Route information | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|
Maintained by Caltrans | ||||
Length | 197 mi [1] (317 km) | |||
Existed | 1934 [2] –present | |||
Tourist routes | Ebbetts Pass Scenic Byway | |||
Restrictions | Segment through Ebbetts Pass closed in winter | |||
Major junctions | ||||
West end | San Pablo Avenue in Hercules | |||
East end | SR 89 near Markleeville | |||
Location | ||||
Country | United States | |||
State | California | |||
Counties | Contra Costa, San Joaquin, Stanislaus, Calaveras, Alpine | |||
Highway system | ||||
|
State Route 4 (SR 4) is a state highway in the U.S. state of California, routed from Interstate 80 in the San Francisco Bay Area to State Route 89 in the Sierra Nevada. It roughly parallels the Sacramento-San Joaquin River Delta, a popular area for boating and fishing, with a number of accesses to marinas and other attractions. After crossing the Central Valley, the highway ascends up the Sierra foothills. It passes through Ebbetts Pass and contains the Ebbetts Pass Scenic Byway, a National Scenic Byway.
SR 4, an east–west highway, begins in Hercules at San Pablo Avenue next to the Interstate 80 junction as part of John Muir Parkway. (The actual parkway extends a bit past the western terminus.) The road is an expressway from its starting point until it approaches Martinez, at which point it becomes a full freeway (the California Delta Highway) passing Concord, Pittsburg, and Antioch. The John Muir National Historic Site is located directly north of Route 4 on Alhambra Avenue in Martinez. Alhambra Avenue at SR 4 is also the site of the Franklin Canyon Adobe. Two gauges of BART tracks run in the median of the freeway from the Port Chicago Highway interchange in Concord to just east of the Hillcrest Avenue interchange in Antioch, where the light rail line currently ends at the Antioch station. [3] After Antioch, the freeway turns southward at its intersection with State Route 160, turning into a suburban and rural road bypassing the Bay Area's rapidly growing and outermost eastern suburbs (Oakley, Brentwood and Discovery Bay, California); and continues east across Victoria Island. [4] This section is also known as the John Marsh Heritage Highway.
Route 4 east continues to Stockton, where it briefly joins I-5 and then enters a separate freeway (known locally as the Crosstown Freeway) routing almost directly through downtown Stockton. The route then runs concurrent with State Route 99 before running eastward into the Sierra through Angels Camp, one of the richest quartz mining sections of the Mother Lode and home of "The Celebrated Jumping Frog of Calaveras County", and Calaveras Big Trees State Park. The route runs through the 8,050 ft (2,450 m) Pacific Grade Summit on its way up to the 8,730 ft (2,660 m) Ebbetts Pass and ends at State Route 89 ten miles (16 km) west of Topaz Lake, on the California–Nevada border. However, "To SR 4" signage continues along southbound SR 89 north to near its intersection with SR 88 in Woodfords, including reassurance shields for both SR 89 and SR 4 on top of the mileage sign just south of town. [5] The portion from Arnold to its terminus is designated the Ebbetts Pass Scenic Byway, which is eventually one lane.
Through the mountains, SR 4 is not suitable for large trucks, buses, or RVs, as it becomes very steep and eventually single-track, with no center dividing line shortly after the Mount Reba Turnoff to Bear Valley Ski area, with tight switchbacks. Ebbetts Pass is not plowed for snow, and thus closes during the winter months, often from November through as late as May, blocking through traffic between the Mount Reba Turnoff and Markleeville. [6]
SR 4 is part of the California Freeway and Expressway System, [7] and from just west of Stockton to SR 49 is part of the National Highway System, [8] a network of highways that are considered essential to the country's economy, defense, and mobility by the Federal Highway Administration. [9] SR 4 is eligible to be included in the State Scenic Highway System; [10] however, it is only a scenic highway as designated by Caltrans from a point east of Arnold to SR 89, [11] meaning that it is a substantial section of highway passing through a "memorable landscape" with no "visual intrusions", where the potential designation has gained popular favor with the community. [12] SR 4 is also known as part of the John Muir Parkway from I-80 in Hercules to I-680 near Martinez, named for the environmentalist John Muir. [13] The stretch through Franklin Canyon was once known as "Blood Alley". [14]
Although segments of Route 4 had been part of the state highway system since 1909, Route 4 was officially designated as such between US Route 40 (now Interstate 80) and State Route 99 in 1934. Prior to that date, the then-existing segment was officially known as the "Borden Highway", and the bridge over the San Joaquin River is still referred to as the "Borden Highway Bridge" in tidal tables. Construction of Route 4 did not finish until 1935, however. [2]
The portion of Route 4 from US Route 40 to State Route 24 was added to the highway system in 1933 as Legislative Route Number (LRN) 106. East of the concurrency with State Route 24 to State Route 49, Route 4 was designated as LRN 75 from 1931 to 1934. Finally, the segment from State Route 49 to State Route 89 was signed as LRN 24 from 1909 to 1934. [2]
In the 1970s, a significant portion of the Filipino American community of "Little Manila" in Stockton was demolished when the "Crosstown Freeway" was constructed, [15] displacing what was once the largest population of Filipinos outside of the Philippines. [16] The freeway, while not yet designated SR 4, was initially constructed from a long-term temporary west end at Fresno Avenue, past I-5, up to a temporary east end at Stanislaus Street, essentially becoming a "freeway to nowhere." In 1993, construction of the Crosstown Freeway from Stanislaus Street to SR 99 was finally completed. It is officially the Ort J. Lofthus Freeway for which it is named after the local civic leader lobbied to get construction of the freeway finished. [17] SR 4, which originally was routed on Charter Way (now Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. Boulevard) and portions of Mariposa and Farmington Roads, transferred its designation onto the Crosstown between I-5 and SR 99. In December 2016, the Crosstown Freeway west of I-5 (though technically not part of SR 4) was extended to Navy Drive via a viaduct bypassing the Boggs Tract neighborhood in Stockton. The connection to Fresno Avenue was subsequently closed to traffic permanently. This was to alleviate heavy traffic to and from the Port of Stockton that plagued the Boggs Tract neighborhood for several decades. [18] Despite being in the planning books for decades, it is unclear if the Crosstown Freeway past Navy Drive will ever be extended to SR 4 west of Stockton.
From 1998 to 2009, a road built by the State Route 4 Bypass Authority, named the State Route 4 Bypass, opened in three phases, bypassing Route 4 in Oakley and Brentwood to the south and west. [19] [20] Many of the signs and local maps designated this extension as simply "Bypass Road". A section of Marsh Creek Road was widened to serve as the connection between the bypass built by the authority and the original Route 4 towards Stockton. In 2012, Caltrans handed over authority for State Route 4 in Oakley and Brentwood to the respective cities. In return, it gained control of the bypass and the upgraded section of Marsh Creek Road, which officially became State Route 4. [21]
In 2004 voters passed a half cent tax increase to fund widening from 4 to 8 lanes from Loveridge Road to Hwy 160. The project lasted from 2010 to 2016 through Pittsburg and Antioch, with the final configuration as three mixed use lanes and one High Occupancy Vehicle (HOV) lane in each direction and auxiliary lanes between interchanges as far as the interchange with Route 160. The median accommodates the eBART extension of the Bay Area Rapid Transit (BART) system. [22] In early March 2016, reconfiguration of the interchange of SR 4 and SR 160 was officially opened, allowing westbound SR 4 traffic to access northbound SR 160 directly and southbound SR 160 to access eastbound SR 4. [23]
From SR 160 to the Balfour Road interchange it continues as a multi-lane freeway. In 2011, Caltrans awarded $25 million toward upgrading the section from Lone Tree Way to Sand Creek Road to a full freeway and constructing an interchange at Sand Creek Road. Sand Creek interchange opened in 2015 and Balfour Road in 2018. [24] [25] The portion from Balfour Road to Vasco Road is single-lane each way and has a signal-controlled grade crossing at Marsh Creek Road.
The freeway segment of SR 4 in Stockton is part of a proposed route to upgrade SR 99 into I-7 or I-9. Under one proposal, the new interstate would go along SR 99 from the split with I-5 at Wheeler Ridge north through Fresno to Stockton, where the proposed route would then turn west via the SR 4 freeway to a terminus at I-5. [26]
In 2016, Pittsburg moved to install surveillance cameras along their portion of the route, in response to a series of 20 freeway shootings in the area that had taken the lives of six people, and injured 11, in the past year. [27]
Except where prefixed with a letter, postmiles were measured on the road as it was in 1964, based on the alignment that existed at the time, and do not necessarily reflect current mileage. R reflects a realignment in the route since then, M indicates a second realignment, L refers to an overlap due to a correction or change, and T indicates postmiles classified as temporary ( ). [28] Segments that remain unconstructed or have been relinquished to local control may be omitted. The numbers reset at county lines; the start and end postmiles in each county are given in the county column.
County | Location | Postmile [28] [29] [30] | Exit [31] [32] | Destinations | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Contra Costa CC 0.00-48.39 | Hercules | 0.00 | John Muir Parkway | Contiunation beyond San Pablo Avenue | |
0.00 | 1A | San Pablo Avenue | At-grade intersection; former US 40; west end of SR 4 | ||
0.00 | 1B | I-80 – Oakland, San Francisco, Sacramento | No exit number eastbound; I-80 exit 23; no eastbound entrance from I-80 west | ||
0.78 | 1C | Willow Avenue – Hercules | No eastbound exit | ||
| R1.70 | 1 | Sycamore Avenue | Eastbound signage | |
| Claeys Lane | Westbound signage; no exit number westbound | |||
| | East end of freeway (eastbound only) | |||
| 2.70 | 3 | Franklin Canyon | At-grade intersection eastbound; interchange westbound | |
| | West end of freeway (eastbound only) | |||
| T4.89 | 5 | Cummings Skyway to I-80 east – Port Costa, Crockett, Vallejo | ||
| R5.17 | 6 | McEwen Road – Port Costa | Westbound exit and eastbound entrance | |
Martinez | R8.55 | 9 | Alhambra Avenue – Martinez | ||
R9.19 | 10 | Pine Street, Center Avenue | |||
R10.33 | 11 | Morello Avenue, Glacier Drive | |||
12.41 | 12A | Pacheco Boulevard – Pacheco | Former SR 21 | ||
| 12.67 | 12 | I-680 – Benicia, Sacramento, Walnut Creek, San Jose | Signed as exits 12B (south) and 12C (north); I-680 exit 53 | |
Concord | R13.65 | 13 | Solano Way | ||
R14.67 | 15A | SR 242 south – Concord, Oakland | Northern terminus of SR 242; SR 242 exits 3B-C; former SR 24 | ||
R15.42 | 15B | Port Chicago Highway | |||
R16.83 | 17 | Willow Pass Road | |||
Pittsburg | R18.83 | 19 | San Marco Boulevard – Bay Point | ||
R20.10 | 20 | Bailey Road | Signed as exits 20A (south) and 20B (north) | ||
23.05 | 23 | Railroad Avenue, Harbor Street | |||
24.32 | 24 | Loveridge Road – Pittsburg | |||
Antioch | 26.01 | 26 | Somersville Road, Auto Center Drive | ||
26.94 | 27 | L Street, Contra Loma Boulevard | Former exit 27A eastbound | ||
27.29 | 27B | G Street – Central Antioch | Closed; former eastbound exit and westbound entrance | ||
R27.79 | 28 | Lone Tree Way, A Street | |||
R28.94 | 29 | Hillcrest Avenue | |||
30.40 | 30 | SR 160 north – Rio Vista, Sacramento | Southern terminus of SR 160; former SR 4 east; west end of bypass | ||
R31.38 | 31 | Laurel Road | |||
Brentwood | R32.99 | 33 | Lone Tree Way | ||
R34.29 | 34 | Sand Creek Road | |||
R35.58 | 35 | Balfour Road | |||
| East end of freeway | ||||
| R38.01 | Marsh Creek Road, Vasco Road – Concord, Livermore | East end of bypass | ||
| 43.97 | Byron Highway, Marsh Creek Road – Brentwood | Byron Highway is former SR 4 west | ||
Byron | R44.37 | CR J4 south (Byron Highway) – Byron, Tracy | Northern terminus of CR J4 | ||
San Joaquin SJ 0.00-38.06 | | 5.96 | CR J2 south (Tracy Boulevard) – Tracy | Northern terminus of CR J2 | |
Stockton | 15.91 25.36 [N 1] | I-5 south / Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. Boulevard (SR 4 Bus. east) – Tracy, San Francisco, Los Angeles, Angels Camp | Interchange; west end of I-5 overlap; Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. Boulevard is former SR 4 east; formerly Charter Way; SR 4 west follows I-5 exit 471 | ||
West end of freeway on I-5 | |||||
26.19 [N 1] R16.06 | 65A | I-5 north / Navy Drive – Sacramento | East end of I-5 overlap; SR 4 east follows I-5 exit 472; Navy Drive serves Port of Stockton | ||
R16.62 | 66A | El Dorado Street / Center Street – Downtown Stockton | Serves Stockton Arena and Ballpark; eastbound exit via I-5 exit 472 | ||
R17.05 | 66B | Stanislaus Street – Downtown Stockton | Signed as exit 66 eastbound | ||
R17.71 | 67 | Wilson Way (SR 99 Bus.) | Former US 50 / US 99 | ||
R18.77 | 68A | Filbert Street | Signed as exit 68 westbound | ||
R19.44 18.68 [N 2] | 68B | SR 99 north – Sacramento | West end of SR 99 overlap; SR 4 west follows exit 254A | ||
18.15 [N 2] | 253 | Main Street | Closed; former westbound exit only | ||
18.02 [N 2] | 253 | Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. Boulevard | Closed; former interchange with no westbound exit; currently accessible via Golden Gate Avenue; former SR 26 west; formerly Charter Way | ||
| 17.50 [N 2] | East end of freeway on SR 99 | |||
SR 99 south / Golden Gate Avenue / Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. Boulevard – Fresno | Interchange; east end of SR 99 overlap; SR 4 east follows SR 99 exit 252B | ||||
| | Farmington Road (SR 4 Bus. west) | Former SR 4 west | ||
| 24.87 | CR J5 (Jack Tone Road) – Lockeford, Ripon | |||
Farmington | 33.10 | CR J6 (Escalon-Bellota Road) – Escalon | |||
Stanislaus STA 0.00-8.89 | | 4.54 | CR J14 (Milton Road) – Milton, Eugene | ||
Calaveras CAL R0.00-R65.87 | Copperopolis | R8.14 | CR E15 south (O'Byrnes Ferry Road) / Rock Creek Road – Copperopolis | Northern terminus of CR E15 | |
Angels Camp | R21.09 | SR 49 / SR 4 Bus. east – San Andreas, Sonora | Former SR 4 east | ||
| | SR 4 Bus. west – Angels Camp, Sonora | Former SR 4 west | ||
Vallecito | 26.22 | CR E18 south (Parrotts Ferry Road) – Moaning Cavern | Northern terminus of CR E18 | ||
Alpine ALP R0.00-31.68 | | R2.91 | SR 207 north (Mount Reba Road) – Bear Valley Ski Area | Southern terminus of SR 207 | |
Lake Alpine East Shore | 4.63 | Eastbound winter closure gate | |||
| 18.56 [33] | Ebbetts Pass (closed in winters), elevation 8,730 feet (2,660 m) [33] | |||
| 31.68 | Westbound winter closure gate | |||
SR 89 to US 395 – Markleeville, Monitor Pass | East end of SR 4; SR 89 south through Monitor Pass closed in winters | ||||
1.000 mi = 1.609 km; 1.000 km = 0.621 mi
|
Location | Angels Camp, California |
---|---|
Existed | 2013–present |
State Route 4 Business (SR 4 Bus.) is a locally maintained business loop within the city of Angels Camp, California. It was established in August 2013 to attract customers to businesses along the parent route's former alignment, prior to the completion of the Angels Camp Bypass. It runs along South Main Street (co-signed with State Route 49), between State Route 4 and Vallecito Road, then turns east along Vallecito Road. [34] [35]
The entire route is in Calaveras County.
Location | mi | km | Destinations | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|
Angels Camp | 0.0 | 0.0 | SR 49 north (Main Street) – San Andreas, Jackson | Continuation beyond SR 4 |
0.0 | 0.0 | SR 4 – Stockton, Murphys | Western terminus; west end of SR 49 overlap | |
1.5 | 2.4 | SR 49 south (Main Street) – Sonora | East end of SR 49 overlap; left turn prohibited westbound for buses or motorcoaches over 40 feet (12 m) long | |
| 2.6 | 4.2 | SR 4 – Murphys, Arnold, Bear Valley | Eastern terminus |
1.000 mi = 1.609 km; 1.000 km = 0.621 mi
|
On February 1, 2019, the Brentwood Press newspaper reported that officials representing the Contra Costa Transportation Authority (CCTA) and the California Department of Transportation (Caltrans) had held a groundbreaking ceremony to start a project that is intended to reduce congestion at the SR 4/I-680 interchange just outside Martinez. The multiphase project will widen SR 4 by adding a third lane in each direction, beginning at Morello Avenue in Martinez and ending at the merge of SR 4 and SR 242. [a] It will also include replacing the 50-year-old Grayson Creek Bridge, which has outlived its serviceable life and does not meet current bridge safety codes. The project will impact about 4 miles (6.4 km) of SR 4. Although no schedule or end date has been announced, the officials said that the estimated cost is about $136 million (in 2018 dollars). [36]
State Route 58 is a major east-west state highway in the U.S. state of California that runs across the Coast Ranges, the southern San Joaquin Valley, the Tehachapi Mountains, which border the southern Sierra Nevada, and the Mojave Desert. It runs between U.S. Route 101 near Santa Margarita and Interstate 15 in Barstow. It has junctions with Interstate 5 near Buttonwillow, State Route 99 in Bakersfield, State Route 202 in Tehachapi, State Route 14 near Mojave, and U.S. Route 395 at Kramer Junction. SR 58 also provides access to Edwards Air Force Base. At various points it is known as the Calf Canyon Highway, Carrisa Highway, Bakersfield-McKittrick Highway, Rosa Parks Highway, Westside Parkway, Barstow-Bakersfield Highway, Bakersfield Tehachapi Highway, Kern County Korean War Veterans Memorial Highway, and Mojave-Barstow Highway.
State Route 152 is a state highway that runs from east to west near the middle of the U.S. state of California from State Route 1 in Watsonville to State Route 99 southeast of Merced. Its western portion provides access to and from Interstate 5 toward Southern California for motorists in or near Gilroy and San Jose.
State Route 99 (SR 99) is a north–south state highway in the U.S. state of California, stretching almost the entire length of the Central Valley. From its southern end at Interstate 5 (I-5) near Wheeler Ridge to its northern end at SR 36 near Red Bluff, SR 99 goes through the densely populated eastern parts of the valley. Cities served include Bakersfield, Delano, Tulare, Visalia, Fresno, Madera, Merced, Turlock, Modesto, Manteca, Stockton, Sacramento, Yuba City, and Chico.
State Route 160 is a state highway in the U.S. state of California consisting of two sections. The longer, southern, section is a scenic highway through the alluvial plain of the Sacramento River, linking SR 4 in Antioch with Sacramento via the Antioch Bridge. The northern section, separated from the southern by Sacramento city streets, is the North Sacramento Freeway, running from the 16th Street Bridge over the American River to Interstate 80 Business towards Roseville.
State Route 120 is a state highway in the central part of California, connecting the San Joaquin Valley with the Sierra Nevada, Yosemite National Park, and the Mono Lake area. Its western terminus is at Interstate 5 in Lathrop, and its eastern terminus is at U.S. Route 6 in Benton. While the route is signed as a contiguous route through Yosemite, the portion inside the park is federally maintained and is not included in the state route logs. The portion at Tioga Pass at Yosemite's eastern boundary is the highest paved through road in the California State Route system. This part is not maintained in the winter and is usually closed during the winter season.
State Route 126 is a state highway in the U.S. state of California that serves Ventura and Los Angeles counties. The route runs from U.S. Route 101 in Ventura to Interstate 5 at the Castaic Junction-Santa Clarita border through the Santa Clara River Valley. The highway is an important connector highway in Ventura County, and serves as an alternate route into the Santa Clarita Valley, and the San Fernando Valley area of Los Angeles and the High Desert of Antelope Valley.
State Route 84 is a state highway in the U.S. state of California that consists of two unconnected segments, one in the San Francisco Bay Area and the other primarily in the Sacramento–San Joaquin River Delta area.
State Route 299 is an east–west state highway in the U.S. state of California that runs across the northern part of the state. At 305.777 miles (492.100 km), it is the third longest California state route, after Route 1 and Route 99, and the longest east-west route. Route 299's western terminus is at US 101 at the northern edge of Arcata, and its eastern terminus is at the Nevada state line at a point east of Cedarville. Between Arcata and Redding, Route 299 intersects with State Route 96, and is briefly co-signed with State Route 3. In Redding, it intersects with State Route 273, State Route 44, and Interstate 5. East of Redding, it intersects with State Route 89, and a section is co-signed with State Route 139 before reaching Alturas. It is then co-signed with U.S. Route 395 northeast of Alturas, and then runs east through Cedarville and to the border with Nevada. A ghost town, Vya, Nevada, can be reached via this route, which after the border becomes a dirt road, which was formerly Nevada State Route 8A. The segment of SR 299 between Arcata and Redding is the Trinity Scenic Byway, a National Forest Scenic Byway.
State Route 12 is a state highway in the U.S. state of California that travels in an east–west direction from State Route 116 in Sebastopol in Sonoma County to State Route 49 just north of San Andreas in Calaveras County. The route connects the Sonoma and Napa valleys with the Sacramento–San Joaquin River Delta and the Sierra Foothills. It is constructed to freeway standards from the Fulton Road/South Wright Road stoplight in Santa Rosa, to its partial interchange with Farmers Lane.
State Route 41 is a state highway in the U.S. State of California, connecting the Central Coast with the San Joaquin Valley and the Sierra Nevada. Its southern terminus is at the Cabrillo Highway in Morro Bay, and its northern terminus is at SR 140 in Yosemite National Park. It has been constructed as an expressway from near SR 198 in Lemoore north to the south part of Fresno, where the Yosemite Freeway begins, passing along the east side of downtown and extending north into Madera County.
State Route 68 is a state highway in the U.S. state of California, located entirely in Monterey County. It runs from Asilomar State Beach in Pacific Grove to U.S. Route 101 in Salinas. The approximately 20-mile (32 km) long highway serves as a major route between the Monterey Peninsula and Salinas.
State Route 33 is a north–south state highway in the U.S. state of California. It runs north from U.S. Route 101 in Ventura through the Transverse Ranges and the western side of the San Joaquin Valley to Interstate 5 at a point east of Tracy. SR 33 replaced part of U.S. Route 399 in 1964 during the "great renumbering" of routes. In the unincorporated sections of Kern County it is known as the West Side Highway. In addition, the California Legislature designated the entire Kern County portion as the Petroleum Highway in 2004. The southernmost portion in Ventura is a freeway known as the Ojai Freeway, while it is known as the Maricopa Highway from Ojai to Maricopa.
State Route 20 is a state highway in the northern-central region of the U.S. state of California, running east–west north of Sacramento from the North Coast to the Sierra Nevada. Its west end is at SR 1 in Fort Bragg, from where it heads east past Clear Lake, Colusa, Yuba City, Marysville and Nevada City to I-80 near Emigrant Gap, where eastbound traffic can continue on other routes to Lake Tahoe or Nevada.
State Route 156 is a west to east state highway in the U.S. state of California, running from State Route 1 in Castroville to State Route 152 near Hollister. It serves as part of the primary route from the Monterey Peninsula to either the San Francisco Bay Area or the California Central Valley.
State Route 36 is an east–west state highway in the U.S. state of California that is routed from U.S. Route 101 in Humboldt County to U.S. Route 395 just east of Susanville in Lassen County. The highway passes through Red Bluff, the county seat of Tehama County, on the northern edge of the Sacramento Valley. The portion of SR 36 travelling past Lassen Volcanic National Park and Lake Almanor is part of the Volcanic Legacy Scenic Byway, a National Scenic Byway. Also, Route 36 between Alton and Susanville is a designated Blue Star Memorial Highway.
State Route 44 is a state highway in the U.S. State of California that travels in an east–west direction from State Routes 273 and 299 in Redding to Lassen Volcanic National Park before ending at State Route 36 west of Susanville. This final portion, between the park and its terminus, is part of the Volcanic Legacy Scenic Byway, a National Scenic Byway.
State Route 65 is a north-south state highway in the U.S. state of California. It is composed of two segments in the Central Valley. The southern segment begins at SR 99, near Bakersfield and terminates at SR 198 near Exeter. It also serves the communities of Oildale, Ducor, Terra Bella, Porterville, Strathmore, and Lindsay. The northern segment begins at Interstate 80 in Roseville and terminates at SR 70 at Olivehurst. It also serves the communities of Rocklin, Lincoln, and Wheatland.
State Route 180 is a state highway in the U.S. state of California. It runs through the heart of the San Joaquin Valley from State Route 33 in Mendota through Fresno, and then east towards the Sierra Nevada to Kings Canyon National Park.
U.S. Route 50 (US 50) is a transcontinental United States Numbered Highway, stretching from West Sacramento, California, in the west to Ocean City, Maryland, in the east. The California portion of US 50 runs east from Interstate 80 (I-80) in West Sacramento to the Nevada state line in South Lake Tahoe. A portion in Sacramento also has the unsigned designation of Interstate 305. The western half of the highway in California is a four-or-more-lane divided highway, mostly built to freeway standards, and known as the El Dorado Freeway outside of downtown Sacramento. US 50 continues as an undivided highway with one eastbound lane and two westbound lanes until the route reaches the canyon of the South Fork American River at Riverton. The remainder of the highway, which climbs along and out of the canyon, then over the Sierra Nevada at Echo Summit and into the Lake Tahoe Basin, is primarily a two-lane road.
U.S. Route 97 (US 97) is a United States Numbered Highway, stretching from Weed, California to the Canadian border in Oroville, Washington. The California portion of US 97 runs north from I-5 in Weed to the Oregon state line. This is the majority of a shortcut between I-5 and Klamath Falls, Oregon, added to both states' state highway systems in 1931. It was designated US 97 in 1935, replacing an east–west section in southern Oregon.
Interstate designation, under the current proposal, would apply to the 260-mile (420 km) segment between the junction of State Route 99 with I-5 south of Bakersfield to I-5 in Stockton using State Route 4 as the connector to I-5. Since there is an I-99 route currently in existence in Pennsylvania, it is anticipated that should designation be granted, the Route 99 designation would become either I-7 or I-9 to satisfy Interstate numbering convention.
CONSIDERATION OF ESTABLISHING PORTIONS OF SR49 AND VALLECITO ROAD AS A BUSINESS ROUTE MOTION by Council Member Lynch, seconded by council Member Kulm and carried 4-0 APPROVING PORTIONS OF SR49 AND VALLECITO ROAD BE ESTABLISHED AS BUSINESS ROUTE.