Jump to content

California State Route 149

Route map:
This is a good article. Click here for more information.
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
(Redirected from Route 149 (California))
State Route 149 marker
State Route 149
SR 149 highlighted in red
Route information
Maintained by Caltrans
Length4.623 mi[1] (7.440 km)
HistoryState highway in 1933; numbered in 1964
Major junctions
South end SR 70 near Oroville
North end SR 99 near Chico
Location
CountryUnited States
StateCalifornia
CountiesButte
Highway system
SR 147 SR 150

State Route 149 (SR 149) is a short state highway in the U.S. state of California that helps to connect Oroville and Chico through rural Butte County. Connecting State Route 70 at Wicks Corner with State Route 99 east of Durham, it forms part of the primary north–south highway through the eastern Sacramento Valley, a Focus Route of the Interregional Road System.[2]

SR 149 was formerly part of the Oroville-Chico Highway; the majority of the latter was merged into other routes. In the mid-1970s, the highway was reallocated onto a newer two-lane alignment. A project to widen the two-lane road to a four-lane expressway was completed in late 2008, removing the bottleneck from the Oroville-Chico highway.[3]

Route description

[edit]

State Route 149 begins at Wicks Corner as a divided highway, at an interchange with SR 70 several miles north of Oroville. This is the north end of the State Route 70 freeway, which passes through a gap between the Campbell Hills and South Table Mountain on its way from Oroville. SR 149 heads northwest across gently rolling terrain before descending into the valley of the Dry Creek. As it begins to climb out of the valley, SR 149 ends at an interchange with SR 99. The latter highway continues the corridor northwest to Chico, quickly dropping back into the Butte Creek valley.[4] The route is a divided highway with four lanes.[5]

SR 149 is part of the California Freeway and Expressway System,[6] and is part of the National Highway System,[7] a network of highways that are considered essential to the country's economy, defense, and mobility by the Federal Highway Administration.[8]

History

[edit]

By the late 1910s, a "natural prairie road" linked Oroville to State Highway Route 3 southeast of Chico, following the present Table Mountain Boulevard, Openshaw Road, and Oroville-Chico Highway to Midway (Route 3). The primary route between these two cities was the all-state highway route, following Route 21 (now SR 162) west from Oroville to Route 3 near Richvale.[9][10] Butte County dedicated a newly improved Oroville-Chico Highway on July 4, 1926;[11] it became part of the state highway system in 1933 as the northern portion of the Woodland-Chico Route 87.[12][13] (The rest of Route 87 became part of Sign Route 24, which turned east at Oroville along present State Route 70, in 1934.[14])

In the 1950s and 1960s, about three-quarters of the Oroville-Chico Highway was absorbed by other routes.[15] A new two-lane alignment of U.S. Route 99E (Legislative Route 3, now SR 99) between east of Richvale and Chico opened in the mid-1950s, using part of the Oroville-Chico Highway south of Durham Dayton Highway and bypassing the remainder to the junction south of Chico.[16][17] In the early 1960s, U.S. Route 40 Alternate (Legislative Route 21, now SR 70) was relocated due to the damming of Lake Oroville across its old alignment. The bridge over the West Branch Feather River northwest of the dam opened in August 1962, resulting in US 40 Alt. using the Oroville-Chico Highway (which was relocated to a new four-lane freeway alignment) south of Wicks Corner.[18][19] The remainder, which was never part of a sign route,[20] became Route 149 in the 1964 renumbering.[21]

SR 149 was relocated onto a new two-lane alignment in the mid-1970s, leaving behind Openshaw Road.[16] Caltrans began studies for interchanges at each end in September 1992. The California Transportation Commission approved funding for four-laning SR 149 in April 1994 and the two interchanges in May 1996, with construction to begin in 1998 and cost $47 million. Due to state budget problems and the need to study environmental impacts, the project was repeatedly pushed back; these impacts and inflation had more than doubled the cost to $120 million in 2004. In particular, an endangered species of meadowfoam was discovered on the south embankment, forcing a redesign. Construction began in September 2005 on a new freshwater marsh near the State Route 70 intersection to replace beaver ponds in the path of the highway, and it was completed in March 2006.[22]

Ground was broken for the highway project in April 2006, with major construction beginning in May.[22] Caltrans estimated completion in late 2009 for the completion of the four-lane expressway, including a new directional interchange at each end, at which State Route 70 and State Route 99 will exit and enter to the right of the main Oroville-Chico movement. Most access was closed, with Shippee Road providing the sole at-grade crossing of the expressway, and an overcrossing near State Route 70 giving access to local property. Shippee Road was relocated to the southeast, allowing for the future construction of an interchange. In addition, State Route 70 was relocated to the west between SR 149 and State Route 191, and local access on State Route 99 between SR 149 and the Durham Dayton Highway interchange was replaced by frontage roads.[3][23] The entire project was completed in November 2008,[24] at a cost of $125 million.[5]

Major intersections

[edit]

Except where prefixed with a letter, postmiles were measured on the road as it was in 1964, based on the alignment that existed at the time, and do not necessarily reflect current mileage. R reflects a realignment in the route since then, M indicates a second realignment, L refers to an overlap due to a correction or change, and T indicates postmiles classified as temporary (for a full list of prefixes, see California postmile § Official postmile definitions).[1] Segments that remain unconstructed or have been relinquished to local control may be omitted. The entire route is in Butte County.

LocationPostmile
[1][16][25]
DestinationsNotes
Wicks Corner0.00
SR 70 to SR 191 – Paradise, Quincy, Oroville, Marysville
Southbound exit and northbound entrance; west end of SR 149
 North end of freeway
R3.11Shippee Road, Openshaw Road
R4.62 SR 99 – Yuba City, Chico, Red BluffInterchange; northbound exit and southbound entrance; east end of SR 149
1.000 mi = 1.609 km; 1.000 km = 0.621 mi

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ a b c California Department of Transportation. "State Truck Route List". Sacramento: California Department of Transportation. Archived from the original (XLS file) on September 5, 2015. Retrieved June 30, 2015.
  2. ^ California Department of Transportation, Focus Routes, January 2005
  3. ^ a b California Department of Transportation, Butte 70/149/99 Highway Improvement Project. Retrieved February 2008.
  4. ^ ACME Mapper 2.0 (Map). ACME Maps. Retrieved January 12, 2012.
  5. ^ a b Staff (December 28, 2008). "Making headlines: Recounting our best stories of 2008". Chico Enterprise-Record. Chico, California: MediaNews Group. Archived from the original on April 17, 2011. Retrieved January 27, 2012.
  6. ^ "Article 2 of Chapter 2 of Division 1". California Streets and Highways Code. Sacramento: California Office of Legislative Counsel. Retrieved February 6, 2019.
  7. ^ Federal Highway Administration (March 25, 2015). National Highway System: California (North) (PDF) (Map). Scale not given. Washington, DC: Federal Highway Administration. Retrieved September 24, 2017.
  8. ^ Natzke, Stefan; Neathery, Mike & Adderly, Kevin (June 20, 2012). "What is the National Highway System?". National Highway System. Washington, DC: Federal Highway Administration. Retrieved July 1, 2012.
  9. ^ Automobile Club of Southern California, Automobile Road Map of California, 1917
  10. ^ Official Automobile Blue Book, Volume Eight, 1919, pp. 222-223
  11. ^ Oakland Tribune, Near-Beer Will Christen New Road, June 18, 1926
  12. ^ California State Assembly. "An act to amend sections 2, 3 and 5 and to add two sections to be numbered 6 and 7 to an act entitled 'An act to provide for the acquisition of rights of way for and the construction, maintenance..." Fiftieth Session of the Legislature. Statutes of California. State of California. Ch. 767 p. 2035.: "State Highway Route 3 near Chico to State Highway Route 21 near Oroville."
  13. ^ California State Assembly. "An act to establish a Streets and Highways Code, thereby consolidating and revising the law relating to public ways and all appurtenances thereto, and to repeal certain acts and parts of acts specified herein". Fifty-first Session of the Legislature. Statutes of California. State of California. Ch. 29 p. 282.: "Route 87 is from: (a) Route 7 near Woodland to State Highway near Yuba City. (b) Route 15 near Marysville to Route 21 near Oroville. (c) Route 21 near Oroville to Route 3 near Chico."
  14. ^ California Highways and Public Works, State Routes will be Numbered and Marked with Distinctive Bear Signs, August 1934
  15. ^ United States Geological Survey, Oroville (1944)[permanent dead link] and Chico (1949)[permanent dead link] (scale 1:62500): these maps show the road before it was absorbed
  16. ^ a b c California Department of Transportation (July 2007). "Log of Bridges on State Highways". Sacramento: California Department of Transportation.
  17. ^ California Department of Transportation, Index to California Highways and Public Works, 1937-1967, June 1997, p. 75
  18. ^ Oakland Tribune, Bridge Dedicated, August 15, 1962
  19. ^ Oakland Tribune, Man, Machines Change Face of Earth in Gigantic Dam Project at Oroville, June 8, 1964
  20. ^ H.M. Gousha Company, California, 1963
  21. ^ California State Assembly. "An act to add Section 253 and Article 3 (commencing with Section 300) to Chapter 2 of Division 1 of, and to repeal Section 253 and Article 3 (commencing with Section 300) of Chapter 2 of Division 1 of, the..." 1963 Session of the Legislature. Statutes of California. State of California. Ch. 385 p. 1183.: "Route 149 is from Route 70 near Wicks Corner to Route 99 near Chico."
  22. ^ a b Chico Enterprise-Record, Project has taken a long time to get to this point Archived 2011-04-17 at the Wayback Machine, July 21, 2006
  23. ^ Chico Enterprise-Record, Closing the gap: The Highway 149 project (map) Retrieved February 2008.
  24. ^ Weston, Mary (20 November 2008). "Highway 49: a reason to celebrate". Chico Enterprise-Record. Chico, California. Retrieved 29 June 2012.
  25. ^ "All Traffic Volumes on CSHS". California Department of Transportation. 2005–2006. Retrieved February 10, 2008.
[edit]
KML is from Wikidata