Iowa Highway 175

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is an old revision of this page, as edited by Fredddie (talk | contribs) at 11:14, 6 December 2009. The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

Iowa Highway 175 marker

Iowa Highway 175

Route information
Maintained by Iowa DOT
Length221.23 mi[1] (356.04 km)
ExistedOctober 15, 1930 [2]–present
Major junctions
Major intersections I-29 at Onawa
Iowa 141 at Mapleton
US 59 at Ida Grove
US 71 near Odebolt
US 169 at Harcourt
US 69 near Jewell
I-35 at Ellsworth
US 65 at Hubbard
Iowa 14 near Grundy Center
Location
CountryUnited States
StateIowa
CountiesMonona, Woodbury, Ida, Sac, Calhoun, Webster, Hamilton, Hardin, Grundy, Black Hawk
Highway system
Iowa 173 Iowa 182

Iowa Highway 175 is a main east-west route in the northern portion of the state. The highway has a length of 221 miles (356 km). Iowa Highway 175 enters the state by a Missouri River crossing between Decatur, Nebraska and Onawa. The highway continues westward as Nebraska Highway 51. Iowa 175's eastern terminus is at a T intersection with U.S. Route 63 in southwestern Black Hawk County.

Route description

Iowa Highway 175 begins at the east end of the Burt County Missouri River Bridge west of Onawa. At Onawa, it intersects Interstate 29. At Turin, it meets Iowa Highway 37 and turns northeast to follow an alignment which lies next to the Maple River. It continues through Castana and meets Iowa Highway 141 in Mapleton. It continues northeast from Mapleton through Danbury and Battle Creek and meets U.S. Highway 59 west of Ida Grove. After passing through Ida Grove together with U.S. 59, they separate east of Ida Grove. Iowa 175 passes east through Arthur and at Odebolt, meets Iowa Highway 39. Further east, Iowa 175 meets U.S. Highway 71. Iowa 175 and U.S. 71 run east, then south, then east again concurrently through Lake View and Ulmer before separating at Auburn.

Iowa 175 leaves Auburn going east, then passes through Lake City. After Lake City, Iowa 175 meets Iowa Highway 4. The two highways run concurrently through Lohrville before separating. Iowa 175 then passes through Farnhamville and Gowrie and intersects Iowa Highway 144 before intersecting U.S. Highway 169 at Harcourt. They continue east together before separating before Dayton. After passing through Stratford, Iowa 175 meets Iowa Highway 17 at Stanhope. It leaves Stanhope going east and meets U.S. Highway 69 south of Jewell. They run together going north into Jewell before Iowa 175 turns east. After passing through Ellsworth, Iowa 175 intersects Interstate 35.

Iowa Highway 175 then continues east of I-35 by passing through Radcliffe before meeting U.S. Highway 65 in Hubbard. Iowa 175 and U.S. 65 then go north, then east, together before separating. Iowa 175 then goes east through Eldora and meets Iowa Highway 14 west of Grundy Center. Iowa 175 continues east with Iowa 14 before separating in Grundy Center. It turns slightly southeasterly while passing through Morrison and Reinbeck, then turns east and ends at U.S. Highway 63 south of Hudson.

History

Iowa Highway 175 was originally nothing more than a very short spur from U.S. Route 65 to Hubbard but grew to absorb other routes. By 1955 it had extended westward to Nebraska. The final segment of Highway 175 was commissioned in 1969, extending the highway eastward from Hubbard to its present eastern terminus. [2]

Notes

  • At Mapleton, Iowa 175 overlaps Iowa Highway 141 through town. This is a wrong-way concurrency, with eastbound Iowa 175 and westbound Iowa 141 routed on one side of the road, and vice versa.
  • Despite Iowa 175's prodigious length, it passes through small communities. The largest city on the route is Onawa, whose 2000 population was 3,091.[3]

External links

References

  1. ^ 2018 Volume of Traffic on the Primary Road System of Iowa (PDF) (Report). Iowa Department of Transportation. July 31, 2019. Retrieved January 4, 2009.
  2. ^ a b The Iowa Highways Page: Highway 175. Accessed 25 October 2006.
  3. ^ 2003 Transportation Map, Iowa Department of Transportation.