U.S. Highway 167 | ||||
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Route of US 167 highlighted in red
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Route information | ||||
Maintained by Louisiana DOTD | ||||
Length: | 241.046 mi (387.926 km) | |||
Existed: | 1926 – present | |||
Tourist routes: |
Louisiana Scenic Byways: Jean Lafitte Scenic Byway Zydeco Cajun Prairie Scenic Byway |
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Major junctions | ||||
South end: |
LA 14 Bus. in Abbeville |
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North end: | US 63 / US 167 at Arkansas state line in Junction City | |||
Location | ||||
Parishes: | Vermilion, Lafayette, St. Landry, Evangeline, Rapides, Grant, Winn, Jackson, Lincoln, Union | |||
Highway system | ||||
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U.S. Highway 167 Business |
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Location: | Alexandria |
Length: | 5.385 mi (8.666 km) |
Existed: | 1994–present |
U.S. Highway 167 (US 167) in Louisiana runs 241.05 miles (387.93 km) in a north–south direction from the national southern terminus at Louisiana Highway 14 Business (LA 14 Bus.) in Abbeville to the Arkansas state line at Junction City.
The route cuts through the center of Louisiana for roughly its entire length and passes through two of the state's metropolitan areas, Lafayette and Alexandria. Between those cities, US 167 ranges in character from an urban freeway to a lightly traveled two-lane collector. During this stretch, it overlaps the southern 23 miles (37 km) of Interstate 49 (I-49) from Lafayette through Opelousas before making a diversion through rural Evangeline Parish to serve the small city of Ville Platte.
US 167 follows a combination of I-49 and the Pineville Expressway through Alexandria and Pineville, crossing the Red River via the twin-span Purple Heart Memorial Bridge. US 167 remains a surface four-lane highway through northern Louisiana and is the primary north–south route through Winnfield, Jonesboro, and Ruston. The northern portion of the route, beginning at the I-20 interchange in Ruston, also carries the first 35 miles (56 km) of US 63.