U.S. Route 34 in Colorado

Route map:
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U.S. Highway 34 marker

U.S. Highway 34

Route information
Maintained by CDOT
Length259.529 mi[1] (417.671 km)
Existed1972[2]–present
Major junctions
West end US 40 in Granby
Major intersections US 36 in Estes Park
US 287 in Loveland
I-25 / US 87 near Loveland
US 85 in Greeley
US 6 / I-76 in Fort Morgan
US 385 in Wray
East end US 34 near Laird
Location
CountryUnited States
StateColorado
Highway system
  • Colorado State Highway System
SH 30 SH 35

U.S. Route 34 in Colorado is a segment of U.S. Route 34. Its west end is at U.S. Highway 40 in Granby and its east end is at the Nebraska border east of Laird, Colorado.

Route description

View of US 34 in Rocky Mountain National Park, at an altitude above 11,000 feet

Granby to Rocky Mountain National Park

The route begins in Granby at US 40. It then follows the Colorado River Valley near Granby Lake and enters Arapaho National Recreational Area.[3]

Trail Ridge Road

After entering Rocky Mountain National Park in Colorado's Front Range,[citation needed] US 34 follows the North Fork Colorado River through Kawuneeche Valley. It passes over Milner Pass and reaches the Alpine Visitor Center. Then it continues east, passing its highest point at 12,183 feet[4] near the Gore Range. It exits the park at US 36 at Deer Ridge Junction.

US 34 here is the highest continuous highway in the United States.[4]

This section of US 34 requires a $30 national park entrance fee, making this segment into a toll road.

Estes Park to Loveland

From here, it passes by Estes Park as Eisenhower Boulevard, has a business route and enters Loveland, becoming a four-lane expressway. Here, it intersects I-25 and U.S. Highway 287.

Greeley to Nebraska border

At Greeley, it passes by U.S. Highway 85 in a complex interchange[2] and U.S. 34 Business, and crosses the South Platte River. It also has an interchange with SH 257.[5] From here, it is no longer an expressway. It intersects SH 144 and SH 39, then joins I-76 at Wiggins. It leaves, and follows the North Fork Republican River east into Nebraska, where it intersects SH 71, SH 52, SH 63, SH 61, SH 59, and U.S. Highway 385.

History

Parts of the route were originally designated as US 38. US 34 was extended into Colorado in 1939.[2]

Major intersections

CountyLocationmi[1]kmDestinationsNotes
GrandGranby0.0000.000 US 40 – Granby, Denver, Hot Sulphur Springs, Salt LakeWest end of route
Grand Lake14.68323.630West Portal Road – Grand Lake and Villageformer SH 278
LarimerDeer Ridge Junction (RMNP)53.75886.515
US 36 east – Moraine Park, Bear Lake, Estes Park
Rocky Mountain National Park55.54689.393Old Fall River RoadEndovalley
57.68692.837Fall River Entrance Station
Estes Park60.96598.114

US 34 Bus. east (Elkhorn Avenue)
62.08199.910MacGregor Avenue – Devils Gulch, Glen Havenformer SH 262
62.507100.595


US 36 / US 34 Bus. west (Elkhorn Avenue / St. Vrain Avenue) to SH 7 – Lyons
Drake75.584121.641 CR 43 – Glen Havenformer SH 262
85.617137.787 CR 27 – Masonvilleformer SH 186
Loveland91.924147.937
US 287 south (Cleveland Avenue) – Longmont, Central Business District
92.009148.074
96.250154.899 I-25 (US 87) – Denver, Fort Collins
WeldGreeley102.476164.919

US 34 Bus. east (10th Street) – Greeley
Eastbound exit and westbound entrance
102.804165.447 SH 257 – Windsor, Milliken
111.233179.01223rd Avenue / 27th Street
112.772181.489


US 85 south / US 85 Bus. north (8th Avenue) – Denver, Greeley
West end of US 85 overlap
113.136182.075
US 85 north – Cheyenne
East end of US 85 overlap
115.411185.736

US 34 Bus. west
117.251188.697 CR 49 – Hudson, Keenesburgformer SH 37 south
Kersey119.178191.798 CR 53 – KerseyModule:Jct warning: "road" parameter is deprecatedformer SH 37 north
Morgan144.470232.502 SH 144 – Orchard, Jackson Lake State Park
149.164240.056 SH 39 / SH 52 – Goodrich, Wiggins
149.345
66.288
240.347
106.680

I-76 west (US 6 west) – Denver
Westbound exit and eastbound entrance; western end of I-76 overlap
73.130117.691Long Bridge RoadI-76 exit 73; former SH 144
75.704
158.794
121.834
255.554

I-76 east (US 6 east)
Eastern end of I-76 overlap
Fort Morgan162.962262.262

SH 52 north (Main Street) to I-76
Brush172.414277.473

SH 71 north (Colorado Avenue) to I-76
West end of SH 71 overlap
173.570279.334
SH 71 south – Last Chance, Limon
173.852279.788

To US 6 / I-76 – Sterling
WashingtonAkron196.336315.972 SH 63 (Cedar Avenue) – Sterling, Anton
Otis209.305336.844
SH 61 north (Dade Street) – Sterling
YumaYuma223.345359.439 SH 59 (Detroit Street) – Haxtun
Wray249.931402.225 US 385 (Dexter Street) – Holyoke
259.529417.671
US 34 east
Nebraska state line
1.000 mi = 1.609 km; 1.000 km = 0.621 mi

Estes Park business loop

U.S. Highway 34 marker

U.S. Highway 34

LocationEstes Park
Length1.690 mi[1] (2.720 km)
Existed1964[6]–present

U.S. Highway 34 Business serves Estes Park, Colorado. Both of its termini are at US 34. The business route splits from the main route east of the Rocky Mountain National Park Fall River Entrance Station,[7] in the western city limits of Estes Park and enters town on West Elkhorn Avenue. The main route continues around the northern edge of Estes park on Wonderview Avenue, passing a large number of motels. At Moraine Avenue, It joins US 36 in downtown Estes Park. It returns to US 34 after about 1.7 miles (2.7 km) at an intersection with Wonderview Avenue, Big Thompson Avenue, and North St. Vrain Avenue. The business route was established in 1964.[6]

Entrance sign for Estes Park

The entire route is in Estes Park, Larimer County.

mi[1]kmDestinationsNotes
0.0000.000 US 34Western terminus
1.3062.102 US 36West end of US 36 overlap
1.6902.720 US 34 / US 36Eastern terminus; east end of US 36 overlap
1.000 mi = 1.609 km; 1.000 km = 0.621 mi

References

KML is from Wikidata
  1. ^ a b c d "Segment Descriptions for Highway 34". Colorado Department of Transportation. Retrieved 2010-03-17. Cite error: The named reference "dot" was defined multiple times with different content (see the help page).
  2. ^ a b c Salek, Matthew E. (January 30, 2010). "Colorado US 34". Retrieved March 17, 2010.
  3. ^ The United States (Map). National Geographic. October 2006. {{cite map}}: |access-date= requires |url= (help)
  4. ^ a b "Destinations: Trail Ridge Road, Colorado". Retrieved March 30, 2010.
  5. ^ "Interchange Information for Highway 034". Retrieved March 30, 2010.
  6. ^ a b Salek, Matthew E. (January 30, 2010). "Colo Hwys: US and SH Business Routes". Retrieved March 24, 2010.
  7. ^ Sanderson, Dale (January 1, 2009). "Highway signs and endpoints in Estes Park". Retrieved March 25, 2010.


U.S. Route 34
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