Great Smoky Mountains Parkway
Great Smoky Mountains Parkway | |
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Route information | |
Maintained by TDOT & NPS/FHWA | |
Length | 23.4 mi[1] (37.7 km) |
Component highways | |
Major junctions | |
South end | US 441 in Gatlinburg |
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North end | I-40 in Kodak |
Location | |
Country | United States |
State | Tennessee |
Highway system | |
The Great Smoky Mountains Parkway travels 14.5 miles (23.3 km) between Great Smoky Mountains National Park and Sevierville, along U.S. route 441 and state route 448, in east Tennessee. It serves both, as the main thoroughfare for Gatlinburg and Pigeon Forge, and a 4.3-mile (6.9 km) spur of the Foothills Parkway.
Route description
The road is simply called "Parkway" in Pigeon Forge and Gatlinburg, where most of the commercial land development has occurred in those two cities. Both have numbered each traffic light sequentially to make it easier for non-locals to find their hotels and other tourist attractions. Sevierville has its traffic lights numbered in miles and tenths, according to the mileage from the national park boundary.[2]
Between Pigeon Forge and Gatlinburg, the parkway becomes part of the Foothills Parkway as its spur route, although that roadway has yet to be built in the area (the right of way for it already includes land for a small interchange adjacent to the southern end of the Pigeon Forge city limit). This 4.3-mile (6.9 km) segment, on a narrow strip of National Park Service (NPS) land, is a four-lane divided highway which runs along both banks of the northward-flowing Little Pigeon River. Where the river briefly diverts to the west and back east again, the southbound roadway on the west bank also curves around, while the northbound lanes go through a tunnel. The Gatlinburg visitor center is located just before entering the town from the north. The Gatlinburg Bypass, part of the Great Smoky Mountains National Park, connects with the parkway to provide a direct access to the National Park. All of these parkways are operated as part of Great Smoky Mountains National Park (unlike other separate national parkways), with support for design and road construction (including repaving) from the Federal Highway Administration (FHWA) through the Public Lands Transportation Program (PLTP) as in other national parks.
In Sevierville, the Parkway has an east branch and a west branch, as well as a spur in both directions along U.S. 411.[2] Between U.S. 411 and Tennessee 66, the road is known as "North Parkway".
Christmas displays
Within the towns, the road is decorated with Christmas lights all winter. As a six-lane divided highway through Pigeon Forge, very tall multi-fixture street lights in the median are decorated with white LED snowflakes that "fall" down the poles. In Gatlinburg, white LED deciduous trees sprout from the lampposts, in addition to other displays, such as the large one that stretches across the road at the town's northern entrance. In Sevierville, the traditional and much brighter snowflake light sculptures are still in use.
History
This section is empty. You can help by adding to it. (November 2014) |
Junctions list
The entire route is in Sevier County.
Location | mi[1] | km | Destinations | Notes | |
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Great Smoky Mountains National Park | 0.0 | 0.0 | US 441 (Newfound Gap Road) – Cherokee | Continuation as Newfound Gap Road | |
Gatlinburg | 1.0 | 1.6 | US 321 north (SR 73 / East Parkway) – Newport | North end of US 321 overlap | |
2.1 | 3.4 | Gatlinburg Bypass – Great Smoky Mountains National Park | No northbound exit | ||
| 5.5 | 8.9 | Lua error in Module:Jct at line 204: attempt to concatenate local 'link' (a nil value). | Foothills Parkway (unconstructed sections) future interchange | |
Pigeon Forge | 7.1 | 11.4 | SR 449 north (Dollywood Parkway) – Dollywood | ||
9.3 | 15.0 | US 321 south (SR 73 / Wears Valley Road) – Townsend | South end of US 321 overlap | ||
Sevierville | 13.4 | 21.6 | US 441 north (SR 71 / Forks of the River Parkway) | North end of US 441 and south end of SR 448 overlap | |
13.9 | 22.4 | US 411 north (SR 35 / Main Street) – Newport, Knoxville | |||
14.5 | 23.3 | SR 66 (Winfield Dunn Parkway) | Northern terminus of SR 448; Southern end of SR 66 overlap | ||
SR 338 north (Douglas Dam Road) – Douglas Dam | Northern end of SR 338 overlap | ||||
SR 338 south (Boyds Creek Highway) – Boyds Creek | Southern end of SR 338 overlap | ||||
Sevierville–Kodak line | SR 139 (Douglas Dam Road) – Dandridge, Kodak | ||||
23.4 | 37.7 | I-40 – Knoxville, Bristol | Northern end of the Great Smoky Mountains Parkway | ||
1.000 mi = 1.609 km; 1.000 km = 0.621 mi
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See also
References
- ^ a b "Great Smoky Mountains Parkway" (Map). Google Maps. Retrieved November 26, 2014.
- ^ a b Smoky Mountain Parkway Traffic Signals (PDF) (Map). Not to scale. Cartography by Engineer's Office. City of Sevierville, Tennessee. Retrieved September 30, 2012.
External links
- Great Smoky Mountains Parkway Editorial/attractions page by DiscoverTheSmokies.com