Which Routes Enter the Most Counties in Each State?

Started by webny99, June 16, 2020, 10:46:57 PM

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webny99

I stand to be corrected but I don't believe we've done this before.
Which route(s) enter the most counties in each state?

In NY, I believe I-90 wins with 16 (of 62) counties.

Also noteworthy:
US 20 - 15
US 9 - 12
I-87 - 11
I-86/NY 17 - 11


dlsterner

My first thought was I-10 across Texas.  Eyeballing an on-line map of dubious accuracy, it looked like it hit 25 counties in the state.

DTComposer

California:

I-5 - 17
US-101 - 14
CA-1 - 12
CA-99 - 12

jmacswimmer

Maryland:

US 40 hits 10 of 24 counties/independent cities (40 is also, not-coincidentally, the longest signed route in MD)

Other honorable mentions:
US 50 - 8
US 1 - 6
I-95 - 6
US 301 - 6
I-70 - 6
"Now, what if da Bearss were to enter the Indianapolis 5-hunnert?"
"How would they compete?"
"Let's say they rode together in a big buss."
"Is Ditka driving?"
"Of course!"
"Then I like da Bear buss."
"DA BEARSSS BUSSSS"

bulldog1979

For Michigan, it would be I-75 at 15 counties. Next up is US 31 at 14 and then US 23 and US 131 tied at 13 each.

US 89

For Utah, the big winner is US 89, which enters 12 of the 29 counties. Other notable mentions include I-15 (10) and US 6 and 191 (7).

There's also a category of routes that used to be significantly longer, but were shortened due to Interstate-related truncations or decommissionings. US 91 is the most notable member of that class - back in its day it entered 11 counties, but is now down to 2.

As for state routes: Utah doesn't have state route concurrencies for the most part, so routes generally aren't that long and it's quite rare for one to cross multiple county lines. The most counties served by a single state route is 4, on SR 24.

roadman65

For Florida we have 20 for US 98.  16 for US 90.  Though I mentioned it before in another thread, the latter enters 14 consecutive county seats along its journey from Alabama to SR A1A.
Every day is a winding road, you just got to get used to it.

Sheryl Crowe

NWI_Irish96

I-69 enters 19 counties in Indiana (will still be 19 once the last section is finished).
Indiana: counties 100%, highways 100%
Illinois: counties 100%, highways 61%
Michigan: counties 100%, highways 56%
Wisconsin: counties 86%, highways 23%

TheHighwayMan3561

MN. US 59 (17)

Other routes people were probably curious about:
MN 23: 14 + 1 WI
US 75: 14
US 71: 13
I-35: 10/12/13 depending on your views on the W/E
I-94: 11
I-90: 9
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Roadgeekteen

I think that MA 9 enters 6 counties. MA 28 might also hit 6 too.
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Current Interstate map I am making:

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kphoger

Quote from: dlsterner on June 16, 2020, 11:14:41 PM
My first thought was I-10 across Texas.  Eyeballing an on-line map of dubious accuracy, it looked like it hit 25 counties in the state.

I think it's 26.
Keep right except to pass.  Yes.  You.
Visit scenic Orleans County, NY!
Male pronouns, please.

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webny99

Quote from: US 89 on June 17, 2020, 01:06:46 AM
As for state routes: Utah doesn't have state route concurrencies for the most part, so routes generally aren't that long and it's quite rare for one to cross multiple county lines. The most counties served by a single state route is 4, on SR 24.

That's almost the polar opposite of New York, where there are many state routes that enter 4+ counties, largely because of the state's disdain for US routes.

roadman65

One could say that I-278 is one of the few urban freeway interstates that enters 5 counties.  As many are aware each borough of NYC is a separate county despite it having no county level government.   However,  they are still counties as I-278 in one municipality enters more counties than the State of Delaware has.
Every day is a winding road, you just got to get used to it.

Sheryl Crowe

Scott5114

I don't think it's possible for a route to beat OK-3's 18 counties (the same no matter whether you use 3E or 3W).
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clong

Alabama
I-65 - 16
US31 - 15 (runs alongside I-65 but doesn't enter Mobile Co at the southern end)
US231 - 15
US431 - 12
US43 - 11
AL14 - 11
US80 - 10
AL5 - 10
AL17 - 9
AL21 - 9

Thing 342

Delaware: DE-1 and US-13 @ 3 :bigass:

Virginia: A rough count, but I believe that US-58 leads at 23 counties + independent cities. I-64 follows closely at 22.

gonealookin

Nevada:

I-80:  9
US 95:  8
US 50:  7 (Carson City counts as a county in these lists)

Special recognition to US 93 for entering just 4 counties despite its 524 miles within the state.

bassoon1986

Louisiana:

I-10 at 15 parishes
US 90 just behind at 14


iPhone

Hot Rod Hootenanny

Please, don't sue Alex & Andy over what I wrote above

formulanone

For Mississippi, it seems the Natchez Trace Parkway runs through 16 counties, edging out I-55's fifteen counties.

wxfree

Quote from: kphoger on June 17, 2020, 12:51:38 PM
Quote from: dlsterner on June 16, 2020, 11:14:41 PM
My first thought was I-10 across Texas.  Eyeballing an on-line map of dubious accuracy, it looked like it hit 25 counties in the state.

I think it's 26.

I-10 goes through 25 counties in Texas.  Wikipedia lists 26, but that's because it includes Kerr County twice.

My first guess would be the state's longest road, US 83.  It goes through 27 counties.  This includes 1 minor corner, 1 very minor corner that would be easy to miss on a large map, and 1 very minor entry, about a tenth of a mile over the county line, that would also be easy to miss.  The other one I think of is US 67, because it crosses diagonally and goes through east Texas, where counties are small.  It goes through 26 counties.
I'd like to buy a vowel, Alex.  What is E?

KCRoadFan

In my state of Missouri:

Interstates:

I-44 goes through 12 counties and I-70 goes through 11 counties (that's if you count St. Louis City as a county, which I do).

US Routes:

US 60 and 61 both go through 15 counties; US 71 goes through 14 counties.

State Routes:

MO 5 (the only state route to connect to state lines at both ends) goes through 13 counties. MO 13, which goes from the Arkansas line up to Bethany (just 20 miles short of the Iowa line), goes through 12 counties.




Konza

For Arizona, the answer appears to be US 60, which enters 6 of Arizona's 15 counties.

Before US 89 was truncated at Flagstaff, it also entered six counties in Arizona.

If I-17 and I-19 were a single route, multiplexed with I-10 from Tucson to Phoenix, that route would also enter six counties.

Both I-10 and I-40 enter five Arizona counties.
Main Line Interstates clinched:  2, 4, 5, 8, 10, 11, 12, 14, 16, 17, 19, 20, 24, 25, 26, 27, 29, 30, 37, 39, 43, 44, 45, 55, 57, 59, 65, 68, 71, 72, 74 (IA-IL-IN-OH), 76 (OH-PA-NJ), 78, 80, 82, 86 (ID), 88 (IL)

wxfree

Which highway enters the most counties nationally?  I don't mean to hijack the thread, but it's a similar question and there's only one answer.  Some of the northern highways are very long.  Some of the eastern highways are long, and the counties tend to be smaller out that way.  My guess is US 1.

I think we shouldn't count independent cities as counties, but we should count the county of which that independent city was once a part if the highway doesn't enter that county otherwise.  Also, DC should be considered a county for this purpose.
I'd like to buy a vowel, Alex.  What is E?

jp the roadgeek

In a previous thread, I stated US 6 is the leader for CT as it enter 6 of the 8 counties in the state (Middlesex and New London excluded).  It goes Fairfield-New Haven-Litchfield-Hartford-Tolland-Windham-Tolland-Windham.  I-84 and CT 66 are tied for 2nd at 5 each (Fairfield, New Haven, Hartford, Tolland, Windham [and Tolland again] for I-84; New Haven, Middlesex, Hartford, Tolland, Windham for CT 66). 
Interstates I've clinched: 97, 290 (MA), 291 (CT), 291 (MA), 293, 295 (DE-NJ-PA), 295 (RI-MA), 384, 391, 395 (CT-MA), 395 (MD), 495 (DE), 610 (LA), 684, 691, 695 (MD), 695 (NY), 795 (MD)



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