston Boulevard, crossing US 91 and US 466, to a junction approximately 2.87 miles (4.62 km) to the west. At this point, Charleston Boulevard continued west along then-SR 85 while Alternate US 95 curved northward to follow Rancho Road (now Rancho Drive) to a terminus at Bonanza Road (then US 95 and SR 5; now SR 579).[1][2]

History

It is unclear when State Route 5C and Alternate US 95 were first designated. A 1952 map of downtown Las Vegas (depicting road layouts as of late-1950) shows the highway alignment with the state route number and without the US highway designation.[1] Another map, produced by a Las Vegas realty company in 1955, depicts Alternate US 95 on this alignment, but no state highways.[3] In the Las Vegas area inset of Nevada's official 1953 state map (the first version of the map to have city insets), US 95A and SR 5C are shown prominently, but without any highway labels.[4] State highway maps would frequently display the route as a major thoroughfare up through the 1987–88 version.[5] With the 1976 renumbering of Nevada's state routes and US 95 freeway construction throughout the 1970s and 1980s, the State Route 5C and Alternate US 95 designations were likely eliminated prior to this time.

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References

KML is from Wikidata
  1. "General Highway Map: Clark County, Nevada" (PDF). Nevada Department of Transportation. 1952. Retrieved January 27, 2016.
  2. Cities of Las Vegas, North Las Vegas, and Vicinity (Map). California State Automobile Association. c. 1957. Retrieved February 15, 2009.
  3. Map of Las Vegas and Vicinity, Clark County, Nevada (Map). Campbell Realty Company. 1955. Retrieved February 17, 2009.
  4. Official Highway Map of Nevada (Map). Nevada Department of Highways. 1953. Las Vegas inset. Retrieved February 17, 2009.
  5. Official Highway Map of Nevada (Map). Nevada Department of Transportation. 1987. Las Vegas Region inset. Retrieved February 18, 2009.
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