U.S. Route 95 Alternate (Schurz–Fernley, Nevada)

Alt
U.S. Route 95 marker

U.S. Route 95 Alternate
Route information
Maintained by Nevada DOT
Length: 105.0 mi[1] (169.0 km)
71.268 miles (114.695 km) independent of I-80[2]
Existed: 1941 – present
Major junctions
South end: US 95 near Schurz
 
North end: I80 / US 95 north of Fallon
Location
Counties: Mineral, Lyon, Churchill
Highway system
  • Highways in Nevada
US 95SR 115

In the U.S. state of Nevada, U.S. Route 95 Alternate (US 95 Alt., sometimes referred to as US 95A) is an alternate route of U.S. Route 95 located in the western part of the state. It connects Schurz to Interstate 80 via the cities of Yerington and Fernley.

The highway is one of three routes in Nevada that has existed as US 95 Alt.

Route description

The present Alternate US 95 begins at its junction with US 95 in Schurz and runs west to Yerington. From there, it runs north to Silver Springs and Fernley. Alternate US 95 is routed concurrently with Alternate US 50 from Silver Springs to Fernley.

View north from the south end of Alternate US 95 in Schurz

Nevada’s official highway log lists the northern termination of the route at its junction with I-80 at Fernley. However, maps, including Nevada’s own official state maps, show the route continuing northeast along I-80 to its junction with mainline US 95 at exit 83.[3]

History

Dates are based on when changes appear on official Nevada state highway maps unless otherwise noted.

The present Alternate US 95 was commissioned in 1941. It ran from its current southern terminus at Schurz to the junction with US 40 and US 95 at Fernley. However, it was displayed on the official 1941 Nevada highway map as US 95, making it appear is if there were two different highways with the same number. The error was corrected on the 1942 map. Alternate US 95 replaced part of SR 3 between Schurz and Yerington; SR 2B from Yerington to present-day Fort Churchill Road, south of Silver Springs; and State Route 1B from Fort Churchill Road to Fernley.

A second Alternate US 95 was created in 1960 due a realignment of mainline US 95. Mainline US 95 was extended due north from Fallon to US 40 over the former SR 1A. The former route of US 95 via Fernley was renumbered as Alternate US 95. Strangely, this placed two different routes numbered as Alternate US 95 in the same area of Nevada with the two meeting at Fernley. This lasted until around 1978, when the route from Fallon to Fernley was renumbered as US 50 Alt., except for the easternmost nine miles (14 km); they had been concurrently numbered as US 50 and retained that number.

Major intersections

US 95 Alt/US 50 Alt southbound, overlooking Silver Springs and the junction of US 50

Note: Mileposts in Nevada reset at county lines; the start and end mileposts for each county are given in the county column. Mileposts are given only for those portions of Alternate US 95 not concurrent with Interstate 80.

CountyLocationmi[4]kmDestinationsNotes
Mineral
MI 0.00-10.68
Schurz0.000.00 US 95 Fallon, Hawthorne
Lyon
LY 0.00-60.59
Yerington SR 208 (Main Street) Wellington, Minden
SR 339 (Nordyke Road) Mason, Wellington
Silver Springs US 50 Carson City, FallonSouth end of US 50 Alt. overlap
Fernley58.3693.92 SR 427 Wadsworth, Reno

US 50 Alt. east / SR 828 (Farm District Road) Fallon
North end of US 50 Alt. overlap
60.5997.51 I80 west RenoSouth end of I-80 overlap
 US 95 Alt. overlaps I-80, exits 48 to 83
Churchill I80 east / US 95 Fallon, Winnemucca, ElkoNorth end of I-80 overlap
1.000 mi = 1.609 km; 1.000 km = 0.621 mi

See also

Notes

  1. United States Numbered Highways. American Association of State Highway and Transportation Officials. 1989. p. 141. Retrieved 2009-02-15.
  2. Nevada Department of Transportation (January 2008). "Nevada State Maintained Highways: Descriptions, Index and Maps". Retrieved 2009-02-15.
  3. Google (August 28, 2016). "Overview of US 95 Alt" (Map). Google Maps. Google. Retrieved August 28, 2016.
  4. Nevada Department of Transportation (May 2008). "Maps of Milepost Location on Nevada's Federal and State Highway System by County" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on February 19, 2009. Retrieved 2009-02-15.

References

Route map: Google

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