Findlay-Upper_Sandusky_Road

Ohio State Route 568

Ohio State Route 568

State highway in northwestern Ohio, US


State Route 568 (SR 568) is an eastwest state highway in the northwestern portion of the U.S. state of Ohio. The western terminus of this highway is at a signalized intersection in downtown Findlay where it meets State Route 12 and State Route 37. The eastern terminus of State Route 568 is in downtown Carey at a signalized intersection that serves as all of the northern split of the U.S. Route 23/State Route 103 concurrency, the western split of the State Route 103/State Route 199 concurrency and the southern split of the U.S. Route 23/State Route 199 concurrency. Currently, 2 bridges on the road are going through rehabilitation expected to last until 2025.

Quick Facts State Route 568, Route information ...

State Route 568 was created in the middle of the 1960s. The entire length of this two-lane highway is part of the former alignment of State Route 15, which was realigned onto a new expressway from Findlay to Carey at that time.

Route description

Along its path, State Route 568 passes through eastern Hancock County and northwestern Wyandot County. There are no segments of State Route 568 that are incorporated within the National Highway System, a network of highways deemed most important for the economy, mobility and defense of the country.[4] The road acts as an original to route to travel from Carey to Findlay, but now acts as an overflow road. It has mainly local cars and trucks traveling on it.

History

State Route 568 was established in 1965. With the completion of a new four-lane divided expressway from Interstate 75 south of Findlay and U.S. Route 23/State Route 103 south of Carey, the State Route 15 designation, which had utilized a two-lane roadway between downtown Findlay and downtown Carey to that point, was transferred onto the new expressway, which parallels the two-lane road to the south. Consequently, this two-lane highway became known as State Route 568. The route has utilized the same alignment from inception to this day, and has not seen any significant changes since its original designation.[2][3]

Prior to the presently designated Route 568, a previous Route 568 traversed northern Lucas County and Fulton County. Established around 1939, its western terminus was the Ohio–Michigan line west of Lyons and the eastern terminus was at U.S. Route 25 (North Detroit Avenue) in Toledo.[5] However, within a year, the part west of old U.S. 223 (present day Monroe Street and Alexis Road in Sylvania) was renamed Route 120 due to difference of traffic.[6] Subsequently only the portion east of Monroe Street remained as Route 568, entirely encompassing Alexis Road. It was decommissioned as a state route around 1953 and designated as a bypass for U.S. 24 and U.S. 25.[7] It was recommissioned as State Route 184 in 1969.[8][9]

Major intersections

More information County, Location ...

References

KML is from Wikidata
  1. Ohio Department of Transportation. "Technical Services Straight Line Diagrams". Retrieved 2006-11-08.
  2. Official Ohio Highway Map (MrSID) (Map). Cartography by ODOH. Ohio Department of Highways. 1964. Retrieved 2011-01-17.
  3. Official Ohio Highway Map (MrSID) (Map). Cartography by ODOH. Ohio Department of Highways. 1965. Retrieved 2011-01-17.
  4. National Highway System: Ohio (PDF) (Map). Federal Highway Administration. December 2003. Retrieved 2011-01-17.
  5. Ohio Highway Map 1939 (PDF) (Map). Ohio Department of Transportation. 1939. Retrieved August 6, 2020.
  6. Ohio Highway Map 1940 (PDF) (Map). Ohio Department of Transportation. 1940. Retrieved August 6, 2020.
  7. Official 1953 Ohio Highway Map (PDF) (Map). Ohio Department of Transportation. 1953. Retrieved August 6, 2020.
  8. 1969 Official Ohio Highway Map (PDF) (Map). Ohio Department of Transportation. 1969. Retrieved August 6, 2020.
  9. U.S.G.S. Topographic Maps: 7.5' Quadrangles for Sylvania (1951) Toledo (1951). Also, Toledo 1:250,000 U.S.G.S. maps dated 1948, and Ohio Department of Transportation Maps dated 1939, 1940 and 1953.

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This article uses material from the Wikipedia article Findlay-Upper_Sandusky_Road, and is written by contributors. Text is available under a CC BY-SA 4.0 International License; additional terms may apply. Images, videos and audio are available under their respective licenses.