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NC 191 is an original state highway. [2] In 1971, the highway was routed along modern-day I-240 from Brevard Road to Haywood Road, a highway that was previously unnumbered. As a result, Brevard Road became unnumbered north of the freeway. Around 1981, NC 191 was moved back onto Brevard Road to end where it currently does at US 19 Business/US 23 ...
Lexington Avenue is a prominent street in Asheville, North Carolina, United States. Located between Rankin Avenue to the west and Broadway Street to the east, it runs for about 0.76 miles (1.22 km) from Broadway Street in the north to Southside Avenue in the south. Its addresses are split between "North Lexington Avenue" and "South Lexington Avenue", the transition occurring at Patton Avenue.
Route description NC 112 begins at its western end at US 19 / US 23 (Smokey Park Highway) in the unincorporated community of Enka, but within the city limits of Asheville. [2] [3] From here it travels south and then east on Sand Hill Road before turning southeasterly on Sardis Road then ending at North Carolina Highway 191 (Brevard Road) in the Asheville community of Venable. Though both ends ...
In the U.S. state of North Carolina U.S. Route 221 ( US 221) is a north–south highway that travels through Western North Carolina. From Chesnee, South Carolina to Independence, Virginia, it connects the cities of Rutherfordton, Marion, Boone and Jefferson between the two out-of-state destinations. Its most memorable section, known as the Little Parkway Scenic Byway between Linville and ...
North Carolina Highway 9 ( NC 9) is a 46.4-mile (74.7 km) primary state highway in the U.S. state of North Carolina. It serves as a connector route from South Carolina Highway 9 to eastern portions of the Appalachians around Asheville .
The massive mixed-use Ferry Road development in South Asheville will come before city of Asheville planning boards soon.
North Carolina Highway 10 Alternate ( NC 10A) was established as a new alternate routing that bypassed north of downtown High Point, via Westchester Drive and Lexington Avenue; it was in complete concurrency with US 70.
Established as an original U.S. Highway in 1926, US 25 was assigned along the Dixie Highway, which followed NC 29 from South Carolina, through Tuxedo, Flat Rock, Hendersonville, and Biltmore Forest, to Asheville. In the downtown area, US 25 links up with US 70 / NC 20 on College Street; it then proceeds north along Merrimon Avenue out of the city.