Jump to content

Utah State Route 106

Route map:
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
(Redirected from Utah State Route 106 (1953))
State Route 106 marker
State Route 106
Map
Route information
Maintained by UDOT
Length9.426 mi[1] (15.170 km)
Existed1931; moved 1953–present
Major junctions
South end I-15 in West Bountiful
Major intersections US 89 in Bountiful
SR-105 in Centerville
SR-227 in Farmington
SR-225 in Farmington
North end US 89 in Farmington
Location
CountryUnited States
StateUtah
Highway system
  • Utah State Highway System
SR-105 SR-107

State Route 106 (SR-106) is a state highway in the U.S. state of Utah, running northerly from Bountiful to Farmington. Most of the road is the old route of US-89/US-91, and once extended further along that old alignment in each direction.

Route description

[edit]

The route begins at a partial diamond interchange at I-15 on exit 317. The highway heads east on 400 North, a four-lane undivided highway. The route continues through Bountiful and turns north on Main Street, a two-lane undivided road. The route continues north into Centerville. North of Chase Lane, the road begins turning northwest. By Lund Lane, the road heads due north again. By this point, the route becomes 200 East. As the highway enters Farmington, 200 East becomes State Street. Immediately after, the route turns north on Main Street. The route then turns northwest and continues in this manner until a diamond interchange with US-89 at exit 396, where it terminates.[2]

History

[edit]

SR-106 was created on May 12, 1931 as a bypass of State Route 1 (US-91) from southern Bountiful to northern Farmington. (This bypass is now the route taken by US-89, mostly overlapping I-15, the former crossing of South 500 West and South Main Street in Bountiful and SR-273 in Farmington). US-91 was moved to the bypass, and, for a while, the old route (still SR-1) was signed as U.S. Route 91 Alternate.[3] In 1953, the Utah State Legislature switched SR-1 and SR-106, taking SR-106 along the older route, and extended SR-106 north along former SR-1 to southern Layton (now exit 330 of I-15) in conjunction with a new bypass of SR-1 south of Layton. (The rest of old SR-106 in northern Farmington became an extension of SR-49, now US-89.) A minor change on May 8, 1961 moved SR-106 from Main Street west to 200 West through Bountiful, taking southbound SR-106 over the Parkin Overpass at its south end. SR-106 was further extended south along old SR-1 to the north side of Salt Lake City (I-15 exit 312) in 1962, when SR-1 was moved to match the planned Interstate 15, and north via Ogden to the Utah Hot Springs (I-15 exit 351) on November 25, 1966, replacing more of SR-1.[4]

This extension of SR-106 through Ogden only lasted until 1969; that year, the State Legislature removed the part between 200 North in Kaysville and the I-15 interchange (now exit 330) in southern Layton, and redesignated the part from southern Layton north to Utah Hot Springs as SR-84. On March 7, 1969, the Utah State Department of Highways (now the Utah Department of Transportation) added Shepard Lane in northern Farmington to the state highway system, from SR-106 west to US-89 (SR-49). SR-106 was rerouted over this roadway, ending at US-89, in order to eliminate a hazardous intersection where US-89 and SR-106 had crossed. The former SR-106 was renumbered SR-272 south of and SR-273 north of this intersection. The old alignment north of Shepard Lane, where still state-maintained, has since become SR-273, SR-126, SR-26, and US-89. As part of the 1977 renumbering, the short piece of SR-106 between Becks and the Parkin Overpass, which was signed as US-89, officially became part of that route.[4]

State Route 131 was added to the state highway system on June 26, 1933 as a loop off SR-1 through Woods Cross. It began at South Main Street and South 800 West and preceded north on 800 West and east on 400 North to North Main Street. As part of the change to SR-106 (which had replaced SR-1 at the north end of SR-131) made on May 8, 1961, SR-131 was truncated from North Main Street to North 200 West, since this portion was now SR-106. SR-131 was truncated to run only along 400 North, from I-15 (SR-1) east to SR-106, by the 1969 State Legislature; most of the former route was deleted from the state highway system, but the southernmost part on 800 West, connecting US-89 (SR-106) to I-15 (SR-1), became an extension of SR-93, which ran east from this I-15 interchange to US-89. (This extension of SR-93 was removed from the state highway system in 1985, but the original piece remains.[5]) A short extension to SR-131 was made on April 25, 1997, adding 400 North from I-15 west over the Union Pacific Railroad's Salt Lake Subdivision to the route.[6]

In early 2001, the city of Bountiful requested that UDOT give up maintenance on the part of SR-106 along 200 West between 500 South (SR-68) and 400 North (SR-131). The state agreed on February 9, 2001, and SR-106 took over what had been SR-131. The portion of SR-106 from SR-68 south to the Parkin Overpass became an extension of SR-68.[4] SR-131 was reused in 2016.

Major intersections

[edit]

The entire route is in Davis County.

Locationmi[1]kmDestinationsNotes
West Bountiful0.0000.000Beginning of state maintenance
0.169–
0.208
0.272–
0.335
Bridge over the Union Pacific Railroad's Salt Lake Subdivision
0.231–
0.277
0.372–
0.446

I-15 south
West BountifulBountiful line0.4450.716 US 89 (500 West) to I-15 north
Bountiful0.7961.281200 WestFormer SR-106 south; SR-106 from mile 0.000 to here was SR-131
Centerville3.0464.902
SR-105 west (Parrish Lane/400 North)
3.5735.750Chase Lane (1000 North)Former SR-255 south
Farmington7.29411.739
SR-227 west (State Street)
8.29413.348
SR-225 west (Park Lane/675 North)
9.04914.563North Main StreetFormer SR-272 north
9.37815.092 US 89
9.42615.170End of state maintenance
1.000 mi = 1.609 km; 1.000 km = 0.621 mi

References

[edit]
KML is not from Wikidata
  1. ^ a b Utah Department of Transportation, Highway Reference Information, accessed July 2007
  2. ^ "Google Maps". Google.
  3. ^ Rand McNally and Company, Road map: Idaho, Mont., Wyo., published by Texaco, 1937
  4. ^ a b c Utah Department of Transportation, Route 106 history, updated February 2006
  5. ^ Utah Department of Transportation, Route 93 history, updated November 2002
  6. ^ Utah Department of Transportation, Route 131 history, updated November 2005