Misplaced Pages

Tennessee State Route 160

Article snapshot taken from Wikipedia with creative commons attribution-sharealike license. Give it a read and then ask your questions in the chat. We can research this topic together.

State highway in Tennessee
State Route 160 marker State Route 160 markerState Route 160
SR 160; primary in red, secondary in blue
Route information
Maintained by TDOT
Length27.1 mi (43.6 km)
Major junctions
North end US 11E in Morristown
Major intersections
South end US 321 near Newport
Location
CountryUnited States
StateTennessee
CountiesHamblen, Cocke
Highway system
SR 159 SR 161

State Route 160 (SR 160) is a state highway in East Tennessee that has both four-lane expressway and two-lane rural collector sections. It serves as an arterial bypass route of US 11E/SR 34 in the city of Morristown in Hamblen County.

Route description

Hamblen County

SR 160 begins as a primary highway at an intersection with US 11E/SR 34 (W Andrew Johnson Highway) in a concurrency with SR 342 in Morristown, heading southeastward as a 4-lane divided highway, serving essentially as a southern bypass of Morristown. SR 342 (Alpha Valley Home Road) exits after SR 160 curves more eastwardly, and has an intersection with SR 66 (Merchants Greene Boulevard) shortly afterwards. SR 160 continues east to have an interchange with SR 343 (S Cumberland Street) before coming to an interchange with US 25E/SR 32 (S Davy Crockett Parkway; Exit 1 on US 25E). SR 160 then leaves Morristown and has an intersection with SR 113 before coming to an interchange with Interstate 81 (Exit 12 on I-81) in Lowland, where it turns secondary, narrows to 2-lanes, and continues through farmland before crossing the Nolichucky River into Cocke County.

Cocke County

SR 160 enters the mountains and passes by Briarwood Ranch Safari Park before passing through Bybee as it exits the mountains and re enters farmland. The highway then winds its way southeast along the banks of the French Broad River to enter Community Newport and come to an end at an intersection with US 321/SR 35 east of downtown.

History

Prior to the extension of the highway, SR 160's original northern terminus was at TN State Route 343, also known as South Cumberland Street and Old US Highway 25E. Construction of the four-laned section began in 1990 and it took roughly two years to complete, passing through a number of hills and valleys, requiring extensive bridges. The first few miles of the highway took over part of Tennessee State Route 342. The four lane section goes from US 11E in Morristown to 1.7 miles south of Interstate 81.

Junction list

CountyLocationmikmDestinationsNotes
HamblenMorristown00.0 US 11E / SR 342 west/begin (W Andrew Johnson Highway/SR 34) – Jefferson City, MorristownNorthern terminus and Eastern terminus of SR 342; at-grade intersection with traffic signal
1.82.9
SR 342 east (Alpha Valley Home Road)
Southern end of SR 342 concurrency
3.25.1 SR 66 (Merchants Greene Boulevard) – White Pine, Dandridge, MorristownDiamond interchange
7.311.7 SR 343 (South Cumberland Street) – MorristownFormer northern terminus, interchange; access to downtown Morristown
813 US 25E (S Davy Crockett Parkway/SR 32) – Bean Station, Tazewell, White Pine, NewportPartial cloverleaf interchange; US 25E exit 1
1016 SR 113 (Springvale Road) – White Pine, Whitesburgat-grade un-signalized intersection
Lowland11.418.3 I-81 – Knoxville, BristolI-81 exit 12; southern end of expressway, primary highway classification; northern end of secondary classification
Cocke27.143.6 US 321 (SR 35) – Newport, GreenevilleSouthern terminus
1.000 mi = 1.609 km; 1.000 km = 0.621 mi

References

KML file (edithelp) Template:Attached KML/Tennessee State Route 160KML is not from Wikidata
  1. Mattern and Craig Inc. "Intersection Improvement: State Route 160 at Commerce Boulevard. Morristown, Hamblen County" (PDF). Tennessee Department of Transportation. Retrieved April 2, 2021.
  2. "Morristown, TN" (Map). Google Maps. Retrieved September 30, 2013.
  3. Bureau of Engineering. "Hamblen County: SR 160 from End of Bridge over Nolichucky River" (PDF). Tennessee Department of Transportation. Archived from the original (PDF) on November 13, 2008.
Categories: