New Mexico State Road 286
Standard route signage in New Mexico
|
Highway names |
Interstates: |
Interstate XX (I-XX) |
US Highways: |
U.S. Route XX (US XX) |
State: |
State Road XX (NM XX) |
System links |
- State Roads in New Mexico
|
State Road 106
|
Location: |
Sombrillo |
Length: |
0.752 mi (1.210 km) |
State Road 138
|
Location: |
Las Cruces |
Length: |
0.670 mi (1.078 km) |
State Road 158
|
Location: |
Hill |
Length: |
0.900 mi (1.448 km) |
State Road 233
|
Location: |
Medanales |
Length: |
0.850 mi (1.368 km) |
State Road 286
|
Location: |
East of Tucumcari
|
Length: |
0.781 mi (1.257 km) |
State Road 305
|
Location: |
West of Lindrith
|
Length: |
0.500 mi (0.805 km) |
State Road 315
|
Location: |
North of Algodones
|
Length: |
0.479 mi (0.771 km) |
There are 22 state roads that are shorter than one mile (1.6 km) long in the U.S. state of New Mexico that are maintained by the New Mexico Department of Transportation. The shortest, State Road 446, is a quarter-mile (402 m) long and serves to connect Valmora to State Road 97. State Road 597, the second shortest highway, links U.S. Route 160 to the Four Corners Monument, a tourist destination on the Navajo Nation where the states of Utah, Arizona, New Mexico, and Colorado meet. In comparison, the longest state road in New Mexico is State Road 120, 119.031 miles (191.562 km) long, which is more than 475 times longer than the shortest state road.
State Road 99 (NM 99) was a very short state highway located entirely in Albuquerque. The highway began at Central Avenue (former US 66) and ended at the Johnson Gym within the University of New Mexico. The exact dates of existence are unknown.
...
Wikipedia