Guam Highway 8 | ||||
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Purple Heart Highway | ||||
Route information | ||||
Maintained by Guam Department of Public Works | ||||
Major junctions | ||||
West end: | GH-1 in Hagåtña | |||
GH-33 in Mongmong-Toto-Maite |
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East end: | Unnumbered road in Barrigada | |||
Highway system | ||||
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GH-33 in Mongmong-Toto-Maite
GH-10 in Barrigada
Guam Highway 8 (GH-8) is one of the primary automobile highways in the United States territory of Guam.
The route is one of the more important highways in the island and is designated the Purple Heart Highway. The primary means of traversing the plateaued central part of the island, the route begins running south from a junction with GH-1 and almost immediately curves eastward into Mongmong-Toto-Maite. It shortly intersects the east end of GH-33, which provides a route into downtown Hagåtña. From there, the route continues eastward into the community of Barrigada. A significant amount of the land north of the road was once Naval Air Station Guam, and GH-8 used to be the primary route to the base, but after the Base Realignment and Closure Commission chose to have its operations relocated, the base was closed and the land has been returned to the local government, which has restored the area's original name of Tiyan. Most of the land has been used to expand the adjacent Antonio B. Won Pat International Airport and support industrial operations, so the main road in Tiyan remains an important though unnumbered highway junction. Towards its east end, GH-8 junctions two other important routes: GH-10 towards Mangilao and the south coast and GH-16 back north towards Tamuning and Dededo. Traffic at the latter junction defaults to GH-16 for travel towards GH-1. GH-8 then curves east-northeast through undeveloped land before emerging at Radio Barrigada, a Naval facility dominated by the Admiral Nimitz Golf Course. The route itself ends at an unremarkable T-intersection within the grounds.