U.S. Route 20 in Oregon

U.S. Route 20
Route information
Maintained by Oregon Department of Transportation
Length: 451.25 mi[1] (726.22 km)
Major junctions
West end: US 101 in Newport
 

OR 34 in Philomath
OR 99W in Corvallis
I-5 in Albany
OR 126 west of Santiam Pass
US 97 in Bend
US 395 in Riley

US 26 in Vale
East end: Idaho state line
Location
Counties: Lincoln, Benton, Deschutes, Linn, Harney, & Malheur
Highway system

United States Numbered Highways
List • Bannered • Divided • Replaced

Oregon highways
Routes • Highways

OR 19 OR 22

U.S. Route 20 in Oregon is a major east–west cross-state highway, especially east of the Cascade Mountains. It connects U.S. Route 101 in Newport on the central Oregon Coast to the Idaho state line east of Nyssa.

Contents

Route description

U.S. Route 20 in Oregon begins at an intersection with U.S. 101 in Newport, and runs eastward over the Central Oregon Coast Range to Corvallis. In Corvallis, it intersects Oregon Route 99W and briefly overlaps Oregon Route 34 before proceeding northeast to Albany. From Albany, U.S. 20 briefly overlaps Oregon Route 99E before turning east through Lebanon and Sweet Home and entering the Cascade Mountains. It intersects Oregon Route 126 west of Santiam Pass and the two routes overlap through Sisters. U.S. 20 then continues eastward and southward to Bend, where it overlaps U.S. 97 for about 5 miles (8.0 km) before turning east through Brothers and Riley. At Riley, U.S. 20 overlaps U.S. 395 through Hines and Burns to about 2 miles (3.2 km) northeast of Burns. From Burns, U.S. 20 continues east through Juntura and Vale. In Vale, U.S. 20 overlaps U.S. 26, and the two highways continue east to Cairo Junction, south of Ontario, and turn south, where they then also run concurrently with Oregon Route 201 to Nyssa. Eastward from Nyssa, U.S. 20 and U.S. 26 continue to the Idaho border.

Bannered routes

U.S. Route 20 has 2 business routes in Oregon: one in Toledo, and one in Bend.

Route straightening

Construction on a portion of U.S. 20 between Newport and Corvallis, specifically, near Toledo to Eddyville, is being done to straighten and remove nearly three miles from the route, and make it easier for larger vehicles to travel. Construction began in 2005, but was halted in 2007 because of excessive unexpected landslides. The project recommenced in May 2008 with a better plan for stabilizing these landslide locations. The final construction was expected to be completed in 2011, but continuing earth movement at a bridge site has delayed the project again. ODOT and the contractor are now in a dispute over liability and money, and the completion date has been postponed until 2012 (small possibility) or 2013 (more likely).[2]

Oregon highway designations

The Oregon section of U.S. 20 consists of the following highways (see Oregon highways and routes), from west to east:

References

External links

U.S. Route 20
Previous state:
Terminus
Oregon Next state:
Idaho