US Highway 23 | ||||
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US 23 highlighted in red |
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Route information | ||||
Maintained by MDOT | ||||
Length: | 362.33 mi[2] (583.11 km) | |||
Existed: | November 11, 1926[1] – present | |||
Tourist routes: |
Lake Huron Circle Tour, Sunrise Side Coastal Highway | |||
Major junctions | ||||
South end: | US 23 / US 223 near Lambertville | |||
I-94 near Ann Arbor |
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North end: | I-75 near Mackinaw City | |||
Location | ||||
Counties: | Monroe, Washtenaw, Livingston, Genesee, Saginaw, Bay, Arenac, Iosco, Alcona, Alpena, Presque Isle, Cheboygan, Emmet | |||
Highway system | ||||
United States Numbered Highways Michigan State Trunkline Highway System
|
US Highway 23 (US 23) is a United States Numbered Highway that runs from Jacksonville, Florida to Mackinaw City, Michigan. In the US state of Michigan, it is a major 362.33-mile (583.11 km) north–south state trunkline highway that runs through the Lower Peninsula (LP). The trunkline is a freeway from the Michigan–Ohio state line near Lambertville to the city of Standish, and it follows the Lake Huron shoreline from there to its northern terminus. The non-freeway section was designated the Sunrise Side Coastal Highway by the Michigan Department of Transportation (MDOT) in 2004 as a part of the Michigan Heritage Route program. Serving the cities of Ann Arbor and Flint, US 23 acts as a freeway bypass of the Metro Detroit area. The section from Flint north to Standish also carries Interstate 75 (I-75) including a segment that carries almost 70,000 vehicles on a daily basis.
The first transportation routes along US 23 in the state were sections of two Indian trails. When the United States Numbered Highway System was first designated on November 11, 1926, the new highway replaced two previous designations along its route. Since creation, the road was been moved and realigned several times. Through the 1930s and 1940s, the lakeshore routing was created to replace a path that run further inland through the northern portion of the state. Starting in the early 1950s, various sections in the southeastern and central areas of the LP were upgraded to freeways, bypassing several major cities in the area. These improvements were completed by the end of the 1960s. Since then a new crossing of the Saginaw River at Zilwaukee was built to carry the I-75/US 23 freeway. The Zilwaukee Bridge was delayed by an August 1982 construction accident. Originally scheduled for completion in 1983, the structure opened to traffic in September 1988.
Contents |
US 23 runs for 362.33 miles (583.11 km) through the LP of Michigan, serving as a freeway bypass to the west of Metro Detroit and a scenic highway through the northern portion of the state along Lake Huron. Between Flint and Standish, US 23 runs concurrently with I-75.[3] Like other state trunkline highways, it is maintained by the Michigan Department of Transportation (MDOT). All of US 23 in the state south of the M-32 junction in Alpena has been listed on the National Highway System,[4] a network of roads important to the country's economy, defense, and mobility.[5] From the Standish area north, the highway is also a part of the Lake Huron Circle Tour and the Sunrise Side Coastal Highway, a Michigan Heritage Route.[3]
US 23 enters Michigan on a freeway northwest of Toledo, Ohio, concurrent with US 223. This freeway runs north through farm fields in rural western Monroe County near Lambertville. about 5 miles (8.0 km) north of the state line, US 223 turns westerly on St. Anthony Road, leaving the freeway. South of Dundee, US 23 crosses the River Raisin before coming to an interchange with M-50 next to the Cabela's store west of town. North of town, the freeway passes near a cement plant.[3][6] Farther north, it crosses a line of the Ann Arbor Railroad[7] near Azalia as the trunkline runs to the east of Milan at the Monroe-Washtenaw county line.[3][6] North of Milan, the freeway crosses a line of the Norfolk Southern Railway.[7]
The landscape takes on a more suburban residential character as the freeway approaches the Ann Arbor area. There are separate interchanges for US 12 (Michigan Avenue) and I-94. Between the latter interchange and the one for Washtenaw Avenue, US 23 carries the Business Loop I-94 (BL I-94) moniker as well. That secondary designation leaves the freeway and runs west on Washtenaw Avenue into downtown Ann Arbor and the campus of the University of Michigan along with the Business US 23 (BUS US 23) designation; east of US 23, M-17 connects the freeway with Ypsilanti. North of this interchange, US 23 crosses the Huron River near the campus of Washtenaw Community College and continues north to a junction with the M-14 freeway. The two merge and run westward along the north side of the city before US 23 turns north and M-14 turns south.[3][6]
North of Ann Arbor, the freeway runs through woodlands and near several lakes. US 23 crosses into Livingston County in Whitmore Lake near the water body of the same name. East of Brighton, the freeway intersects I-96 and continues north to an intersection with M-59 south of Hartland. The freeway turns northeasterly by Runyon Lake and runs toward the city of Fenton. The trunkline passes through town and turns back toward the northwest, running between lakes Ponemah and Fenton. Continuing north, US 23 runs through fields as it approaches the Flint area.[3][6]
Southwest of Grand Blanc, US 23 meets I-75, and the two freeways merge together near the Bishop International Airport.[3][6] The freeway has an interchange with I-69 near the crossing with the Canadian National Railway line.[7] I-75/US 23 runs along the west side of Flint, crossing the Flint River. In Mount Morris Township, the freeway intersects the northern end of I-475 before meeting M-57 near Clio.[3][6] The highest traffic totals along US 23 in the state of Michigan were recorded by MDOT near the M-57 interchange; in 2009 an average 68,800 vehicles used that section of freeway daily.[8] These traffic counts are expressed in terms of annual average daily traffic (AADT), which is a statistical calculation of the average daily number of vehicles on a segment of roadway.
Near Birch Run, the highway turns northwesterly next to a large outlet mall. Between here and the Saginaw area,the trunkline runs through more wooded lands, crossing the Cass River near Bridgeport. I-75/US 23 enters the Tri-Cities (named for Saginaw, Bay City and Midland) when it bypasses Saginaw on the east. The freeway intersects M-46 in the suburb of Buena Vista south of the junction with I-675. North of downtown, the freeway crosses the Saginaw River on the Zilwaukee Bridge,[3][6] a "post-tensioned, segmental, [concrete] box girder bridge"[9] that is "infamous" for a series of "construction mishaps, cost overruns, and government foibles."[10]
Past the bridge, I-75/US 23 meets the northern end of I-675 and continues through fields and woods to the Bay City area. At exit 162, the freeway meets the eastern terminus of US 10 and the western terminus of M-25 west of downtown. The next interchange north is with the M-13 connector freeway, and I-75/US 23 turns northwesterly to bypass around Kawkawlin. The trunkline turns north, crosses the Kawkawlin River and the Pinconning Creek before coming to exit 188. There, US 23 turns east, separating from I-75. The trunkline continues for about 3 miles (4.8 km) as a freeway which ends at the intersection with M-13 south of Standish.[3][6] The lowest AADT along any freeway section of US 23 in Michigan is the section immediately east of I-75; here the traffic levels drop from 20,763 vehicles per day to 4,466 vehicles after US 23 separates from I-75.[8]
US 23 runs north from the end of its freeway along Huron Road through the community of Standish. Huron Road turns northeasterly after the intersection with Old M-76.[3][6] Northeast of this intersection, the highest, non-freeway AADT level on US 23 was recorded by MDOT at 16,757 vehicles daily.[8] Running through Omer, the highway crosses the Rifle River[3][6] and a line of the Lake State Railway.[7] In between the two crossings, it turns due east on its way out of town. At Hale Road, US 23 meets the southern end of M-65 before it continues east to Au Gres. There it runs along the Saginaw Bay and crosses the Au Gres River. Huron Road turns northward along the lakeshore, staying inland near Point Lookout. US 23 runs through woods as it follows Saginaw Bay through Alabaster to Tawas City. The highway intersects the eastern terminus of M-55, runs around Tawas Bay to East Tawas and follows the Lake Huron shoreline to Oscoda.[3][6] Through this area, US 23 runs parallel to the Lake State Railway and crosses into the Huron National Forest.[11]
Oscoda is the location of the eastern termini of both the River Road National Scenic Byway, County Road F-41. In between those two junctions, the highway crosses the Au Sable River near its mouth, and the trunkline passes by the former Wurtsmith Air Force Base. Huron Road continues north, running next to Van Etten Lake as it leaves the national forest. Further north, it runs along Cedar Lake when it crosses into Alcona County.[6][11] The highway meets the eastern termini of F-30 and M-72 in Greenbush and Harrisville respectively. It also passes the Harrisville State Park in the latter community. The highway shifts a bit further inland north of Harrisville, continuing to parallel the rail road through the Mackinaw State Forest. Near Ossineke, the trunkline turns back toward the lake, running along the shoreline of Thunder Bay.[3][6]
When US 23 enters Alpena, it follows State Street through town and turns northwesterly on Chisholm Street. The intersection of Chisholm and Washington streets marks the eastern terminus of M-32. Chisholm Street runs along the Thunder Bay River and crosses the river near Lake Besser. The highway leaves town and runs through rural woodlands to the south shore of Long Lake, curving around the eastern side of the lake. Near the northern end of the lake, US 23 crosses into Presque Isle County and runs along the west shore of Grand Lake. At the north end of that lake, the highway turns west along the Lake Huron shoreline near Thompson's Harbor State Park. The trunkline continues to Rogers City where it bypasses town to the south and west, intersecting F-21 and M-68 in the process; BUS US 23 runs through downtown. On the other side of Rogers City, US 23 runs along the lake past Hoeft State Park and along Hammond Bay before crossing into Cheboygan County.[3][6] This area had the lowest AADT levels in 2009 at 1,097 vehicles per day.[8]
US 23 follows the Lake Huron shoreline through Cheboygan County through woodlands past Cheboygan State Park and Duncan Bay. On the eastern edge of the city, the highway intersects F-05 before following State Street through a commercial district. State Street crosses the Cheboygan River on the Cheboygan Bascule Bridge near the mouth of the river and the dock for the USCGC Mackinaw. On the west side of the river, US 23 meets the northern terminus of M-27 at the intersection with Main Street. State Street continues westerly as C-66, and US 23 turns north on Main Street for a block before resuming west on Mackinaw Avenue. The highway continues along the lake toward Mackinaw City. As it approaches the village, it passes Historic Mill Creek State Park and several motels. At Nicolet Street in town, the highway crosses into Emmet County for the short distance to the highway's national northern terminus at I-75's exit 338.[3][6]
Before Michigan became a state, the first land transportation corridors were the Indian trails.[12] The original Shore Trail ran roughly parallel to the route of the modern US 23 from the Bay City area to Cheboygan. Another section of the current highway followed the Saginaw Trail between Flint and Saginaw.[13]
Later, during the auto trail era, the modern US 23 also coincided with the east branch of the Dixie Highway and part of the Lower Peninsula section of the Theodore Roosevelt International Highway. The Dixie Highway was created by William S. Gilbreath after he developed the Lincoln Highway. The highway was designed to link the Great Lakes with the Gulf of Mexico, and to commemorate a half century of peace between the North and the South after the American Civil War. At the urging of Governor Woodbridge Ferris, the northern terminus was located at the Straits of Mackinac. The highway had two branches in the Lower Peninsula; the eastern branch followed what later became US 23 north of Standish.[14] The Theodore Roosevelt International Highway named for former US president Theodore Roosevelt after his death in 1919. Overall, this highway ran from Portland, Oregon, to Portland, Maine, by way of Michigan and the Canadian province of Ontario. In Michigan, it also followed US 23 north of Standish.[15]
The highway was also part of the East Michigan Pike, designed to be a counterpart of the West Michigan Pike. Backers of this auto trail lost out in terms of name recognition to the Dixie Highway. The original route was to include a section along the coast of The Thumb between Bay City and Port Huron, and it used same route as the Dixie Highway north of Bay City. The Dixie Highway won in terms of name recognition, relegating the East Michigan Pike to the list of failed auto trails.[16] The southern part of what is now US 23 in the state wasn't left out of the auto trail craze. The Top of Michigan Trail was designated in 1917 from the state line north to the Bay City area, before turning inland along other roadways. The name faded from shortly after the time the Michigan State Highway Department assigned the first highway numbers in the state.[17]
The first state highways along the US 23 corridor were numbered M-65 from the Ohio line north to the Flint area and M-10 from Flint north to Mackinaw City by July 1, 1919.[18][lower-alpha 1] When originally designated, M-65 was in two sections: the southern segment ran from the Ohio state line north to the Dundee area; the northern section ran between Ann Arbor and Flint by way of Brighton and Fenton.[18] The gap between the two segments was eliminated by the middle of 1926.[20]
US 23 was commissioned on November 11, 1926,[1] with the debut of the United States Numbered Highway System.[21] The Michigan State Highway Department (MSHD)[lower-alpha 2] removed the M-10 and M-65 designations from the highway at the time. As it was originally designated, US 23 crossed into Michigan from Ohio south of Temperance and ran north to Ypsilanti via Maybee. Once the highway entered Ann Arbor, it followed the roads that preceded the modern freeway up to Flint. From Flint to Saginaw, US 23 ran concurrently with US 10. On the way north to Bay City, the highway ran on the west side of the Saginaw River before turning north to the Standish area. From Standish to Mackinaw City, US 23 initially took a more inland route through the northeastern LP.[24]
Starting in 1929, MSHD started updating the route that US 23 followed through the Lower Peninsula. Late that year, the routing was moved to the east side of the Saginaw River, and M-47 was extended along the former course on the west side of the river.[25][26] During 1930, a set of changes realigned the highway's route through the southeast corner of the state. Near Ida, US 23 was rerouted along M-50 to Dundee and north through Milan to Ann Arbor, bypassing Maybee and Whittaker.[27] US 23 was moved from its inland routing between Omer and Tawas City via Whittemore to follow a shoreline alignment by way of Au Gres along Saginaw Bay around 1932; the former route through Twining and Whittemore became an extension of M-65 and the section from Whittemore east to Tawas City was added to M-55 as a part of these changes.[28][29]
In 1932, US 23 was moved closer to the lakeshore between Spruce and Alpena; the former routing was redesignated M-171.[29] The highway was also moved to a route closer to the lakeshore between Tawas City and Oscoda, with part of the old inland route taking the designation Old US 23.[30][31] A few years later in 1936, US 23 replaced M-72 between Oscoda and Harrisville and followed a new roadway north to the Spruce area. The M-171 designation was applied to the former routing by way of Mikado and Lincoln.[32][33] In the middle of 1937, US 27 was extended concurrently along US 23 between Cheboygan and Mackinaw City.[34][35] Around the end of the decade, US 23's routing was moved in another location to follow the lakeshore; this time the highway was rerouted between Alpena and Rogers City. M-65 was extended northwards from Lachine through Posen to terminate over the former US 23 routing.[36][37]
US 23 was moved to its current lakeshore routing between Rogers City and Cheboygan in 1940, and M-33 was extended westerly from Onaway to Afton and north to Cheboygan over the former US 23 roadway while M-68 was extended eastward through Onaway to Rogers City.[38][39] In early 1941, a bridge across the Saginaw River connecting Salzburg and Lafayette avenues in Bay City was added to the route of US 23 in the city; at the same time the former routing was redesignated U.S. Route 23 Business.[40][41] The highway was also realigned between Hartland and Fenton in 1941.[42][43] By 1945, the northernmost segment of M-65 downtown Rogers City was redesignated Business US 23, and M-65 was truncated to its junction with US 23 southeast of town, removing the concurrency that existed since 1940.[44] North of Dundee, a more direct alignment to Azalia was added to US 23, turning the former routing back to local control in late 1947 or early 1948; at the same time, the last gravel section of the highway was paved near Hammond Bay in northwestern Presque Isle County.[45][46]
One of the first pieces of what would later become part of US 23's freeway route was completed in late 1951 or 1952, when a two-lane bypass was built around the eastern side of Milan.[47][48] Two years later, a similar bypass was built from Bridgeport to M-81 on the east side of Saginaw, with the old route becoming a BUS US 23 designation.[49][50] Both bypasses would later be upgraded to four-lane freeways by 1961, with the Saginaw one later incorporated into the route of I-75.[51] When the Mackinac Bridge opened on November 1, 1957, US 23, US 27 and US 31 were extended along the access roadways to the foot of the bridge.[52]
The first future freeway portion of US 23 was built in 1957 from north of Ann Arbor to Whitmore Lake as a divided highway.[53][54] On June 30, 1958, the first stretch of the "Fenton–Clio Expressway" opened, stretching from Fenton to Birch Run.[55] The freeway connection from Dundee south to Ohio was opened on October 1, 1959.[56] In late 1959, the portion from Flint to Birch Run also gained the I-75 designation.[57]
In late 1960 or early 1961, a new I-75/US 23/US 10 freeway was built from the north end of the Saginaw bypass to Kawkawlin, utilizing the Zilwaukee drawbridge (later replaced by the Zilwaukee Bridge) over the Saginaw River; when it opened, MSHD extended M-13 along the former route of US 23 from the northside of Saginaw into Bay City to the end of the freeway at Kawkawlin. Another section connected the Whittemore Lake area with Brighton in the same timeframe.[51][58] By the end of the year, freeway sections opened to bypass Saginaw south and ran south to Birch Run, another connected south from Fenton to Hartland, and a third connected Milan with Dundee.[59] The remaining gaps were eliminated with additional freeway openings in 1962: Brighton to Hartland opened in September,[60] and Milan to Ann Arbor opened in November.[61]
The I-75/US 23 freeway north of the Kawkawlin area to Standish opened in 1967, and M-13 was shown on maps following US 23's former route through Linwood and Pinconning after the change.[62][63] MSHD requested that US 23 north of Standish be included in the Interstate Highway System in 1968; if the addition had been approved, federal funding would have been available for additional freeway conversions.[64] Once the last piece of I-75 was completed along the M-76 corridor, the I-75 designation was extended north of Bay City on US 23 in 1973.[65][66]
The MSHD first proposed a realignment of US 223 in 1965; this change would reroute that highway to replace M-151 in southern Monroe County, and use the US 23 freeway to connect to Sylvania, Ohio.[67] The rerouting change was made in 1977 when Michigan shifted its segment of US 223 as proposed twelve years prior. Instead of running south through Ottawa Lake, US 223 continued east to the US 23 freeway and south into Ohio.[68][69]
The original bridge across the Saginaw River at Zilwaukee was built in 1960 as a bascule bridge to allow shipping traffic to use the river. Opening the drawbridge would back traffic up on I-75/US 10/US 23 for upwards of four hours on holiday weekends.[70] Approved in 1974, construction on the replacement bridge started in October 1979. A major construction accident in August 1982 delayed completion of the new Zilwaukee Bridge.[9] The structure was originally supposed to cost $76.8 million with a 1983 completion date; in the end it cost $131.3 million when the southbound span finally opened on September 19, 1988.[71]
While that construction was being done, MDOT truncated US 10 at Bay City in 1986; this removed the concurrency between US 10 and US 23 that existed since 1926.[72][73]
As early as 1992, plans were studied to build a new US 23 freeway from Standish northerly, with proposed termini in either Tawas City, Oscoda or Alpena. This proposal was brought up due to a high level of tourist traffic along the current routing since the mid 1960s.[74] Officials in the Flint area have proposed extending a freeway to directly connect I-475 to US 23. Such an extension, if built, "include a new freeway coming out of I-475, which would snake across Fenton and Cook roads before connecting into US 23 at Baldwin Road."[75]
Most of US 23, along with US 2 in the Upper Peninsula, was designated the United Spanish War Veterans Memorial Highway The designation was conferred in Public Act 207 of 1945, with companion legislation for US 2 in 1949. Signs marking the highway were not erected until 1968 when Governor George W. Romney had them installed.[76]
North of Standish, US 23 is a part of the Lake Huron Circle Tour (LHCT).[3] This two tour was created in May 1986 as part of the overall Great Lakes Circle Tour through a joint effort between MDOT and its counterparts in Wisconsin, Minnesota and Ontario.[77]
When the Michigan State Legislature consolidated the statutes defining the various memorial highways in 2001, they included the Veterans of World War I Memorial Highway in the law. Defined along I-75/US 23 between Saginaw and Bay City, the designation was included in Public Act 142.[78] That act also moved the Roberts–Linton Highway name between the two cities to the freeway. Originally named in 1931 for local leaders that championed the construction of a highway along the Saginaw River, the moniker was applied to the former highway routing between Saginaw and Bay City until the 2001 change.[79]
In May 2004, the highway north of Standish was named the Sunrise Side Coastal Highway, a Michigan Heritage Route.[80] At the end of 2011, the Northeast Michigan Council of Governments (NEMCOG) was working on funding a tourist promotion called "Telling Stories of the Sunrise Coast" through the US 23 Heritage Route Interpretive Program. Past efforts by NEMCOG included print media, logos, and other marketing efforts.[81]
MDOT maintains a listing of the historic bridges in the state. Along US 23, the department has listed two structures. The bridge over the Ocqueoc River in Ocqueoc Township in Presque Isle County was built in 1937. The 106-foot-long (32 m) structure is one of the last three deck truss bridges in the state.[82] The roadway on the bridge is 38 feet (11.6 m) wide and carries two lanes of traffic. The bridge was reconstructed in 1994.[83]
The second bridge is the Cheboygan Bascule Bridge in Cheboygan. This bascule bridge was built in 1940 over the Cheboygan River as the last of its kind before World War II. It was built as "two-leaf bridge in a place where a single-leaf bridge probably would have sufficed."[84] The initial construction of the structure was delayed when the contractor died, but completed in December 1940. It was the second moveable bridge on the site, replacing an iron swing bridge built in 1877.[84] The structure is 155 feet (47 m) long, composed of two 42-foot (13 m) spans on either side of the central 70-foot (21 m) span; the roadway is 40 feet (12 m) wide with four lanes for traffic. When the bridge is opened to allow river traffic to pass, boats have a 60-foot-wide (18 m) channel for navigation.[85] The bridge was added to the National Register of Historic Places on December 17, 1999,[86] and reconstructed in 2003.[84]
County | Location | Mile[2] | Exit | Destinations | Notes | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Monroe |
Whiteford Township | 0.00 | US 23 south / US 223 south – Toledo | Ohio state line | ||
1.48 | 1 | Sterns Road | ||||
2.99 | 3 | Consear Road – Ottawa Lake | ||||
5.11 | 5 | US 223 north – Blissfield, Adrian | Northern end of US 223 concurrency | |||
Summerfield Township | 8.73 | 9 | Summerfield Road | |||
13.19 | 13 | Ida West Road – Petersburg | ||||
Dundee Township | 15.33 | 15 | Lloyd Road | Northbound exit and southbound entrance via Dixon Road | ||
Dundee | 16.69 | 17 | M-50 – Jackson, Monroe | |||
Milan Township | 21.89 | 22 | Cone Road – Azalia | |||
Milan | 25.15 | 25 | Plank Road — Downtown Milan | |||
Washtenaw |
26.65 | 27 | Carpenter Road | |||
York Township | 30.64 | 31 | Willis Road – Willis, Saline | |||
Pittsfield Township | 34.02 | 34 | US 12 (Michigan Avenue) – Saline, Ypsilanti | |||
Ann Arbor | 35.37 | 35 | I-94 – Detroit, Chicago BL I-94 west |
Southern end of BL I-94 concurrency | ||
37.39 | 37 | BL I-94 west / BUS US 23 north – Downtown Ann Arbor M-17 east – Ypsilanti |
Northern end of BL I-94 concurrency; signed as exits 37A (M-17) and 37B (BL I-94 and BUS US 23) | |||
38.89 | 39 | Geddes Road | ||||
41.27 | 41 | Plymouth Road | ||||
42.49 | 42 | M-14 east – Plymouth, Livonia | Eastern end of M-14 concurrency | |||
Ann Arbor Township | 45.01 | 45 | BUS US 23 south / M-14 west – Downtown Ann Arbor |
Western end of M-14 concurrency | ||
Northfield Township | 49.07 | 49 | North Territorial Road | |||
50.18 | 50 | 6 Mile Road – Whitmore Lake | ||||
52.15 | 52 | Barker Road | Northbound exit and southbound entrance | |||
Washtenaw– Livingston |
Northfield Township – Green Oak Township |
52.59 | 53 | 8 Mile Road – Downtown Whitmore Lake | ||
Livingston |
Green Oak Township | 53.76 | 54 | M-36 – South Lyon, Pinckney, Hamburg | Signed as exits 54A (east) and 54B (west) northbound | |
55.48 | 55 | Silver Lake Road | ||||
58.14 | 58 | Lee Road | ||||
Brighton | 59.45 | 60 | I-96 – Detroit, Brighton, Lansing | Signed as exits 60A (east) and 60B (west) | ||
Hartland Township | 67.28 | 67 | M-59 – Howell, Pontiac | |||
70.35 | 70 | Clyde Road – Clyde | ||||
Tyrone Township | 74.51 | 75 | Center Road | |||
76.83 | 77 | White Lake Road | ||||
Genesee |
Fenton | 78.43 | 78 | Owen Road – Downtown Fenton | ||
79.55 | 79 | Silver Lake Road – Downtown Fenton, Linden | ||||
79.87 | 80 | Torrey Road, North Road | ||||
Fenton Township | 83.76 | 84 | Thompson Road | |||
Mundy Township | 87.55 | 88 | Grand Blanc Road – Grand Blanc | |||
89.58 | 90 | Hill Road | Connector to I-475 | |||
90.27 | 115 | I-75 south – Detroit, Toledo | Southern end of I-75 overlap; US 23 follows I-75 exit numbers | |||
Flint | 91.61 | 116 | Bristol Road | Signed as exits 116A (east) and 116B (west) southbound; former M-121, exit to Bishop International Airport | ||
Flint Township | 92.51 | 117 | I-69 / Miller Road – Port Huron, Lansing | Signed as exits 117A (I-69) and 117B (Miller Road) | ||
94.03 | 118 | M-21 (Corunna Road) – Owosso | ||||
Mount Morris Township | 98.24 | 122 | Pierson Road – Flushing | |||
100.70 | 125 | I-475 south – Downtown Flint | ||||
102.25 | 126 | Mt. Morris | ||||
Vienna Township | 106.34 | 131 | M-57 – Clio, Montrose | |||
Saginaw |
Birch Run | 111.41 | 136 | M-54 south / M-83 north – Birch Run, Frankenmuth | Northern terminus of M-54, southern terminus of M-83 | |
Bridgeport Township | 119.81 | 144 | Frankenmuth, Bridgeport | Signed as exits 144A (Frankenmuth) and 144B (Bridgeport) northbound | ||
Buena Vista Township | 124.53 | 149 | M-46 (Holland Avenue) – Sandusky, Buena Vista | Signed as exits 149A (Sandusky) and 149B (Buena Vista) | ||
125.83 | 150 | I-675 north – Downtown Saginaw | ||||
127.01 | 151 | M-81 – Caro, Reese | ||||
129.26 | 153 | M-13 (East Bay City Road) – Saginaw | ||||
Saginaw River | Zilwaukee Bridge | |||||
Zilwaukee | 130.19 | 154 | Zilwaukee | |||
Zilwaukee Township | 131.09 | 155 | I-675 south – Downtown Saginaw | |||
Bay |
Frankenlust Township | 135.43 | 160 | M-84 (Saginaw Road) | ||
Monitor Township | 137.94 | 162 | US 10 west – Clare M-25 / BL I-75 east – Downtown Bay City |
Signed as 162A (US 10) and 162B (M-25); BS I-75 is not signed | ||
139.46 | 164 | CONN M-13 / Wilder Road – Kawkawlin |
||||
Kawkawlin Township | 144.18 | 168 | Beaver Road | |||
Fraser Township | 149.14 | 173 | Linwood Road – Linwood | |||
Pinconning Township | 157.15 | 181 | Pinconning Road – Pinconning | |||
Arenac |
Lincoln Township | 163.73 | 188 | I-75 north – Mackinac Bridge | Northern end of I-75 concurrency | |
Standish | 166.12 | M-13 south – Bay City | Freeway ends; northern terminus of M-13 | |||
168.40 | M-61 west – Gladwin | Eastern terminus of M-61 | ||||
Omer | 177.86 | M-65 north – Twining | Southern terminus of M-65 | |||
Iosco |
Tawas City | 204.25 | M-55 west – West Branch, Houghton Lake | Eastern terminus of M-55 | ||
Oscoda | 220.71 | F-41 north – Mikado | Southern terminus of F-41 | |||
Alcona |
Greenbush | 231.84 | F-30 west | Eastern terminus of F-30 | ||
Harrisville | 236.63 | M-72 west – Grayling, Traverse City | Eastern terminus of M-72 | |||
Alcona Township | 251.78 | F-41 south – Lincoln | Northern terminus of F-41 | |||
Alpena |
Alpena | 268.43 | M-32 west – Atlanta, Gaylord | Eastern terminus of M-32 | ||
Presque Isle |
Pulawski Township | 297.52 | M-65 south – Posen | Northern terminus of M-65 | ||
Rogers Township | 303.36 | BUS US 23 north – Downtown Rogers City |
Southern terminus of BUS US 23 | |||
Rogers City | 305.67 | F-21 south – Hillman | Northern terminus of F-21 | |||
305.94 | M-68 – Onaway, Downtown Rogers City | |||||
306.86 | BUS US 23 south (3rd Street) – Downtown Rogers City |
Northern terminus of BUS US 23 | ||||
Cheboygan |
Benton Township | 344.69 | F-05 south | Northern terminus of F-05 | ||
Cheboygan | 346.83 | M-27 south (Main Street) – Indian River C-66 west (State Street) |
Northern terminus of M-27; eastern terminus of C-66 | |||
Cheboygan– Emmet |
Mackinaw City | 362.17 | Nicolet Street | Former M-108 on the county line | ||
Emmet |
362.33 | I-75 north – Mackinac Bridge | Exit 338 on I-75; northbound exit and southbound entrance | |||
1.000 mi = 1.609 km; 1.000 km = 0.621 mi Concurrency terminus • Closed/Former • Incomplete access • Unopened |
US Highway 23 | ||
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Previous state: Ohio |
Michigan | Next state: Terminus |
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