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Topic: Interstate 180 (Nebraska)


  
 Interstate 180 Nebraska @ Interstate-Guide.com
Southbound Interstate 180 and eastbound U.S. 34 reach Exit 2, Cornhusker Highway east to U.S. 6 and west to the Lincoln Municipal Airport.
Interstate 80 and U.S. 77 are co-signed between Exits 397 and 405.
Interstate 180 is a short spur that connects transcontinental Interstate 80 with downtown Lincoln, the state capital of Nebraska.
www.interstate-guide.com /i-180_ne.html   (1767 words)

  
 Wyoming @ RockyMountainRoads.com - Interstate 180
Interstate 180 is unique in that it is not freeway grade or "Interstate standard" at all for its entire length, excepting perhaps the twin viaducts over the Union Pacific Railroad.
Interstate 180 is signed on Central Avenue for the first time; it did not appear on official State of Wyoming highway maps until 1985.
Although work on the second Interstate 180 bridge was substantially complete by the fall of 1983, cold weather set in before final paving could be accomplished, and thus it was the spring of 1984 before the grand opening could occur.
www.rockymountainroads.com /i-180_wy.html   (2727 words)

  
 Nebraska   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-09)
Map of Nebraska Nebraska is bordered by South Dakota to the north; Iowa and Missouri to the east, across the Missouri River; Kansas to the south; Colorado to the southwest, and Wyoming to the west.
Indeed, one of Nebraska's mottos is "Where the West begins", and a local legend even has it that the West begins precisely at the intersection of 13th and O Streets in Lincoln (where it is marked by a red brick star).
According to the Census Bureau, as of 2003, the population of Nebraska was 1,739,291.
nebraska.iqnaut.net   (1074 words)

  
 University of Nebraska Administration   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-09)
Nebraska State Normal School at Kearney was established in 1903 as a teachers college, serving central and western Nebraska.
The Lincoln campus of the University of Nebraska (UNL) was founded in 1869 and is the state's land-grant and comprehensive university, recognized by the Legislature as the primary research and doctoral-degree granting institution in the state and currently enrolling 22,000 undergraduate and graduate students.
The University of Nebraska Medical Center (UNMC) is considered Nebraska's academic health science center, recognized nationally and internationally as a leader in research, education, and patient care and currently enrolls 2,500 students.
www.nebraska.edu /about/fac_descr.shtml   (419 words)

  
 Top20Nebraska.com - Your Top20 Guide to Nebraska   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-09)
Nebraska is bordered by South Dakota to the north; Iowa and Missouri to the east, across the Missouri River; Kansas to the south; Colorado to the southwest; and Wyoming to the west.
A past Nebraska tourism slogan was "Where the West Begins"; locations given for the beginning of the "West" include the Missouri River, the intersection of 13th and O Streets in Lincoln (where it is marked by a red brick star), the 100th meridian, and Chimney Rock.
According to the Census Bureau, as of 2004, the population of Nebraska was 1,747,214.
top20nebraska.com   (2163 words)

  
 Nebraska National Register Sites in Scotts Bluff County   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-09)
Although Nebraska's counties were required by the state legislature in 1913 to use standard twenty-ton capacity designs, the canal companies were not.
The Interstate Canal Bridge and the three other trusses in Scotts Bluff County are the only known examples in the state of steel truss erection by the canal companies.
Scottsbluff was no different than many other Nebraska towns when approached with the opportunity for a "first-class hotel": The townspeople courted, and even donated money to, entrepreneurs to entice the building's construction.
www.nebraskahistory.org /histpres/nebraska/scotsblf.htm   (1751 words)

  
 Nebraska Roads: The Roads Log
Nebraska is the only state in the continental United States without a north-south Interstate highway.
The first numbering system for Nebraska's "minor" highways, which added a third or fourth digit to a two- or three-digit route, was adopted in 1957; the current one, which numbers the routes by county and a letter suffix, was adopted around 1971.
Nebraska also has a third highway of this class, the recreation road (it is abbreviated in the same way as link and spur highways).
www.nebraskaroads.com /roads/index.html   (499 words)

  
 Interstate 180 - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Interstate 180 is the designation for several Interstate Highways in the United States, all of which are related to Interstate 80:
Interstate 180 (Illinois), a short spur in rural northern Illinois.
Interstate 180 (Pennsylvania), a spur to Williamsport, Pennsylvania.
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/Interstate_180   (172 words)

  
 nebraska
But it was George William Norris, representing Nebraska in Congress for a half century, battling for such causes as the direct election of senators, a unicameral legislature, and public power, who embodied it.
Nebraska rates are less than all the surrounding states (the exception being Wyoming, with on-site coal and generating capacity).
Northeast Nebraska has many communities naturally attractive to professionals and entrepreneurs with a taste for small-town life, people who can conduct their businesses from anywhere there's a modem and phone line but prefer a rural setting.
www.citistates.com /nebraska1.htm   (15918 words)

  
 Mn/DOT joins Interstate Highway System's 50th anniversary celebration
Interstates carry about 60,000 people per route-mile a day, 26 times the amount of all other roads, and 22 times the amount of rail passenger services.
The interstate sign itself measures 36 inches high, and is 36 inches wide for two-digit interstates, or 45 inches for three digit interstates.
The interstate connects 45 of the 50 state capitals, including the nation’s capital, Washington, D.C. The five state capitals not directly served by the interstate systems are Juneau, AK; Dover, DE; Jefferson City, MO; Carson City, NV; and Pierre, SD.
www.dot.state.mn.us /interstate50/50facts.html   (1303 words)

  
 Interstate 180
Interstate 180 has earned some notoriety as a front-runner for the nation's least necessary interstate spur.
This was not approved by the FHWA, but the state made provisions for the highway in Peoria ("ghost ramps" from IL 6 at the IL 29 interchange, and an I-180 stub at its IL 29 interchange).
In the 1970s, Illinois proposed a similar route incorporating future I-155 and I-180 as Interstate 53; the number was approved by AASHTO, but the route was declined by the FHWA.
www.kurumi.com /roads/3di/i180.html   (1010 words)

  
 Fallbrook - Building Nebraska   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-09)
Based in Lincoln, Nebraska, Constructors is a heavy-highway contractor involved primarily with concrete and asphalt paving in Nebraska.
Nebraska Ash was formed in 1976 for the express purpose of handling coal combustion products at coal fired electric generating stations.
OLandB was organized in 1903 as an interurban railroad to connect Lincoln to Omaha to the northeast and with Beatrice to the south.
www.fallbrookusa.com /pages/nebraska.html   (2810 words)

  
 Interstate Highway Shields @ Interstate-Guide.com: Nebraska
A trailblazer for Interstate 29 is attached to the final eastbound reassurance shield for this state route.
An Interstate 80 shield and a U.S. 34 shield are posted on a traffic signal along southbound 9th Street at O Street in downtown Lincoln.
This is the only northbound Interstate 180 reassurance shield; it is located after Exit 2, Cornhusker Highway to U.S. 6 and before Exit 1, Superior Street.
www.interstate-guide.com /ishields/nebraska.html   (221 words)

  
 Nebraska by Bruce Springsteen great music album buy
Since 1991, two of Nebraska's five U.S. Electoral Collegeelectoral votes are awarded based on the winner of the statewide election; the other three go to the highest vote-getter in each of the state's three congressional districts.
== Geography == Image:National-atlas-nebraska.PNGleftthumbMap of Nebraska Nebraska is bordered by South Dakota to the north; Iowa and Missouri to the east, across the Missouri River; Kansas to the south; Colorado to the southwest, and Wyoming to the west.
Nebraska is known for its agriculture, especially beef and maizecorn (aka maize).
www.artbrain.co.uk /music/nebraska.htm   (2059 words)

  
 NEBCO, Inc. - Building Nebraska From The Ground Up
The most recent interests include a public golf course, Quarry Oaks, a professional baseball team, the Lincoln Saltdogs, and a community development project that includes residential homes and town homes as well as a business park and retail center, Fallbrook.
NEBCO Realty Group is responsible for the managing and marketing of all of NEBCO’s real estate holdings, which include an impressive portfolio of properties that include office, industrial, retail, and residential holdings as well as farmland, lake properties and entertainment endeavors.
Located west of Interstate 180 and Memorial Stadium, and north of the Historic Haymarket area, Lincoln's newest sports complex creates a visually appealing gateway to the Star City and is home to the professional baseball team, the Lincoln Saltdogs.
www.nebcoinc.com /building_nebraska   (2632 words)

  
 The Nebraska Highways Page
The Interstate Highway system in Nebraska began in 1957 with construction of a portion of I-80 near Gretna.
I-80, a major east-west route across the U.S., was completed in Nebraska in October of 1974.
In addition, Nebraska is also served by I-76 for a few miles, by I-180 going into Lincoln, and the I-480 and I-680 freeways around Omaha.
www.northernplainshighways.org /nebraska   (537 words)

  
 Interstate 580
Interstate 580 from Oakland eastward is part of California's initial system of interstate highways, submitted by the state June 27, 1945, and approved August 7, 1947.
The 12.8-mile stretch of Highway 17 between I-80 and US 101 was given Interstate status in 1978 (as unsignposted Interstate 180), and officially became part of I-580 in 1983.
However, federal interstate standards for the 480/580 interchange would have doubled the cost of constructing it.
www.kurumi.com /roads/3di/i580.html   (1514 words)

  
 [No title]   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-09)
To view all the Nebraska commercial properties for sale and for lease and to access hundreds of thousands of other commercial properties for sale and for lease in Nebraska and throughout the U.S. and Canada, become a LoopNet member today.
LoopNet operates the largest listing service for Nebraska commercial real estate and for other markets in the U.S. and Canada with more than $370 billion of commercial real estate for sale and 3.0 billion sq.
LoopNet also attracts the largest community of Nebraska commercial real estate professionals with more than 1.5 million members comprised of brokers, corporate executives, service providers, and more than 700,000 buyers, tenants and other principals throughout the U.S. and Canada.
www.loopnet.com /Nebraska   (1013 words)

  
 OKRoads.com -- Fields Trip -- Interstate 80 Nebraska
Interstate 80 spans 2,900 miles across the United States.
On Day One of the Fields Trip, I drove Interstate 80 from U.S. 81 near York, Nebraska, to Omaha; and on Day Two, I drove the highway between Omaha and Interstate 380 near Iowa City, Iowa.
Interstate 80 East at Exit 409 - U.S. 6 - Waverly.
www.okroads.com /fields/i80ne.html   (722 words)

  
 Wyoming Highways @ RockyMountainRoads.com
For Interstates, the state control route number is the letter "I" plus the route number.
U.S. - Diversion Dam to Riverton; Riverton to Shoshoni; Dwyer to Ogallala, Nebraska
Cheyenne and Oregon Trail Loop begins on Interstate 25 in Cheyenne and follows U.S. to Torrington, U.S. past Ft. Laramie to Guernsey, Wyoming 270 through Hartville to Manville and finally U.S. back to Interstate 25 south of Douglas.
www.rockymountainroads.com /wyoming.html   (1664 words)

  
 The Nebraska Highways Page: Highways 101 to 300
This was part of a request that had been made to add 246 miles to the Nebraska Interstate system, and apparently was part of a planned Lincoln to Sioux City interstate as an upgrade of US-77.
The numbering along the Nebraska segment was dropped in the early 1980's, but the Iowa portion remains IA-165.
History and Notes: This route (at least the northern half of it) was mandated by the Nebraska legislature, apparently because the Dept. of Roads failed to build a highway in this area; the route number was written into the legislation.
www.northernplainshighways.org /nebraska/ne100up.html   (2670 words)

  
 I-80 50th Anniversary Page   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-09)
The dedication of Nebraska I-80 on October 19, 1974, marked Nebraska as the first state in the nation to complete its mainline interstate system.
Normally, federal interstate funding for construction is 90 percent federal funds and 10 percent state funds.
25 rest areas and one scenic overlook (near Chappell) are on the Interstate in Nebraska.
www.nebraskatransportation.org /i-80-anniv/index.htm   (377 words)

  
 UNL | Directions
From Interstate 80, take exit 401 A (downtown exit).
Proceed south on Interstate 180 to the city campus (approx.
Westbrook Music Building, Kimball Recital Hall, and The Lied Center for Performing Arts are all located at the corner of 11th and Q Street.
www.unl.edu /choir/directions.shtml   (90 words)

  
 Nebraska Department of Roads   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-09)
These sites may occasionally have public web interfaces.
Lincoln Area - Interstate 80 and I-180 traffic flow sensors and related message boards
From Concept to Construction - The Highway Planning and Design Process for the Nebraska Department of Roads
www.nebraskatransportation.org /projects   (303 words)

  
 Travel Information
• View Mapquest driving directions (193 kB) from westbound Interstate 80.
Please contact the Webmaster if you have any questions/comments about our Web site.
AMOP Physics Group • 116 Brace Lab • University of Nebraska-Lincoln •; Lincoln, Nebraska 68588-0111
www.unl.edu /amop/travel_information.html   (164 words)

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