U.S. Route 321
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U.S. Route 321 |
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Length: | 526 mi (847 km) | ||||||||||||
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Formed: | 1931 | ||||||||||||
South end: | US 17 at Hardeeville, SC | ||||||||||||
North end: | I-40/TN 73/95 at Lenoir City, TN | ||||||||||||
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U.S. Route 321 is a spur of U.S. Route 21. It runs for 526 miles (847 km) from South Carolina to Tennessee. The northern terminus of U.S. 321 is between Lenoir City and Oak Ridge, Tennessee, at Interstate 40 exit 364, which is about 4 miles (6.4 km) west of Interstate 40's junction with Interstate 75. The southern terminus is in Hardeeville, South Carolina at the intersection with U.S. Route 17, less than a mile away from Interstate 95 and 15 miles north of Savannah, Georgia.
Because of its unusual "North-South-North" route, U.S. 321 intersects both Interstate 40 and U.S. Route 70 three separate times.
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[edit] Route description
[edit] South Carolina
U.S. 321 provides direct access between Savannah and Columbia, serving as an alternate to Interstate 95 and Interstate 26. Starting in Hardeeville, U.S. 321 goes through sparsely populated areas and small towns including Estill, Fairfax, and Denmark, heading in a rather straight and northward direction into the Columbia area, where it merges with its parent route U.S. 21 in Dixiana. In Columbia, the route stays concurrent with U.S. 21 through Cayce, over the Congaree River on the Blossom Street Bridge, turning left onto Huger Street, right onto Elmwood Avenue, and left onto North Main Street. The roads separate at Hyatt Park, with U.S. 321 staying west of Interstate 77 and U.S. 21 north of Columbia. The route goes through to communities of Winnsboro, Chester, York, and Clover before entering North Carolina at Bowling Green.
[edit] North Carolina
U.S. 321 is an important route in Western North Carolina. It provides an alternative North-South route to Interstate 77, which passes through a busy metropolitan area, and U.S. Route 221, which is often a twisty and difficult drive up the Appalachians. Travelers from South Carolina who are going to points west of Charlotte and want to avoid the traffic of I-77 may choose to enter the state on U.S. 321.
U.S. 321 is a multilane highway beginning at the state line. After seven miles, it enters the Gastonia area. Traffic on northbound 321 through Gastonia is generally not as heavy as traffic on southbound 321 north of Interstate 85, where it may back up for a couple of miles as drivers wait to turn onto I-85.
The road becomes a freeway at C. Grier Beam Boulevard in Gastonia, just south of North Carolina Highway 275 / 279. It remains a freeway until its junction with Interstate 40. The freeway bypasses a number of cities that mainline U.S. 321 once passed through. A rather long business route still serves Maiden, Newton, and Conover, but the freeway is a more direct route to the mountains, and the business route is generally used by local traffic only.
Traffic is heavy between Hickory and Lenoir. The North Carolina Department of Transportation (NCDOT) has a long-term plan to widen the road to six lanes, which is estimated to be completed by 2015. However, the project will probably take considerally longer. The first stage of the project (NCDOT project B-4450), replacing the bridge over the Catawba River, was previously estimated to be completed by 2011. [1] However, the NCDOT project page shows that right-of-way acquisition will not begin until 2012. [2]
North of Lenoir, U.S. 321 is a four-lane divided highway. Currently the highway becomes a two-lane road again in northern Caldwell County. NCDOT project R-2237 will widen the road the four lanes through Blowing Rock. [3] The widening of U.S. 321 through Blowing Rock has been a controversial project. Many residents of the town feel that a four-lane highway will destroy the character of the small town, and they proposed several bypass alternatives. NCDOT has selected the widening as its preferred alternative, but added several features such as underground utilities, sidewalks, landscaping, and rock walls to make the widening more palatable to the residents who are opposed to it. [4] These features are not present on the two-lane highway that is being replaced.
North of Blowing Rock, U.S. 321 is already a four-lane highway up to King Street in Boone; thus, R-2237 will make 321 a four-lane highway from the South Carolina state line to downtown Boone. Currently, U.S. 321 meets U.S 421 at King Street and overlaps it over King Street to leave town to the west. NCDOT project R-2615 is proposed to widen the U.S. 321/421 concurrency from this junction to their junction near Vilas, although this project is currently unfunded. [5] There is a feasibility study (FS-0511A) in progress to examine the possibility of widening U.S. 321 from the junction near Vilas to the Tennessee state line. If both of these projects were completed, then U.S. 321 would be a four-lane highway through the entire state.
[edit] Tennessee
U.S. 321 "changes direction" in Elizabethton, Tennessee: the road is designated as southbound in both directions driving away from its intersection with U.S. Route 19E. [6] It is conterminous with US 11E through portions of Washington and Greene counties. In Greeneville, the highway continues south into Cocke County, crossing I-40 at Newport. The stretch of US 321 from Newport south to Cosby and southwest through Pittman Center to Gatlinburg parallels the northern boundary of the Great Smoky Mountains National Park and is quite scenic. From a point between Newport and Cosby to the intersection with the Little River Road, it is concurrent with Tennessee State Route 73. In Pigeon Forge, US 321 is a divided, multi-lane traffic-laden thoroughfare where it serves as the city's main route, lined with hotels, outlet malls and amusement facilities. Veering southwest of Pigeon Forge, the highway takes on a more rural character, and narrows down to 2 lanes as it traverses Wears Valley until its junction with Tennessee State Route 73/337 (the Little River Road) at the Townsend entrance to the Great Smoky Mountains National Park. It is concurrent with Tennessee 73 from this junction to its terminus. With the exception of a 3 mile section between Townsend and Maryville, the remaining portions of the highway through Blount County are a minimum of 4 lanes and usually a divided highway until it reaches Fort Loudon Dam in Loudon County where it crosses the Tennessee River at just south of Lenoir City, and has a wrong-way concurrency with Tennessee State Route 95 from a point several miles south of Lenoir City to its terminus at I-40.
Current plans call for a new bridge crossing over Fort Loudoun Lake and Fort Loudoun Dam along with widening of 1.4 miles of related highway, with construction underway.[citation needed] Though sections of the highway are already four-laned, remaining portions through Loudon County will also be widened as part of the project, meaning the highway would be a four-lane semi-divided thoroughfare from Interstate 40 and Interstate 75 to the Great Smoky Mountains National Park, except for the 3 mile stretch near Walland, TN.
[edit] Future
This article contains information about a planned or expected future road. It may contain information of a speculative nature and the content may change as the road's construction or completion approaches and more information becomes available. |
In addition to the widening project, there have also been talks of a freeway-to-freeway connection with Interstate 85 in Gastonia that would greatly relieve traffic flowing through the junction. Currently, U.S. 321 is a surface road while passing through the interchange, but shortly becomes a freeway north of there. However, in order to extend the freeway to I-85, the few remaining at-grade intersections and traffic lights would have to be eliminated. An interchange is planned for the proposed Garden Parkway, which would terminate at the freeway section of U.S. 321 near Dallas.
[edit] Major intersections
- U.S. Route 17 in Hardeeville, South Carolina
- U.S. Route 601 near Tarboro, South Carolina
- U.S. Route 278 in Fairfax, South Carolina
- U.S. Route 301 in Ulmer, South Carolina
- U.S. Route 78 in Denmark, South Carolina
- U.S. Route 178 in North, South Carolina
- U.S. Route 21/U.S. Route 176 from south of Columbia to Columbia, South Carolina
- Interstate 26 in West Columbia, South Carolina
- Interstate 20 in Columbia, South Carolina
- South Carolina Highway 9 in Chester, South Carolina
- Interstate 85 in Gastonia, North Carolina
- Interstate 40 in Hickory, North Carolina
- U.S. Route 64 in Lenoir, North Carolina
- U.S. Route 221 from Blowing Rock to Boone, North Carolina
- U.S. Route 421 from Boone to near Vilas, North Carolina
- U.S. Route 19E from Hampton to Elizabethton, Tennessee
- Interstate 26 in Johnson City, Tennessee
- Interstate 40 in Newport, Tennessee
- U.S. Route 441 from Gatlinburg, Tennessee to Pigeon Forge, Tennessee
- U.S. Route 411 in Maryville, Tennessee
- U.S. Route 129 in Maryville, Tennessee
- U.S. Route 11 in Lenoir City, Tennessee
- Interstate 75 & Interstate 40 in Lenoir City, Tennessee
[edit] Bannered routes
[edit] North Carolina alternate
U.S. Route 321A |
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Location | Granite Falls-Lenoir, North Carolina |
U.S. Route 321A is an alternate route of US 321 in western North Carolina. The southern terminus of the route is at US 321 southeast of Granite Falls. The northern terminus is at US 321 near the northern city limit of Lenoir.
[edit] Business loops and spurs
- High Shoals, North Carolina to Hickory, North Carolina. This business route is over 30 miles (48 km) long and diverges considerably from the main route. It passes through Lincolnton, North Carolina, Maiden, North Carolina, Newton, North Carolina, and Conover, North Carolina
- Granite Falls, North Carolina to Lenoir, North Carolina
- Blowing Rock, North Carolina
[edit] References
- "U.S. 321 widening to take longer than estimated" by Andrew Mackie, Hickory Daily Record, March 14, 2006