In the US state of Virginia, some state highways have been specifically designated to serve state parks and state institutions. State Route 217 and the range of numbers from State Route 302 to State Route 399 are currently used (non-exclusively) for this purpose. For a list of very short Virginia primary state highways, see List of primary state highways in Virginia shorter than one mile.
State Route 302 is the designation for the roads on the grounds of the University of Virginia in Albemarle County and the City of Charlottesville that are maintained by the Virginia Department of Transportation, including Copeley Road and Massie Road. The roads were added to the state highway system in 1932, and the number was in use by 1936.[4][5]
State Route 303 is the designation for the roads on the grounds of the Virginia Military Institute in the City of Lexington that are maintained by the Virginia Department of Transportation. The roads were added to the state highway system in 1932, and the number was in use by 1936.[4][5]
State Route 308, Three Creeks Road, appeared in 1938 as a renumbering of part of SR 32 in Southampton County. In 1949 the part from SR 612 to SR 40 was made a secondary road, leaving behind the part of SR 308 from US 58 to just north of the Southampton Correctional Center, at a junction with SR 612 and SR 735.[4][8]
State Route 310 was the designation for the access road to the Virginia School for the Deaf and Blind in the City of Staunton. The road was first designated in June 1932, and was decommissioned before SR 310 was reassigned to the James River Correctional Center in 1990.[4][10]
State Route 313 is the designation for the access road from US 522 to the Beaumont Learning Center in Powhatan County. This designation also covers some (but not all) roads within the facility. It is unknown when the road was first designated, although the July 1932 CTB meeting minutes specifically mention this road.[4][5]
State Route 314 is the designation for the roads on the grounds of the Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University (Virginia Tech) in Montgomery County that are maintained by the Virginia Department of Transportation. The roads may have been added to the state highway system in 1932, and the number was in use by 1939.[4][5]
State Route 317 was the designation for the access road into the Blue Ridge Sanatorium in the City of Charlottesville. It connected the sanatorium with SR 20. It was first commissioned in July 1932, and was decommissioned in April 2002.[4][5]
State Route 318 is the designation for the access road to the Virginia State Capitol from Ninth Street in the City of Richmond. Because of the nature of the building it accesses, one must have a proper pass to drive on this road. It is unknown when this road was first commissioned, but it may have been as early as 1941.[4]
State Route 320 is the designation for Catawba Hospital Drive, the access road to the Catawba State Hospital in Roanoke County. It connects SR 779 with SR 698. This road first appeared as a renumbering of then-SR 123 in 1941.[4][12]
State Route 324 is the designation for the ingress and egress roads to the Bon Air Learning Center, which was built on the grounds of the old Virginia Home and Industrial School for Girls in Chesterfield County. It extends from SR 718 through the learning center and back to SR 718.[5][13]
State Route 325 is the designation for the access road to the Barrett Learning Center, which was built on the grounds of the old Virginia Industrial School for Colored Girls in Hanover County. It extends from SR 651 to the learning center.[5][13]
State Route 326 is the designation for the access road to the Hanover Learning Center, which was built on the grounds of the old Virginia Manual Labor School in Hanover County. It extends from SR 605 to the learning center.[5][13]
State Route 327 is the designation for the access roads to the Virginia State University, Petersburg in Chesterfield County, which was renamed from the Virginia State College for Negroes. The road endpoints are at SR 36, SR 1102, and SR 1107.[5][13]
State Route 330 is the designation for roads within the Keen Mountain Correctional Center in Buchanan County. These roads were first made part of the primary road system in the 1990s when the facility opened. The outside terminus is at SR 624.[13][19]
State Route 330 was the designation for the roads within Mary Washington College, now known as the University of Mary Washington, in the City of Fredericksburg. The roads were first designated in 1938, and were decommissioned in 1980, long before the school was redesignated as a "University".[4][20]
State Route 331 is the designation for roads within James Madison University, including University Boulevard, Port Republic Road and Bluestone Drive, in the City of Harrisonburg, as well as Alumnae Drive near Port Republic in Rockingham County. The school was, in 1932, the Virginia Teachers College in Harrisonburg, and received a primary road allocation in 1932. The outside termini for the section in Harrisonburg are at US 11 and US 33,[5][13] while the section near Port Republic ends at SR 253.
State Route 332 is the designation for the entrance into the Virginia Beach Agricultural Station, formerly known as the Virginia Truck Experimental Station, Virginia Beach, in the City of Virginia Beach. The station received a primary road allocation in 1932. The outside terminus is at SR 166.[5][13]
State Route 333 is the designation for Augusta Woods Drive, which travels south from George M Cochran Parkway in Staunton, under Interstate 81, and comes to a dead end in Augusta County.[21][22]
State Route 334 is the designation for roads on the grounds of the Central Virginia Training Center in Amherst County that are maintained by the Virginia Department of Transportation. This institution is on the site of the Virginia State Colony for Epileptics and Feebleminded (see also Carrie Buck) near Lynchburg. The roads were added to the state highway system in 1932, and the number was in use by 1938.[5][13] The Virginia State Colony for Epileptics and Feebleminded (now one of five sites of the Central Virginia Training Center) will close by 2020, and VA 334 will be cancelled.[23][24]
State Route 335 is the designation for the entrance into the Eastern Shore Experimental Station, formerly known as the Virginia Tech Experimental Station, Painter, Virginia in Accomack County, that is maintained by the Virginia Department of Transportation. The road forms a loop off of SR 614. It was added to the state highway system in 1959.[13][25]
State Route 336 is the designation for roads on the grounds of the State Police, Fourth Division Headquarters in Wythe County that are maintained by the Virginia Department of Transportation. These roads form a spur off of SR F-043. They were added to the state highway system in 1960.[13][26]
State Route 339 is the designation for the entrance into the State Police Headquarters of Chesterfield County that are maintained by the Virginia Department of Transportation. This road was added to the state highway system in 1939. The outside terminus is US 60.[13][27]
State Route 341 is the designation for the entrances into the State Police Headquarters of Appomattox County that are maintained by the Virginia Department of Transportation. These roads were added to the state highway system in 1940. The outside terminus is SR 613.[28][29]
State Route 342 is the designation for the entrance into the State Police Headquarters of Culpeper County that is maintained by the Virginia Department of Transportation. This road was added to the state highway system in 1940. The outside terminus is SR 762.[28][29]
State Route 343 is the designation for the entrances into First Landing State Park in the City of Virginia Beach that are maintained by the Virginia Department of Transportation. These roads were added to the state highway system in 1940. The outside termini are US 60 and 64th Street.[28][30]
State Route 344 is the designation for the entrance into Staunton River State Park in Halifax County, along with the road to US 360/SR 360 (Scottsburg Road, McDonald Road) that is maintained by the Virginia Department of Transportation. These roads were added to the state highway system in 1940.[28][30]
State Route 345 is the designation for the entrance into Richard Bland College in Dinwiddie County and Prince George County that is maintained by the Virginia Department of Transportation. This road was added to the state highway system in 1962. The outside termini are SR 608 and SR 677.[28]
State Route 345 was the designation for a road within Douthat State Park in Bath County that was maintained by the Virginia Department of Transportation. This road was added to the state highway system in 1941, and was decommissioned in 1944.[28][31]
State Route 346 is the designation for Fairystone Lake Drive within Fairy Stone State Park in Patrick County that is maintained by the Virginia Department of Transportation. The southern terminus for this road is SR 57. It was added to the state highway system in 1940.[28][30]
State Route 347 is the designation for Westmoreland State Park Road in Westmoreland State Park, Westmoreland County that is maintained by the Virginia Department of Transportation. The southern terminus for this road is SR 3. It was added to the state highway system in 1940.[28][30]
State Route 348 is the designation for Hungry Mother Drive in Hungry Mother State Park in Smyth County that is maintained by the Virginia Department of Transportation. The southern terminus for this road is SR 16. It was added to the state highway system in 1940.[28][30]
State Route 350 is the designation for College Crescent in Tidewater Community College, Virginia Beach Campus in the City of Virginia Beach that is maintained by the Virginia Department of Transportation. The outside terminus for this road is SR 165. It was added to the state highway system in 1971.[28]
State Route 353 is the designation for "roads in the grounds of Virginia Commonwealth University (Medical Center Campus) at City of Richmond."[32] Though it has formerly included other roads, it is now only Duval Street Connection between 8th Street and the Main Hospital on 13th Street.[33] Although located entirely within the city and connecting city-maintained streets, Route 353 is maintained by the state, and, despite its short length, a single reassurance shield can be found westbound just after entering the route from 13th Street. SR 353 was first added to the state highway system in 1942, when 0.015 miles (0.024 km) from the end of East Clay Street south to the central power plant were taken over by the state.[34] The current SR 353 was built in the 1950s as part of the Richmond-Petersburg Turnpike project, and the original roadway was removed from the system in 1973.[28][35][36]
State Route 355 is the designation for College Street in Lord Fairfax Community College, Fauquier Campus, in Fauquier County near Warrenton that is maintained by the Virginia Department of Transportation. The western terminus for this road is SR 880 (near US 15). It was added to the state highway system about 2001.[28][37]
State Route 355 was the designation for College Street, the entrance and main road of Radford University in the City of Radford that was maintained by the Virginia Department of Transportation. The northern terminus for this road was US 11, and the western terminus for this road was SR 177. It was added to the state highway system in 1947, and decommissioned in 1983.[28][38][39]
State Route 357 was the designation for North Road and East Road, the access roads in the Southside Virginia Training Center just southwest of Petersburg in Dinwiddie County that are maintained by the Virginia Department of Transportation. The southern terminus for this road was US 1/US 460 Business. It was added to the state highway system in 1960.[28][40] The Southside Virginia Training Center closed in 2014, and the property was demolished in 2017. The road was decommissioned in March 2019, and the road was demolished.[41]
State Route 358 is the designation for Woodrow Wilson Avenue and other roads within the Wilson Workforce & Rehabilitation Center near Fishersville in Augusta County that are maintained by the Virginia Department of Transportation. The southern terminus for this road is US 250. It was added to the state highway system in 1949.[28][42]
State Route 361 is the designation for Red Onion State Prison Access Road, the entrance to Red Onion State Prison in Wise County that is maintained by the Virginia Department of Transportation. The northern terminus for this road is SR 83 in Dickenson County. The road crosses into Wise County where it meets the prison. The road was added to the state highway system in 1997.[43][44]
State Route 361 was the designation for roads within the University of Virginia, Eastern Shore Campus in Accomack County that were maintained by the Virginia Department of Transportation. They were added to the state highway system in 1966, and removed in 1980.[20][43][45]
State Route 362 is the designation for Grayson Highland Lane, the entrance and main road within Grayson Highlands State Park in Grayson County that is maintained by the Virginia Department of Transportation. The southern terminus for this road is US 58. The road was added to the state highway system about 1976.[43][46]
State Route 363 is the designation for College Lane, the entrance and main road within Blue Ridge Community College in Augusta County that is maintained by the Virginia Department of Transportation. The western terminus for this road (at both ends) is US 11. The road was added to the state highway system around 1967.[43]
State Route 364 is the designation for Occoneechee Park Road, the entrance and main road within Occoneechee State Park in Mecklenburg County that is maintained by the Virginia Department of Transportation. The northern terminus for this road is US 58. The road was added to the state highway system in 1968.[7][43]
State Route 365 is the designation for the entrance to Wytheville Community College in Wythe County that is maintained by the Virginia Department of Transportation. The southern terminus for this road is US 11. The road was added to the state highway system in 1965.[43][47]
State Route 366 is the designation for the entrance and roads in John Tyler Community College in Chesterfield County that are maintained by the Virginia Department of Transportation. The western terminus for this road is US 1/US 301. The road was added to the state highway system about 1969.[43][48]
State Route 367 is the designation for roads in Tidewater Community College's Regional Workforce Development Center and Truck Driver Training Site in the City of Suffolk that are maintained by the Virginia Department of Transportation. The southern terminus for these roads is SR 135. The roads were added to the state highway system in 1968.[43][48]
State Route 368 is the designation for the access road for Central Virginia Community College in the City of Lynchburg that is maintained by the Virginia Department of Transportation. The eastern terminus for this road is US 29 Business. The western terminus for the road is Wards Ferry Road. The road was added to the state highway system in 1968.[43][49]
State Route 369 is the designation for roads on the grounds of Southwest Virginia Community College in Tazewell County and Russell County that are maintained by the Virginia Department of Transportation. The northern termini for these roads is US 19. The roads were added to the state highway system in 1968.[43][50]
State Route 370 is the designation for roads within Natural Tunnel State Park in Scott County that are maintained by the Virginia Department of Transportation. The western terminus for this road is SR 871. The road was added to the state highway system in 1970. Previously the park was under private ownership.[43][51]
State Route 371 is the designation for Patriot Avenue and other roads on the grounds of Patrick Henry Community College in Henry County that are maintained by the Virginia Department of Transportation. The western terminus for these roads is SR 714. The roads were added to the state highway system in 1971.[43][52]
State Route 372 is the designation for VHCC Drive, the entrance road for Virginia Highlands Community College in Washington County that is maintained by the Virginia Department of Transportation. The western terminus for this road is SR 140. The road was added to the state highway system in 1970.[43][53]
State Route 373 is the designation for College Drive, the entrance to New River Community College in Pulaski County that is maintained by the Virginia Department of Transportation. The termini for these roads are SR 100 and US 11. The roads were added to the state highway system in 1971.[43][54]
State Route 374 is the designation for College Drive, the entrance of Rappahannock Community College, South Campus in Gloucester County that is maintained by the Virginia Department of Transportation. The southern terminus for this road is SR 33. The roads were added to the state highway system in 1971.[43][54]
State Route 375 is the designation for College Drive, the entrance of Germanna Community College in Orange County that is maintained by the Virginia Department of Transportation. The northern terminus for this road is SR 3. The road was added to the state highway system in 1970.[43][55]
State Route 376 is the designation for Lake Drive, East Drive, West Drive and Center Drive, the roads on the grounds of Northern Virginia Community College, Annandale Campus in Fairfax County that are maintained by the Virginia Department of Transportation. The northern terminus for these roads is SR 236. The roads were added to the state highway system in 1967.[43][56]
State Route 377 is the designation for a loop joining Lord Fairfax Community College to US 11 in Frederick County that is maintained by the Virginia Department of Transportation. The roads were added to the state highway system in 1971.[43][57]
State Route 378 is the designation for Campus Drive and other roads on the grounds of Southside Virginia Community College, Christiana Campus in Brunswick County that are maintained by the Virginia Department of Transportation. The eastern terminus for these roads is SR 46. The roads were added to the state highway system in 1970.[43][58]
State Route 379 is the designation for the entrance roads of Paul D. Camp Community College in the City of Franklin that are maintained by the Virginia Department of Transportation. The western termini for these roads is College Drive. The roads were added to the state highway system about 1972.[43][59]
State Route 382 is the designation for roads on the grounds of the University of Virginia's College at Wise in Wise County that are maintained by the Virginia Department of Transportation. The southern termini for these roads is SR 642, Coeburn Mountain Road. The roads were added to the state highway system in 1965.[60][61]
State Route 383 is the designation for University Drive, the entrance road into George Mason University, Fairfax Campus in Fairfax County that is maintained by the Virginia Department of Transportation. The western terminus for this road is SR 123, Ox Road. The road was added to the state highway system in 1964.[60][62]
State Route 384 is the designation for Dabney Drive, the entrance and circle within Dabney S. Lancaster Community College in Alleghany County that is maintained by the Virginia Department of Transportation. The eastern terminus for this road is I-64/US 60/US 220, and leads directly onto US 60 Business/US 220 Business. This college entrance is the only one to have direct access to an Interstate highway in Virginia. The road was added to the state highway system in 1965.[60][63]
State Route 385 is the designation for Daniel Road, the entrance and main road within Southside Virginia Community College, John H. Daniel Campus in Charlotte County that is maintained by the Virginia Department of Transportation. The southern terminus for this road is SR 40. The road was added to the state highway system about 1970, when the campus was created.[60][64]
State Route 386 was the designation for Prison Road, the entrance to Mecklenburg Correctional Center in Mecklenburg County that was maintained by the Virginia Department of Transportation. The northern terminus for this road was US 58. The road was added to the state highway system about 1976, when the facility was opened.[60][65] The facility was closed in 2012 and torn down in 2017. The road was decommissioned in October 2019.[66]
State Route 387 is the designation for Mountain Empire Road, the entrance to and main road within Mountain Empire Community College in Wise County that is maintained by the Virginia Department of Transportation. The eastern terminus for this road is US 23. The road was added to the state highway system in 1974.[60][67]
State Route 388 is the designation for the entrance to and main road within Piedmont Virginia Community College in Albemarle County that is maintained by the Virginia Department of Transportation. The eastern terminus for this road is SR 20. The road was added to the state highway system in 1974.[60][67]
State Route 389 is the designation for the entrance to Eastern Shore Community College, Melfa Campus in Accomac County that is maintained by the Virginia Department of Transportation. The eastern terminus for this road is US 13. The road was added to the state highway system about 1975.[60]
State Route 390 is the designation for the entrance into Virginia Tech, Tidewater Research and Continuing Education Center in the City of Suffolk. The road was added to the state highway system in 1978. The outside terminus is US 58.[60]
State Route 391 is the designation for Campus Drive, the entrance to Northern Virginia Community College, Loudoun Campus in Loudoun County that is maintained by the Virginia Department of Transportation. The southern terminus for this road is SR 7. The road was added to the state highway system about 1976.[60][68]
State Route 392 is the designation for Harrison Circle, the entrance to and main road in Southwestern Virginia Training Center in Carroll County that is maintained by the Virginia Department of Transportation. The western terminus for this road is SR 707 near US 58. The road was added to the state highway system about 1976.[60][69]
State Route 393 is the designation for the entrance to Northern Virginia Community College, Manassas Campus in Prince William County that is maintained by the Virginia Department of Transportation. The western terminus for this road is SR 234, Sudley Road. The road was added to the state highway system about 1976.[60][70]
State Route 394 is the designation for College Drive, the entrance to Northern Virginia Community College, Woodbridge Campus in Prince William County that is maintained by the Virginia Department of Transportation. The northern and southern termini of this road are SR 638 (Neabsco Mills Road). The road was added to the state highway system about 1977.[60][71]
State Route 396 is the designation for Dickinson Road, the main road through J. Sargeant Reynolds Community College, Western Campus in Goochland County that is maintained by the Virginia Department of Transportation. The western terminus for this road is US 522 / SR 6, and the northern terminus is SR 632 (Fairground Road). The road was added to the state highway system about 1978.[60][72]
State Route 397 is the designation for Ridge Road (Sussex County) and Correction Way (Greensville County), the entrance into the Greensville Correctional Center in Greensville County and Sussex County that is maintained by the Virginia Department of Transportation. The eastern terminus for this road is US 301 in Sussex County. The road was added to the state highway system in 1990.[60][73]
State Route 398 is the designation for Neathery Lane, the main road through Danville Community College in the City of Danville that is maintained by the Virginia Department of Transportation. The road connects Kemper Road and College Park Drive. It was added to the state highway system about 1967.[60][74]
State Route 399 is the designation for the entrance loop into the Science Museum of Virginia in the City of Richmond that is maintained by the Virginia Department of Transportation. The southern terminus for this road is US 33 / US 250 (Broad Street). The road was added to the state highway system about 1980. The road is one way, from east to west.[60][75]
^State Highway Commission of Virginia (May 12–14, 1954). "Minutes of Meeting"(PDF) (Report). Richmond: Commonwealth of Virginia. p. 15 Retrieved January 25, 2010
^ abcdefghijklmnoState Highway Commission of Virginia (July 27–29, 1932). "Minutes of Meeting"(PDF) (Report). Richmond: Commonwealth of Virginia. p. 27 Retrieved January 22, 2010
^ abState Highway Commission of Virginia (June 27, 1968). "Minutes of Meeting"(PDF) (Report). Richmond: Commonwealth of Virginia. pp. 47, 64 Retrieved January 23, 2010
^Commonwealth Transportation Board (April 18, 1991). "Minutes of Meeting"(PDF) (Report). Richmond: Commonwealth of Virginia. pp. 5–6 Retrieved January 23, 2010
^State Highway Commission of Virginia (June 10, 1932). "Minutes of Meeting"(PDF) (Report). Richmond: Commonwealth of Virginia. Retrieved January 23, 2010
^State Highway Commission of Virginia (May 2–3, 1946). "Minutes of Meeting"(PDF) (Report). Richmond: Commonwealth of Virginia., p. 7 Retrieved January 24, 2010
^State Highway Commission of Virginia (August 25–28, 1947). "Minutes of Meeting"(PDF) (Report). Richmond: Commonwealth of Virginia.
^State Highway Commission of Virginia (October 23, 1958). "Minutes of Meeting"(PDF) (Report). Richmond: Commonwealth of Virginia. p. 10 Retrieved January 24, 2010
^State Highway Commission of Virginia (November 10, 1932). "Minutes of Meeting"(PDF) (Report). Richmond: Commonwealth of Virginia. p. 6 Retrieved January 24, 2010
^ abState Highway and Transportation Commission (December 18, 1980). "Minutes of Meeting"(PDF) (Report). Richmond: Commonwealth of Virginia. pp. 13–14 Retrieved January 26, 2010
^State Highway Commission of Virginia (February 19, 1959). "Minutes of Meeting"(PDF) (Report). Richmond: Commonwealth of Virginia. p. 9 Retrieved January 29, 2010
^State Highway Commission of Virginia (August 18, 1960). "Minutes of Meeting"(PDF) (Report). Richmond: Commonwealth of Virginia., p. 37 Retrieved January 29, 2010
^State Highway Commission of Virginia (December 19, 1939). "Minutes of Meeting"(PDF) (Report). Richmond: Commonwealth of Virginia., p. 1 Retrieved January 30, 2010
^ abState Highway Commission of Virginia (January 12, 1940). "Minutes of Meeting"(PDF) (Report). Richmond: Commonwealth of Virginia., p. 7 Retrieved March 9, 2010
^ abcdeState Highway Commission of Virginia (July 25, 1940). "Minutes of Meeting"(PDF) (Report). Richmond: Commonwealth of Virginia., p. 10 Retrieved March 9, 2010
^Email from VDOT Public Relations Specialist Tom Jewell: "State Route 353 is comprised of that section of Duval Street from the intersection with 8th Street traveling east adjacent to I95/I64 and ending at the MCV Main Hospital on 13th Street."
^State Highway Commission of Virginia (March 20, 1942). "Minutes of Meeting"(PDF) (Report). Richmond: Commonwealth of Virginia. p. 12.
^State Highway Commission of Virginia (May 17, 1973). "Minutes of Meeting"(PDF) (Report). Richmond: Commonwealth of Virginia. pp. 21, 22.
^State Highway Commission of Virginia (March 20, 1942). "Minutes of Meeting"(PDF) (Report). Richmond: Commonwealth of Virginia., p. 12 Retrieved March 9, 2010
^State Highway Commission of Virginia (October 30, 1947). "Minutes of Meeting"(PDF) (Report). Richmond: Commonwealth of Virginia., p. 6 Retrieved March 10, 2010
^State Highway and Transportation Commission (May 19, 1983). "Minutes of Meeting"(PDF) (Report). Richmond: Commonwealth of Virginia., p. 31 Retrieved March 10, 2010
^State Highway Commission of Virginia (May 13, 1965). "Minutes of Meeting"(PDF) (Report). Richmond: Commonwealth of Virginia. p. 19 Retrieved February 8, 2010
^Commonwealth Transportation Board (November 20, 1997). "Minutes of Meeting"(PDF) (Report). Richmond: Commonwealth of Virginia., p. 16 Retrieved March 10, 2010
^State Highway Commission of Virginia (July 21, 1966). "Minutes of Meeting"(PDF) (Report). Richmond: Commonwealth of Virginia. p. 27 Retrieved February 2, 2010
^ abState Highway Commission of Virginia (January 23, 1969). "Minutes of Meeting"(PDF) (Report). Richmond: Commonwealth of Virginia., pp 10–12 Retrieved March 10, 2010
^State Highway Commission of Virginia (January 29, 1970). "Minutes of Meeting"(PDF) (Report). Richmond: Commonwealth of Virginia., p.12 Retrieved March 10, 2010
^ abState Highway Commission of Virginia (December 16, 1971). "Minutes of Meeting"(PDF) (Report). Richmond: Commonwealth of Virginia., pp. 26–27, 41 Retrieved February 27, 2010
^Google Earth Desktop Application. Search for "germanna community college, va", choose "locust grove" campus. Retrieved February 7, 2010
^State Highway Commission of Virginia (March 18, 1971). "Minutes of Meeting"(PDF) (Report). Richmond: Commonwealth of Virginia., pp. 23–24 Retrieved March 7, 2010
^State Highway Commission of Virginia (July 15, 1971). "Minutes of Meeting"(PDF) (Report). Richmond: Commonwealth of Virginia., p. 33 Retrieved February 27, 2010
^State Highway Commission of Virginia (July 16, 1964). "Minutes of Meeting"(PDF) (Report). Richmond: Commonwealth of Virginia., p. 12 Retrieved March 10, 2010
^State Highway Commission of Virginia (November 19, 1964). "Minutes of Meeting"(PDF) (Report). Richmond: Commonwealth of Virginia., p. 9 Retrieved February 23, 2010
^State Highway Commission of Virginia (February 18, 1965). "Minutes of Meeting"(PDF) (Report). Richmond: Commonwealth of Virginia., p. 15 Retrieved February 23, 2010
^ abState Highway Commission of Virginia (January 17, 1974). "Minutes of Meeting"(PDF) (Report). Richmond: Commonwealth of Virginia., p. 30 Retrieved February 27, 2010