Washington State Route 104
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
State Route 104 Number based on US 101 |
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RCW 47.17.175 | |||||
Length: | 31.75 mi[1] (51.1 km) | ||||
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Formed: | 1964 | ||||
West end: | US 101 near Discovery Bay | ||||
Major junctions: |
SR 19 near Port Ludlow SR 3 in Port Gamble SR 524 in Edmonds SR 99 in Edmonds I-5 in Mountlake Terrace |
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East end: | SR 522 in Lake Forest Park | ||||
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State Route 104 is a state highway in the U.S. state of Washington. It extends from Discovery Bay in the northwest to Lake Forest Park in the southeast. Its length is just under 32 miles (52 km), excluding the portion of the route carried by the Washington State Ferries run from Kingston to Edmonds.
[edit] Route description
Originating at U.S. Route 101 on the Olympic Peninsula, it runs southeasterly towards Hood Canal, and crosses it to the Kitsap Peninsula on the third longest floating bridge in the world, the Hood Canal Bridge. From there it continues to Kingston, from which the ferry run to Edmonds is an integral part of the route. It continues its southeasterly course from Edmonds and crosses State Route 99 just north of the King-Snohomish County line. SR-104 becomes the line itself from just east of SR-99 to its intersection with Interstate 5, where it once again turns southeast, as Ballinger Way N.E. The highway ends at Bothell Way N.E. (State Route 522) in Lake Forest Park.
[edit] References
- ^ State Highway Log, Washington State Department of Transportation, 2005 B
[edit] External links
State routes in Washington related to US 101 | |
SR 100 (Spur) - SR 102 - SR 103 - SR 104 - SR 105 (Spur) - SR 106 - SR 107 - SR 108 - SR 109 (Spur) - SR 110 (Spur) - SR 112 - SR 113 - SR 114 - SR 115 - SR 116 - SR 117 - SR 119 | |
Former or proposed State Routes: SR 111 - SR 118 |
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