- I-366
- I-180 Illinois
Any others you know of?
Main
Broadway
S.E. 15th Street
River
I-70 inside the Baltimore city limits
FritzOwl's interstates*
*when money starts growing on trees, probably.
That should cover them.
1st Street
Apian Way
Chris
High Street.
US Highway π outside of Illinois
Not anymore, but there was previously an I-6 in Maine (should have been a state route).
I remember I-136, QC 366 entirely overlapped with US 30, "US Route <insert number here> in <insert state here>" in states other than <insert state here>, etc.
I-295 outside of Philly
I-195 (New Jersey)
Market Street.
Broad Street
Pine Street
Michigan Avenue
Cedar Street
South Street
Quote from: 1 on September 17, 2021, 07:18:55 AM
Not anymore, but there was previously an I-6 in Maine (should have been a state route).
Ecuador is currently full of interstates, including business routes.
And they in fact use the same shield for their roads, so it's not a goof by Google. Wonder if AASHTO is taking action or they only hold the copyright for the USA.
Quote from: CNGL-Leudimin on September 18, 2021, 04:50:01 AM
And they in fact use the same shield for their roads, so it's not a goof by Google. Wonder if AASHTO is taking action or they only hold the copyright for the USA.
The Interstate shield, being a work of the federal government, is public domain and cannot be copyrighted. AASHTO holds a trademark. Given that they have apparently only enforced it in situations where unofficial signage could be confused for the real thing, I wouldn't imagine they really care what Ecuador's doing.
Quote from: Scott5114 on September 18, 2021, 05:16:59 AM
Quote from: CNGL-Leudimin on September 18, 2021, 04:50:01 AM
And they in fact use the same shield for their roads, so it's not a goof by Google. Wonder if AASHTO is taking action or they only hold the copyright for the USA.
The Interstate shield, being a work of the federal government, is public domain and cannot be copyrighted. AASHTO holds a trademark. Given that they have apparently only enforced it in situations where unofficial signage could be confused for the real thing, I wouldn't imagine they really care what Ecuador's doing.
Ecuador's main routes are also prefaced with E, and their signs (which I had to search for quite a while to find) are
notably different than ours (https://www.google.com/maps/@-1.3492002,-80.730192,3a,19.6y,316.8h,81.02t/data=!3m6!1e1!3m4!1s_8MwXBvPCWCrO-GLKTGSog!2e0!7i13312!8i6656!5m1!1e1).