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North Carolina Highway 191

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North Carolina Highway 191 marker
North Carolina Highway 191
Route information
Maintained by NCDOT
Length21.62 mi[1] (34.79 km)
Existed1921[2]–present
Major junctions
South end US 25 in Hendersonville
Major intersections
North end

US 19 Bus. / US 23 Bus. in Asheville
Location
CountryUnited States
StateNorth Carolina
CountiesHenderson, Buncombe
Highway system
NC 186 NC 194

North Carolina Highway 191 (NC 191) is a 21.62-mile (34.79 km) long south-to-north state highway in the western part of the U.S. state of North Carolina. It travels within portions of Henderson and Buncombe counties.

Route description

NC 191 begins at an intersection with U.S. Route 25 Business (US 25 Bus.) / Asheville Highway in the city of Hendersonville in Henderson County. Named Haywood Road, it travels northwest from Hendersonville and enters the town of Mills River, where it meets NC 280 (Boylston Highway). NC 191 runs concurrent with NC 280 northward for a short distance before separating after approximately one mile (1.6 km).[1] The route continues north towards Asheville, leaving Henderson County and entering Buncombe County, before meeting the western terminus of NC 146 (Long Shoals Road) in the community of Avery Creek. Past Avery Creek, NC 191 intersects the scenic Blue Ridge Parkway, a National Parkway and All-American Road. The highway continues north into Venable, intersecting the eastern terminus of NC 112 (Sardis Road) and then Interstate 26 (I-26) and US 74 at exit 33 as it reaches the outermost city limits of Asheville. Entering the city, NC 191 interchanges with I-40 (exit 47) and one-half mile (0.80 km) later, with I-26/I-240 (exit 1B). NC 191 heads into the southwestern section of Asheville named Brevard Road. At just over 21.5 miles (34.6 km), the route reaches its northern end at US 19 Bus./US 23 Bus. (Haywood Road)[1][2]

History

NC 191 is an original state highway.[2] In 1971, the highway was routed along modern-day I-240 from Brevard Road to Haywood Road, a highway that was previously unnumbered. As a result, Brevard Road became unnumbered north of the freeway. Around 1981, NC 191 was moved back onto Brevard Road to end where it currently does at US 19 Bus./US 23 Bus. The freeway became I-240.[2]

Major intersections

CountyLocationmi[1]kmDestinationsNotes
HendersonHendersonville0.000.00
US 25 Bus. (Asheville Highway)
Southern terminus NC 191
Mills River7.4111.93
NC 280 west (Boylston Highway) – Brevard
West end of NC 280 overlap
8.5313.73
NC 280 east (Boylston Highway) – Asheville Regional Airport
East end of NC 280 overlap
BuncombeAvery Creek13.2021.24
NC 146 east (Long Shoals Road)
Western terminus NC 146
Bent Creek15.6525.19Blue Ridge Parkway
Asheville17.6928.47
NC 112 west (Sardis Road)
Eastern terminus NC 112
18.3029.45 I-26 / US 74 – Hendersonville, AshevilleExit 33 (I-26/US 74)
20.0332.24 I-40 – Black Mountain, CantonExit 47(I-40)
20.6533.23
Future I-26 / I-240
Exit 1B (I-26/I-240)
21.6434.83

US 19 Bus. / US 23 Bus. (Haywood Road)
Northern terminus NC 191
1.000 mi = 1.609 km; 1.000 km = 0.621 mi

Bannered routes

Asheville alternate route

North Carolina Highway 191A marker
North Carolina Highway 191A
LocationAsheville, North Carolina
Length1.8 mi[3] (2.9 km)
Existed1957–1960

North Carolina Highway 191A (NC 191A) was established as a concurrency with US 19A/US 23A along Haywood Road, between Hanover Street and Patton Avenue. The route existed only in the late 1950s.

See also

References

  1. ^ a b c d Overview Map North Carolina Route 191 (Map). Yahoo Maps. Retrieved 2010-11-09.
  2. ^ a b c d NC Roads: NC 191 Archived November 25, 2010, at the Wayback Machine[self-published source]
  3. ^ "North Carolina Highway 191A - Asheville" (Map). Google Maps. Retrieved July 13, 2013.
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