U.S. Route 40 in Utah

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U.S. Route 40 marker

U.S. Route 40
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Route information
Defined by Utah Code §72-4-107
Maintained by UDOT
Length: 174.624 mi[1] (281.030 km)
Existed: 1926 – present
Major junctions
West end: I-80 in Silver Summit
  US-189 in Heber City
US-191 in Duchesne
US-191 in Vernal
East end: US 40 at the Colorado state line (west of Dinosaur, CO)
Highway system
SR-39 SR-42

The west end of U.S. Route 40 is in the U.S. state of Utah at Silver Creek Junction in Silver Summit(about 20.7 miles (33.3 km) east of Salt Lake City) with Interstate 80. From there it heads southeast through Heber City and east into Colorado on its way to the Mid-Atlantic.

Route description

Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found. U.S. Route 40 begins at I-80 at Silver Creek Junction in Silver Summit, traveling south-southeast as a full freeway in a broad valley northeast of Park City. At the south end of the valley, Jordanelle Reservoir comes into view and US-40 continues south high on the slope above its western shore while Utah State Route 248 climbs away to the east on the slope overlooking the northern shore. The freeway passes through several large cuttings in the side of the mountains that were dug when US-40 was relocated to make way for the reservoir; Utah State Route 319 provides access down the slope to a state park on the shore of the reservoir. South of the reservoir, the dam is visible on the left and the road loses elevation quickly before abruptly connecting to a (suburban or exurban) non-freeway segment with frequent curb cuts and building frontage. In central Heber, U.S. Highway 189 continues south, but US-40 turns east to leave the city. US-40 continues south and east through mountains and the Uintah Basin to the Colorado border near Dinosaur National Monument.

History

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As with most states, US-40 follows the Victory Highway through Utah. This auto trail was organized in 1921, and overlapped the older Lincoln Highway through Salt Lake City. To the west, it split from the Lincoln at Mills Junction, and took a straight path across the Great Salt Lake Desert on the proposed Wendover Cut-off to Nevada. The east split with the Lincoln was at Kimball Junction, where the Victory turned to the southeast over an old trail that led past Heber City, over Daniel's Pass, and along the Strawberry River and Duchesne River to Fort Robidoux. The highway continued east across a relatively flat area through Vernal to Colorado.[2][3]

The Utah State Road Commission took over the highway from Kimball Junction to Colorado in 1910 and 1911; in late 1926, the American Association of State Highway Officials (AASHO) assigned US-40 to this cross-state route.[4]

The old Lincoln Highway east of Kimball Junction was initially US-530, but in the late 1930s it became part of US-189.[citation needed] The split between US-40 and US-189, formerly the junction of the Victory and Lincoln Highways, was moved east from Kimball Junction to Silver Creek Junction in 1952; this change moved both routes to a new road between Keetley Junction and Silver Creek Junction, and renumbered the road between Kimball and Silver Creek Junctions from US-189 to US-40.[5] The old road between Keetley and Kimball Junctions became State Route 248.[6] In 1974, with its replacement - Interstate 80 - almost complete across California, Nevada, and Utah, the three states applied to AASHO to truncate US-40 to Silver Creek Junction. (US-40 had been removed west of Truckee, California in 1964.) AASHO approved the truncation on June 17, 1975.[7]

After a bypass of Myton was built, the old route[citation needed] along Main and Sixth Streets became State Route 252 in 1953.[8] It was given to the city in 1969.[9]

Realignments

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Major intersections

County Location mi[1] km Exit Destinations Notes
Summit Silver Creek Junction 0.000 0.000 I-80 west – Salt Lake Westbound exit and eastbound entrance
0.000 0.000 1 I-80 east (US-189 north) / Silver Creek Road – Cheyenne Westbound exit and eastbound entrance; west end of unsigned US-189 overlap
1.309 2.107 2 Silver Summit
3.998 6.434 4 Park City, Kamas (SR-248)
Wasatch 8.246 13.271 8 Mayflower (SR-319)
13.033 20.975 East end of freeway
13.248 21.321 SR-32 – Francis, Kamas, Midway
Heber City 17.006 27.369 SR-113 (100 South)
17.945 28.880 US-189 south – Orem, Provo East end of unsigned US-189 overlap
Duchesne 68.247 109.833 SR-208
Duchesne 85.931 138.293 SR-311
86.434 139.102 US-191 south (100 West) West end of US-191 overlap
86.524 139.247 SR-87 (Center Street)
109.538 176.284 SR-87
Roosevelt 114.576 184.392 SR-121 (200 North)
Uintah 130.450 209.939 SR-88
Vernal 143.787 231.403 SR-121 (500 West)
144.285 232.204 US-191 north (Vernal Avenue) – Flaming Gorge, Rock Springs East end of US-191 overlap
Naples 148.242 238.572 SR-45 – Bonanza
157.109 252.842 SR-149 – Dinosaur National Monument
174.624 281.030 US 40 east – Denver, Craig Continuation into Colorado
1.000 mi = 1.609 km; 1.000 km = 0.621 mi

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 Utah Department of Transportation, Highway Reference Information: US-40 PDF (128 KB), updated May 2008, accessed June 2008
  2. Froiseth, B.A.M., Map of the Territory of Utah, 1870
  3. Rand McNally Auto Road Atlas, 1926, accessed via the Broer Map Library
  4. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  5. Utah Department of Transportation, Route 6 history, updated September 2005
  6. Utah Department of Transportation, Route 248 history, updated December 2005
  7. Utah Department of Transportation, Route 40 history, updated October 2005
  8. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  9. Utah Department of Transportation, Highway Resolutions: Route 252 PDF (2.54 MB), updated November 2007, accessed May 2008


U.S. Route 40
Previous state:
Terminus
Utah Next state:
Colorado