New rules to ensure post quality. See this thread for details.
https://goo.gl/maps/9AsypVUnfCfZrfw2ANine over nine?
If you can control the meaning of words, you can control the people who must use them.
This on I64 might give a few people the slip, but they named the road.
Quote from: formulanone on February 23, 2021, 04:14:12 PMThis on I64 might give a few people the slip, but they named the road.This one is different. We lived off of the far end of Roxalana Road back in the early 1960s. Unlike the other examples here, the designation 25/25 is not 25th spur. Before I-64 was completed to Dunbar, Roxalana Road was signed as Alt WV-25. Being that WV-25 was the "main road" out of North Charleston and old US-35 (now WV-62) was the "back road", Roxalana was a good bypass to avoid the extra congestion in Dunbar coming off the (then) Dunbar Toll Bridge. In a different thread, there is a number of posts about traffic problems on I-64. But before I-64 was completed to South Charleston, the worst of the traffic congestion from the west was on both Dunbar Avenue (WV-25) and Roxalana before hitting the four-lane Seventh Avenue.In a nutshell, Kanawha CR-25/25 is a nod to its former state route numbering.
Quote from: Dirt Roads on February 23, 2021, 08:06:22 PMQuote from: formulanone on February 23, 2021, 04:14:12 PMThis on I64 might give a few people the slip, but they named the road.This one is different. We lived off of the far end of Roxalana Road back in the early 1960s. Unlike the other examples here, the designation 25/25 is not 25th spur. Before I-64 was completed to Dunbar, Roxalana Road was signed as Alt WV-25. Being that WV-25 was the "main road" out of North Charleston and old US-35 (now WV-62) was the "back road", Roxalana was a good bypass to avoid the extra congestion in Dunbar coming off the (then) Dunbar Toll Bridge. In a different thread, there is a number of posts about traffic problems on I-64. But before I-64 was completed to South Charleston, the worst of the traffic congestion from the west was on both Dunbar Avenue (WV-25) and Roxalana before hitting the four-lane Seventh Avenue.In a nutshell, Kanawha CR-25/25 is a nod to its former state route numbering.WVDOH has done the same thing with parts of old WV 73. CR 73 (no fraction) is used in Monongalia and Marion counties between Morgantown and Fairmont. CR 73/73 was used on two other sections south of White Hall (Marion/Taylor/Harrison Counties) and east of Coopers Rock (Monongalia/Preston Counties) to avoid conflicting with the existing CR 73 sections.When county routes are renumbered to avoid conflicts, DOH normally just seems to use the next available fraction. CR 68 in Monongalia County became CR 68/7 to avoid conflicting with I-68. CR 33 in Randolph County was changed to a child of a different route, CR 37/8, altogether to avoid conflicting with US 33.
Interesting that they use same-number fractions for old alignments or to resolve number conflicts.
Quote from: Takumi on October 30, 2013, 06:15:52 PMThe reciprocal of bike is not 4.
Quote from: formulanone on February 24, 2021, 06:29:44 AMInteresting that they use same-number fractions for old alignments or to resolve number conflicts.Interesting that putting two 25s is supposed to make people not think it's 25...
County route numbers aren't really used for navigation. They're posted, but mostly just used for DOH's internal purposes. It's not uncommon for numbers to change seemingly randomly along a corridor because of road abandonments and realignments since the numbers were initially designated in 1933.
How do you pronounce these? Would "902/81" be "902 over 81", "902 dash 81", "nine-oh-two-eighty-one", or what?
Oh, oh, oh. And before the days of street names and E-911, many of these back roads had "farmer names" such as: "left at the old Turner place", "the road over to Exchange", "the right fork up the holler", etc. Most of these got different names after E-911, which confused all of the locals.
I've never heard anyone use the fractions in any conversation - always the road names. The state does a pretty good job with signing those at least.
I remember getting directions to a friend's farm back in western Kansas, and part of the directions was to turn on "the last road before seven-mile hill". And I knew exactly which road that was. Yeah, it has a blue pentagon with a number on it, but who pays attention to things like that!
They even have a 1/1 on US 11: