U.S. Route 93 in Idaho

This article is about the section of highway in Idaho. For the entire length of highway, see U.S. Route 93.

U.S. Route 93 marker

U.S. Route 93
Route information
Maintained by ITD
Major junctions
South end: US 93 at the NV state line
in Jackpot
  US-30 in Twin Falls
I-84 near Twin Falls
US-26 from Shoshone to Arco
US-20 from Carey to Arco
North end: US 93 at the MT state line
at Lost Trail Pass
Highway system

State Highways in Idaho

US-91US-95

U.S. Route 93 (US 93) is a northsouth U.S. Highway in the U.S. state of Idaho.

Route description

US 93 enters southern Idaho from Nevada, immediately north of the border casino town of Jackpot. Heading northbound in Twin Falls County, it passes through Rogerson and Hollister towards Twin Falls. West of the city, US 93 turns and runs eastwest for a few miles, parallel with US 30. This section is Pole Line Road; the highway returns to its northsouth orientation in Twin Falls at the intersection of Pole Line Road and Blue Lakes Boulevard.

North of Twin Falls, US 93 crosses the Snake River Canyon via the Perrine Bridge, 486 feet (148 m) above the water. Approximately 3 miles (5 km) north of the bridge, the highway intersects with Interstate 84 at exit 173.

Further north in Shoshone, US 93 connects with the southern terminus of State Highway 75, the former route of US 93 to Ketchum and over Galena Summit8,701 to Stanley and Clayton. Present-day US 93 diverts in a northeasterly route to Richfield, Carey, the Craters of the Moon, and Arco. Between Shoshone and Arco the highway runs concurrently with the eastwest US 26, and also with US 20 between Carey and Arco.

From Arco, the highway turns northwest and climbs the Big Lost River valley through Mackay. This section provides views of the Lost River Range to the northeast of the highway, including Borah Peak, the highest point in the state at 12,662 feet (3,859 m) above sea level. Mackay Dam and reservoir are on the southwest side of the highway. The highway crosses the Willow Creek Summit at 7,161 feet (2,183 m) (web-cam) and later descends into Grand View Canyon and heads into the city of Challis.

US 93 creates the northern terminus of State Highway 75 just south of Challis and takes over as the northern leg of the Salmon River Scenic Byway.[1] It descends with the Salmon River as it winds north around the edge of the Lost River and Lemhi mountain ranges into the city of Salmon at 4,004 feet (1,220 m).

Continuing north, the US 93 runs along portions of the Lewis and Clark Trail. The highway follows the descending northbound river until North Fork at 3,620 feet (1,100 m), where the Salmon River makes a left turn to flow west across the state to Riggins. US 93 continues north, climbing the North Fork of the Salmon River into the Bitterroot Range, passing through the Salmon-Challis National Forest and Gibbonsville. The highway exits Idaho at Lost Trail Pass (web-cam) at 7,014 feet (2,138 m) and enters Montana toward the Bitterroot Valley. West of the highway at the pass is the Lost Trail Powder Mountain ski area, with terrain in both states.

Major intersections

CountyLocationmikmDestinationsNotes
Twin Falls0.000.00 US 93 south Las VegasNevada state line
Filer US-30 westWestern end of US 93 concurrency
Twin Falls US-30 eastEastern end of US 30 concurrency
I-84
LincolnShoshone SH-24 eastWestern terminus of SH–24
US-26 west / SH-75 northWestern end of US 26 concurrency; southern terminus of SH–75
BlaineCarey US-20 westWestern end of US 20 concurrency
ButteArco US-20 east / US-26 eastEastern end of US 20 concurrency; eastern end of US 26 concurrency
Custer SH-75 southNorthern terminus of SH–75
LemhiSalmon SH-28 southNorthern terminus of SH–28
US 93 northMontana state line
1.000 mi = 1.609 km; 1.000 km = 0.621 mi

References

U.S. Route 93
Previous state:
Nevada
Idaho Next state:
Montana
This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 10/15/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.