Virginia State Route 191

State Route 191 (SR 191) is a primary state highway in the U.S. state of Virginia. Known as Jolliff Road, the state highway runs 3.13 miles (5.04 km) from U.S. Route 13, US 58, US 460, and US 460 Alternate north to SR 337 within the independent city of Chesapeake.

State Route 191
Jolliff Road
Route information
Maintained by VDOT
Length3.13 mi[1] (5.04 km)
Existed1933–present
Major junctions
South end
US 13 / US 58 / US 460 / US 460 Alt. in Chesapeake
North end SR 337 in Chesapeake
Location
CountiesCity of Chesapeake
Highway system
SR 190SR 192

Route description

View south along SR 191 at SR 337 in Chesapeake

SR 191 begins at a four-way intersection with US 13, US 58, US 460, and US 460 Alternate in the Bower's Hill area of the city of Chesapeake. US 13, US 58, US 460 head west as Military Highway toward Suffolk; just west of the intersection is the U.S. Highways' interchange with Interstate 664 (I-664) (Hampton Roads Beltway). The south leg of the intersection is also Military Highway, which US 13 and US 460 follow toward Norfolk and Virginia Beach. The east leg of the intersection is Airline Boulevard, which US 58 and US 460 Alternate follow toward Portsmouth. The north leg of the intersection is SR 191, which immediately turns west and crosses over I-664 with no access. The state highway crosses Goose Creek, a tributary of the Western Branch Elizabeth River, and gradually curves north. SR 191 intersects Dock Landing Road before reaching its northern terminus at SR 337 (Portsmouth Boulevard) in the Jolliff section of Chesapeake.[1][2]

Major intersections

The entire route is in Chesapeake.

mi[1]kmDestinationsNotes
0.000.00
US 13 / US 58 / US 460 / US 460 Alt. east (Military Highway / Airline Boulevard) to I-64 / I-264 east / I-664 Virginia Beach
3.135.04 SR 337 (Portsmouth Boulevard)
1.000 mi = 1.609 km; 1.000 km = 0.621 mi
gollark: Also, they could probably just live somewhere with less wildly inflated house pricing.
gollark: > I want the scientists in society to have a place to exist too.I mean, I don't disagree, but just "give whoever rents it first a freeish house" doesn't seem like a good mechanism for that. Unless you mean they do "give whoever they find cool a freeish house", which is... also bad in other ways.
gollark: If it was actually possible to add more housing, it would be much easier to fix.
gollark: We somehow deal with this problem in basically every *other* market.
gollark: If they simply did not awful zoning, land would probably be substantially cheaper (via higher density in places).

References

  1. "2010 Traffic Data". Virginia Department of Transportation. 2010. Retrieved 2011-11-29.
  2. Google (2011-11-29). "Virginia State Route 191" (Map). Google Maps. Google. Retrieved 2011-11-29.

KML is from Wikidata
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1928–1933
SR 540 >
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