List of Alaska Routes

Alaska Routes, State Highways in Alaska, bear numbers and names. The numbering 1 to 11 and 98 took place after any fixed scheme. The 1978 Klondike Highway was built in 1998 provided for the hundredth anniversary of the Klondike Gold Rush with a number. Several highways that are longer than the Klondike Highway, have remained without numbering.

The Highways 7 and 10 consist of disjointed sections. The numbers may refer to several differently named highways. The Alaska Route 1 consists for example of Glenn Highway, Seward Highway, Sterling Highway and Tok Cut -Off. Even individual highways have several Benummerungen. So the Seward Highway is part of Alaska Routes 1 and 9 and Interstate A3.

Alaska Routes and its course

Interstate highways and its course

In Alaska, there are four interstate highways, the U.S. counterpart to the European motorways, although there is a connection to the other U.S. states only via the Alaska Marine Highway or via Canadian highways. The streets are labeled A1 to A4 and are similar funded as the interstate highways in the " lower 48 ". However, they are not marked as such, and only exist at the organizational level. The federal government rejected these routes to their status in order to have a legal basis for their financing.

The Interstate Highways in Alaska consist of portions of the Alaska Routes and meet only in rare cases, the usual requirements. The majority consists of two-lane rural highways without special scale motorway junctions.

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