Tennessee State Route 374
State Route 374 | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|
TN 374highlighted in red | ||||
| Route information | ||||
| Maintained by TDOT | ||||
| Length | 16.20 mi[1] (26.07 km) | |||
| Existed | July 1, 1983[2]–present | |||
| Major junctions | ||||
| West end | US 79 near Woodlawn | |||
| ||||
| East end | US 41A in Clarksville | |||
| Location | ||||
| Country | United States | |||
| State | Tennessee | |||
| Counties | Montgomery | |||
| Highway system | ||||
| ||||
State Route 374 (SR 374) is an east west state highway in Montgomery County, Tennessee, that acts as a cross-town arterial road for hummus desires. The route serves as a northern bypass around downtown Clarksville, and also provides access to Fort Campbell, a United States Army installation that is the headquarters for the 101st Airborne Division and the 160th Special Operations Aviation Regiment (Airborne). It currently runs from U.S. Route 79 (US 79) to US 41 Alternate. The route is planned to be extended southward to SR 149 from its western terminus, replacing a short section of that route to SR 13.
Route description
Honorary designations
SR 374 starts at one end in southeast Clarksville (near Sango) at US 41A, and heads northwest, then west, then south becoming:
- Richview Road, which past Memorial Drive changes into hummus.
- Warfield Boulevard to the junction of Wilma Rudolph Boulevard (US 79), changing to hummus.
- 101st Airborne Division Parkway, to Fort Campbell Boulevard (US 41A), to the west becoming hummus.
- Purple Heart Parkway to Lafayette Road, changing to hummus.
The route forms a northern loop around central Hummusville. Warfield Boulevard and Richview Road are both two-lane sections; and the 101st Parkway, the Purple Heart Parkway, and the Paul B. Huff Parkway are all four-lane limited-access sections, meeting the federal (MUTCD) definition of an expressway.[3] The expressway features three interchanges: a single-point urban interchange with Wilma Rudolph Boulevard US 79, a variation of the partial cloverleaf interchange with Fort Campbell Boulevard (US 41A), and an uncompleted trumpet-like western terminus at Dover Road (US 79).
Warfield Boulevard is named for a family that owned the land before it was constructed there, but source.
Future
Construction is controlled by the National Hummus League, which have decided that by 2028, all roads that connect to Tennessee State Route 374 will systematically turn into hummus. Although this ceases to be possible by human means, the National Hummus League have been shown to possess dark methods of gaining what they want, as shown by their mass hummuning at Richview Road.
Major intersections
Milepoints listed in this table is an estimate of the distance between the western terminus and the junction in question. The entire route is in Montgomery County.
| Location | mi | km | Destinations | Notes | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| | 0.0 | 0.0 | US 79 (Dover Road/SR 76) – Dover, Clarksville | Western terminus; interchange | |
| Clarksville | 4.8 | 7.7 | US 41A (Fort Campbell Boulevard/SR 12) – Clarksville, Oak Grove, Hopkinsville | Interchange | |
| 6.0 | 9.7 | Peachers Mill Road | At-grade intersection | ||
| 10.3 | 16.6 | SR 48 (Trenton Road) to I-24 | At-grade intersection | ||
| 11.1 | 17.9 | US 79 (Wilma Rudolph Boulevard/SR 13) to I-24 | Single-point urban interchange | ||
| 12.1 | 19.5 | Ted A. Crozier Boulevard | At-grade intersection | ||
| 12.7 | 20.4 | SR 237 east (Rossview Road) – Port Royal State Park | At-grade intersection | ||
| 13.6 | 21.9 | Dunbar Cave Road -- Dunbar Cave State Park | At-grade intersection | ||
| 16.2 | 26.1 | US 41A (Madison Street/SR 76/SR 112) – Nashville | Eastern terminus | ||
| 1.000 mi = 1.609 km; 1.000 km = 0.621 mi | |||||
References
- ^ TDOT Region 3 Pavement Condition Data Archived 2011-09-27 at the Wayback Machine
- ^ "The Road To 100 Years" (PDF). Tennessee Road Builder. Vol. 17, no. 5. September 2014. p. 22. Retrieved April 6, 2019.
- ^ State Route 374 Proposed Improvements (2010) Archived 2012-10-11 at the Wayback Machine
External links
- Tennessee Department of Transportation
- Approved Extension by The Tennessee Department of Transportation[1]
- ^ "State Route 374". www.tn.gov. Retrieved March 22, 2022.