U.S. Route 36 - Major Intersections

Major Intersections

  • I-25 at Welby, Colorado
  • I-270 from Welby to Denver, Colorado - concurrency 5 miles (8.0 km)
  • I-76 at Welby, Colorado
  • I-70 from Denver to Byers, Colorado - concurrency 37 miles (60 km)
  • I-225 in Aurora, Colorado
  • US 81 in Belleville, Kansas (four-lane divided highway becomes Interstate 135 69 miles (111 km) to the south in Salina)
  • I-229 in St. Joseph, Missouri
  • I-29 in St. Joseph, Missouri
  • I-35 in Cameron, Missouri
  • US Highway 65 near Chillicothe, Missouri
  • US Highway 63 near Macon, Missouri
  • US Highway 61 near Hannibal, Missouri
  • US Highway 24 near Hannibal, Missouri
  • US Highway 54 ends at US 36 west of Pittsfield, Illinois in Pike County, Illinois. Prior to the decommissioning of US 54 from this point to its original eastbound terminus in Chicago, US 36 and US 54 formed a concurrency from here to Springfield, Illnois.
  • I-72 from Hannibal, Missouri to Decatur, Illinois - concurrency 135 miles (217 km)
  • I-172 in northwestern Pike County, Illinois, west of Hull, Illinois and east of Hannibal, Missouri
  • Old U.S. 36 intersects I-72 near Winchester, Illinois
  • U.S. Route 67 near Jacksonville, Illinois
  • I-55 in Springfield, Illinois - concurrency 6 miles (9.7 km)
  • U.S. Route 51 near Decatur, Illinois
  • I-57 at Tuscola, Illinois
  • Illinois Route 1 in Edgar County, Illinois
  • U.S. Route 41 in Rockville, Indiana
  • The I-74 and I-465 concurrency on the west side of Indianapolis, Indiana
  • I-65 in Indianapolis, Indiana
  • I-70 in Indianapolis, Indiana
  • I-465 near Lawrence, Indiana, east of Indianapolis
  • US Route 27 near Lynn, Indiana
  • U.S. Route 127/Ohio State Route 571 near Greenville, Ohio
  • I-75 in Piqua, Ohio
  • US Route 23 in Delaware, Ohio
  • I-71 in Delaware County, Ohio west of Sunbury and east of Delaware
  • I-77 at Newcomerstown, Ohio

Read more about this topic:  U.S. Route 36

Famous quotes containing the word major:

    As a novelist, I cannot occupy myself with “characters,” or at any rate central ones, who lack panache, in one or another sense, who would be incapable of a major action or a major passion, or who have not a touch of the ambiguity, the ultimate unaccountability, the enlarging mistiness of persons “in history.” History, as more austerely I now know it, is not romantic. But I am.
    Elizabeth Bowen (1899–1973)