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Washington State Route 16

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State Route 16 (SR 16) is a 27.16-mile-long (43.71 km) state highway in the U.S. state of Washington, connecting Pierce and Kitsap counties. The highway, signed as east–west, begins at an interchange with Interstate 5 (I-5) in Tacoma and travels through the city as a freeway towards the Tacoma Narrows. SR 16 crosses the narrows onto the Kitsap Peninsula on the partially tolled Tacoma Narrows Bridge and continues through Gig Harbor and Port Orchard before the freeway ends in Gorst. The designation ends at an intersection with SR 3 southwest of the beginning of its freeway through Bremerton and Poulsbo. SR 16 is designated as a Strategic Highway Network (STRAHNET) corridor within the National Highway System as the main thoroughfare connecting Tacoma to Naval Base Kitsap and a part of the Highways of Statewide Significance program.

SR 16 was created during the 1964 state highway renumbering as the successor to Primary State Highway 14 (PSH 14). PSH 14, which had itself been the successor to State Road 14, traveled northeast from Shelton to Gorst and south to Gig Harbor. PSH 14 was extended over the Tacoma Narrows in 1939 on the unfinished Tacoma Narrows Bridge, which would later collapse months after opening in 1940, into Tacoma over Secondary State Highway 14C (SSH 14C). SR 16 has been expanded into a freeway in stages beginning with the original Nalley Valley Viaduct in Tacoma in 1971, and ending with the opening of an interchange near Port Orchard in 2009. Later improvements to the corridor include the installation of high-occupancy vehicle lanes that connect to I-5 and the rest of the freeway network in Pierce County, which were completed in 2019.

Route description

The twinned Tacoma Narrows Bridge carries SR 16 between Tacoma and the Kitsap Peninsula

SR 16 begins as an elevated freeway at an interchange with I-5 in Tacoma southwest of downtown. The interchange includes direct ramps for a set of high-occupancy vehicle lanes (HOV lanes) and collector–distributor lanes as it travels over South Tacoma Way and a railroad that carries Sound Transit's Sounder commuter train. SR 16 intersects Sprague Avenue at an interchange and turns west, passing a golf course and Cheney Stadium. A parallel pedestrian and cycling path, the Scott Pierson Trail, runs along the north side of the freeway.<ref name="wsdot-spt">Template:Cite map</ref> At a partial interchange with Center Street near Fircrest, SR 16 turns northwest and travels around the Tacoma Community College campus to an interchange with North Pearl Street (SR 163), which provides access to Ruston and the Vashon Island ferry.<ref name="google">Template:Google maps</ref>

SR 16 continues west past a partial cloverleaf interchange with Jackson Avenue and towards the Tacoma Narrows on the twin-suspension Tacoma Narrows Bridges.<ref name="log"/><ref name="diagram-MP4-jackson">"SR 16 - Exit 4: Junction Jackson Avenue" (PDF). Washington State Department of Transportation. September 4, 2008. Retrieved March 18, 2013.</ref><ref name="google"/> The 5,979-foot-long (1,822 m) westbound span and the tolled 5,400-foot-long (1,600 m) eastbound span combine to carry six lanes of SR 16 onto the Kitsap Peninsula.<ref name="wsdot-tnb">"SR 16 - Tacoma Narrows Bridge - Just the Facts". Washington State Department of Transportation. Archived from the original on March 5, 2013. Retrieved March 18, 2013.</ref><ref name="wsdot-tnb2">"The Bridge Machine Since 1950". Washington State Department of Transportation. 2005. Archived from the original on October 26, 2011. Retrieved March 18, 2013.</ref> The eastbound span is tolled via electronic toll collection through the "Good to Go" program on the Kitsap Peninsula side of the bridge. Tolls for two axle vehicles and motorcycles are set at $4.50 for Good to Go accounts, $5.50 collected at the toll plaza, and $6.50 for Pay by Mail, with prices increasing for each additional axle by $2.25 for Good to Go accounts, $2.75 for toll plaza users, and $3.25 for Pay by Mail users.<ref>"Tacoma Narrows Bridge Toll Rates". Washington State Department of Transportation. Retrieved 2016-04-25.</ref>

SR 16 continues onto the Kitsap Peninsula and intersects 24th Street in a partial diamond interchange east of the Tacoma Narrows Airport as it passes the toll plaza for the eastbound Tacoma Narrows Bridge.<ref name="diagram-MP8-24">"SR 16 - Exit 8: Junction 24th Street NW" (PDF). Washington State Department of Transportation. September 4, 2008. Retrieved March 18, 2013.</ref> The freeway travels northwest through Gig Harbor past interchanges with Olympic Drive and Wollochet Drive near Gig Harbor High School before it reaches Henderson Bay. SR 16 continues through an interchange with Burnham Drive and past the Washington Corrections Center for Women and St. Anthony Hospital towards Purdy,<ref name="diagram-burnham">"SR 16: Junction Burnham Drive NW/Borgen Boulevard NW" (PDF). Washington State Department of Transportation. October 18, 2011. Retrieved March 18, 2013.</ref> intersecting the southern terminus of SR 302.<ref name="diagram-302">"SR 16: Junction SR 302/SR 302 Spur Purdy" (PDF). Washington State Department of Transportation. January 27, 2009. Retrieved March 18, 2013.</ref> The freeway bypasses Purdy and Peninsula High School to the east before intersecting SR 302 Spur and entering Kitsap County.<ref name="diagram-302s">"SR 16: Junction SR 302 Spur Purdy" (PDF). Washington State Department of Transportation. December 17, 2009. Retrieved March 18, 2013.</ref> SR 16 passes the community of Burley and intersects its main access highway, Burley-Olalla Road, in an interchange before entering the city of Port Orchard.<ref name="diagram-MP20-burleyolalla">"SR 16 - Exit 20: Junction SE Burley-Olalla Road" (PDF). Washington State Department of Transportation. February 7, 2011. Retrieved March 18, 2013.</ref> The freeway ends after serving as the western terminus of SR 160 and SR 166 on the west side of the city.<ref name="diagram-160">"SR 16: Junction SR 160/Sedgewick Road" (PDF). Washington State Department of Transportation. January 27, 2010. Retrieved March 18, 2013.</ref><ref name="diagram-166">"SR 16: Junction SR 166 (Formerly SR 160)" (PDF). Washington State Department of Transportation. September 17, 2004. Retrieved March 18, 2013.</ref> The four-lane highway continues west along the Sinclair Inlet into Gorst, intersecting its spur route and ending at an intersection with SR 3.<ref name="diagram-3">"SR 3: Junction SR 16/SR 16 Spur Gorst" (PDF). Washington State Department of Transportation. February 28, 2011. Retrieved March 18, 2013.</ref>

Every year, the Washington State Department of Transportation (WSDOT) conducts a series of surveys on its highways in the state to measure traffic volume. This is expressed in terms of annual average daily traffic (AADT), which is a measure of traffic volume for any average day of the year. In 2012, WSDOT calculated that the busiest section of SR 16 was west of its interchange with Union Avenue in downtown Tacoma, serving 112,000 vehicles, while the least busiest section is after the SR 160 interchange west of Port Orchard, serving 32,000 vehicles.<ref name="ATR">Staff (2012). "2012 Annual Traffic Report" (PDF). Washington State Department of Transportation. pp. 93–99. Retrieved March 24, 2013.</ref> SR 16 is designated as a Strategic Highway Network corridor, connecting Naval Base Kitsap to the state highway system along with SR 3, within the National Highway System that classifies it as important to the national economy, defense, and mobility.<ref name="NHS">Template:Cite map</ref><ref name="NHS-about">"What is the National Highway System?". Federal Highway Administration. September 26, 2012. Retrieved March 18, 2013.</ref> WSDOT designates the entire route of SR 16 as a Highway of Statewide Significance,<ref name="HSS-list">"Transportation Commission List of Highways of Statewide Significance" (PDF). Washington State Transportation Commission. July 26, 2009. Archived from the original (PDF) on July 24, 2013. Retrieved March 18, 2013.</ref> which includes highways that connect major communities in the state of Washington.<ref name="HSS-about">Lorenzo, Judy. "Highways of Statewide Significance". Washington State Department of Transportation. Retrieved March 18, 2013.</ref>

History

The current westbound (left) and now-demolished eastbound (right) portions of the Nalley Valley Viaduct, carrying SR 16 through Tacoma.

The present route of SR 16 roughly follows the route of several state highways signed during the 20th century, the first of which was State Road 14. State Road 14 traveled north from Shelton to Gorst and south into Gig Harbor as the primary connector between the Olympic and Kitsap peninsulas.<ref name="law1923">Washington State Legislature (March 19, 1923). "Chapter 185: Primary and Secondary State Highways". Session Laws of the State of Washington (1923 ed.). Olympia, Washington: Washington State Legislature. p. 631. Retrieved March 23, 2013.</ref> Its construction had been proposed by Pierce County in the 1910s to connect Gig Harbor to the Navy Yard Highway, which was under construction at the time.<ref>"Pierce County Wants Highway". The Spokesman-Review. November 3, 1916. p. 6. Retrieved November 3, 2021 – via Newspapers.com.</ref> State Road 14 was re-designated in 1937 as PSH 14 and included a secondary highway named SSH 14C that traveled from Gig Harbor to the Tacoma Narrows, site of an under-construction suspension bridge to open in 1940.<ref name="law1937a">Washington State Legislature (March 17, 1937). "Chapter 190: Establishment of Primary State Highways". Session Laws of the State of Washington (1937 ed.). Olympia, Washington: Washington State Legislature. p. 940. Retrieved March 23, 2013.</ref><ref name="law1937b">Washington State Legislature (March 18, 1937). "Chapter 207: Classification of Public Highways". Session Laws of the State of Washington (1937 ed.). Olympia, Washington: Washington State Legislature. p. 1010. Retrieved March 23, 2013.</ref><ref name="wsdot-tnb-timeline">"Spanning Time: A Chronology of Tacoma Narrows Bridges History". Washington State Department of Transportation. 2005. Retrieved March 23, 2013.</ref> PSH 14 was extended southeast over SSH 14C and the unfinished Tacoma Narrows Bridge into the city of Tacoma as part of a transfer of bridge ownership to the state of Washington in 1939.<ref name="law1939">Washington State Legislature (January 27, 1939). "Chapter 5: Lake Washington and Narrows Bridges". Session Laws of the State of Washington (1939 ed.). Olympia, Washington: Washington State Legislature. p. 10. Retrieved March 23, 2013.</ref> After the collapse of the original bridge on November 7, 1940,<ref name="HL-TNB4">Long, Priscilla (January 13, 2003). "Tacoma Narrows Bridge collapses on November 7, 1940". HistoryLink. Retrieved March 23, 2013.</ref> PSH 14 was truncated to Gig Harbor and traffic was redirected to a ferry landing in Manchester.<ref name="law1949">Washington State Legislature (March 22, 1949). "Chapter 225: Establishing of Primary and Secondary State Highways". Session Laws of the State of Washington (1949 ed.). Olympia, Washington: Washington State Legislature. pp. 773–774. Retrieved March 23, 2013.</ref> The second Tacoma Narrows Bridge was opened on October 14, 1950, and PSH 14 was extended the following year to an intersection with U.S. Route 99 (US 99) in Downtown Tacoma.<ref name="law1951">Washington State Legislature (1951). "Chapter 8". Session Laws of the State of Washington (1951 ed.). Olympia, Washington: Washington State Legislature.</ref><ref name="HL-TNB5">Long, Priscilla (October 29, 2004). "Tacoma Narrows Bridge, second edition, opens to traffic on October 14, 1950". HistoryLink. Retrieved March 24, 2013.</ref>

PSH 14 was replaced by SR 16 under the sign route system created during the 1964 state highway renumbering, traveling from US 99 in Tacoma to SR 3 in Gorst.<ref name="RCW"/><ref name="sr">Prahl, C. G. (December 1, 1965). "Identification of State Highways" (PDF). Washington State Highway Commission, Department of Highways. Retrieved March 23, 2013.</ref> WSDOT began converting the SR 16 corridor to a controlled-access freeway with the construction of the Nalley Valley Viaduct in 1969, designed with tetrapod columns at a cost of $3.67 million.<ref name="wsdot-WN-history">"SR 16 - Westbound Nalley Valley - History". Washington State Department of Transportation. Retrieved March 23, 2013.</ref> The viaduct opened on October 29, 1971,<ref>Sand, Paul (July 1, 2007). "The last piece of the puzzle takes the longest". The News Tribune. p. A11. Retrieved November 22, 2022 – via Newspapers.com.</ref> and connected SR 16 to I-5 in Tacoma, part of a new freeway replacing Bantz Boulevard between I-5 and the Tacoma Narrows Bridge.<ref name="wsdot-WN-history"/><ref>Corvin, Aaron; Sherman, Kris (August 5, 2001). "Before Highway 16, traffic crawled on Bantz Blvd". The News Tribune. p. A1. Retrieved November 22, 2022 – via Newspapers.com.</ref><ref name="usgs-1965">Template:Cite map</ref> A bypass of Purdy on the PierceKitsap county line was opened in November 1978 and the former route of SR 16 was divided between SR 302 and its spur route.<ref>"Purdy Bypass Gives Relief To Motorists". Transpo News. Vol. 29, no. 6. Washington State Department of Transportation. December 1978. p. 6. Retrieved November 4, 2021 – via WSDOT Library Digital Collections.</ref><ref>Template:Cite WSDOT map</ref> The remainder of SR 16 in Port Orchard was upgraded to a freeway during the 1980s;<ref name="ERG-1982">Chase, Donn (May 21, 1982). "Off the Top of the Mountain". Eugune Register-Guard. Retrieved March 23, 2013.</ref> however, at-grade intersections remained at Mullenix Road until 1993 and Burley-Olalla Road until 2009.<ref>Baker, Travis (September 30, 1992). "Highway 16: Interchange work starts at deadly intersection". Kitsap Sun. Retrieved May 17, 2018.</ref><ref name="sun-bo">Friedrich, Ed (October 5, 2009). "State Pushing for Wednesday Opening of Burley-Olalla Interchange". Kitsap Sun. Retrieved March 23, 2013.</ref> Two at-grade intersection remain to access businesses and a cemetery from the westbound lanes north of the Wollochet Drive interchange.[citation needed]

WSDOT began installation of high-occupancy vehicle lanes (HOV lanes) on SR 16 as part of a Pierce County HOV system, which was constructed from 2000 to 2022 across several freeways.<ref>Sailor, Craig (August 25, 2022). "After two decades of construction it's finally here: Tacoma's I-5 HOV project opens Friday". The News Tribune. Retrieved November 22, 2022.</ref> Beginning in the early 2000s, frontage roads and the Scott Pierson Trail were built along the freeway and sound walls were erected near residential areas in Tacoma.<ref name="wsdot-spt"/><ref name="wsdot-2007a">Suafoa, Rumina (July 2007). "SR 16 - HOV Improvements - Olympic Drive to Union Avenue - Complete July 2007". Washington State Department of Transportation. Retrieved March 23, 2013.</ref> From Tacoma to Gig Harbor, WSDOT began installing exit numbers to interchanges with SR 16 that correspond to its milepost.<ref name="wsdot-2007b">Ziegler, Dave (July 2007). "SR 16 HOV Improvements - Olympic Drive to Union Avenue Specifics". Washington State Department of Transportation. Retrieved March 23, 2013.</ref> The Nalley Valley Viaduct was replaced by a new westbound structure in 2011, carrying all four lanes of SR 16 towards I-5 in Tacoma, while the original viaduct was closed and demolished.<ref name="wsdot-WN">Baker, Claudia Bingham (June 2011). "SR 16 - Westbound Nalley Valley - Complete June 2011". Washington State Department of Transportation. Retrieved March 23, 2013.</ref><ref name="wsdot-WN-opening">Deffenbacher, Jon; Copeland, Lisa (June 21, 2011). "I-5/SR 16 westbound Nalley Valley Viaduct opens in Tacoma". Washington State Department of Transportation. Retrieved March 23, 2013.</ref> The eastbound Nalley Valley Viaduct began construction in November 2011 and was completed by WSDOT in January 2014.<ref name="wsdot-EN-oct2011">Copeland, Lisa (October 28, 2011). "Nalley Valley to get new eastbound viaduct". Washington State Department of Transportation. Retrieved March 23, 2013.</ref><ref>Glenn, Stacia (January 2, 2014). "New viaduct on Route 16 should open Monday". The News Tribune. Tacoma, Washington. Retrieved February 5, 2018.</ref> The third viaduct, carrying HOV lanes, began construction in 2017 and was completed in November 2019.<ref>Lynn, Adam (January 31, 2017). "You'll soon get to use some new pieces of I-5, but congestion relief could be years away". The News Tribune. Tacoma, Washington. Retrieved February 5, 2018.</ref><ref>"WSDOT ready to open last part of I-5 interchange with SR 16". Seattle Daily Journal of Commerce. November 5, 2019. Retrieved November 22, 2022.</ref>

On February 23, 2016, a ten-mile (16 km) section of SR 16 from the Kitsap–Pierce county line to Gorst was dedicated as the Tony Radulescu Memorial Highway, in honor of a Washington State Patrol trooper who was killed on that stretch of highway four years earlier.<ref name="king5news-EN-feb2016">"Highway Dedication Tuesday for Murdered State Trooper". King 5 News. February 23, 2016. Retrieved February 24, 2016.</ref>

The northern terminus of SR 16 in Gorst is a major traffic bottleneck and forms a gap between the two main freeways on the Kitsap Peninsula. A proposal to rebuild the intersection into a grade-separated interchange was considered in 2019 but did not move forward in a legislative session. A rebuilt interchange, estimated to cost around $500 million, has been sought to improve access to Bremerton National Airport and local military installations.<ref>Farley, Josh (March 14, 2021). "Gorst fix? 'We can't afford to wait any longer'". Kitsap Sun. p. A1. Retrieved March 18, 2021.</ref>

Tacoma Narrows Bridge

The original Tacoma Narrows Bridge, also known by its nickname of "Galloping Gertie", during its opening on July 1, 1940.

The Tacoma Narrows Bridge, which carries SR 16 across the Tacoma Narrows between Tacoma and the Kitsap Peninsula, was first proposed by locals during the late 19th century—the earliest being local rancher John G. Shindler while traveling through the Narrows by steamboat in 1888.<ref name="wsdot-tnb-timeline"/> The Northern Pacific Railway planned to build a trestle bridge over the Narrows to connect its western terminus in Tacoma to the proposed Puget Sound Naval Shipyard in Port Orchard.<ref name="wsdot-tnb-timeline"/> The Washington State Legislature, after extensive lobbying by local auto groups and businesses, authorized the construction of a road bridge over the Narrows in February 1929.<ref name="wsdot-tnb-timeline"/> The Washington Toll Bridge Authority was created in March 1937 to construct and maintain toll bridges throughout the state, beginning with the Tacoma Narrows Bridge from Tacoma to Gig Harbor and the Lake Washington Floating Bridge from Seattle to Mercer Island.<ref name="HL-TNB1">Becker, Paula (January 19, 2005). "State legislature establishes Washington Toll Bridge Authority in March 1937". HistoryLink. Retrieved March 24, 2013.</ref>

The bridge, designed by American suspension bridge engineer Leon Moisseiff, began construction on November 23, 1938, by the Pacific-General-Columbia Company, a partnership between three companies that received a $2.88 million grant from the Public Works Administration and a $3.52 million loan from the Reconstruction Finance Corporation, to be repaid through tolls.<ref name="UW-TNB2">"Part 2: Construction - 1938-1940". History of the Tacoma Narrows Bridge. University of Washington Libraries. Retrieved March 24, 2013.</ref> The Tacoma Narrows Bridge opened on July 1, 1940, and included ceremonies attended by an estimated 10,000 people, including Governor of Washington Clarence D. Martin. The 2,800-foot-long (850 m) bridge, christened the name "Galloping Gertie" by its construction workers, cost $6.4 million to build and became the third longest suspension span in the world after its completion.<ref name="HL-TNB2">Long, Priscilla (November 20, 2004). "Tacoma Narrows Bridge is dedicated on July 1, 1940". HistoryLink. Retrieved March 24, 2013.</ref><ref name="UW-TNB3">"Part 3: Opening and Experiments to study 'ripple'". History of the Tacoma Narrows Bridge. University of Washington Libraries. Retrieved March 24, 2013.</ref> The following day, the art deco MV Kalakala was chosen to make the commemorative final ferry crossing of the Tacoma Narrows.<ref name="HL-TNB3">Stein, Alan J. (June 1, 1999). "Ferry Kalakala chosen for final ferry run at Tacoma Narrows on July 2, 1940". HistoryLink. Retrieved March 24, 2013.</ref> The original toll for the bridge cost 55 cents per car, 15 cents per extra passenger, and 15 cents for pedestrians.<ref name="UW-TNB3"/> The bridge, which was prone to movement during windstorms, collapsed at approximately 11:00 am on November 7, 1940, because of winds in excess of 42 miles per hour (68 km/h).<ref name="UW-TNB4">"Part 4: The Collapse". History of the Tacoma Narrows Bridge. University of Washington Libraries. Retrieved March 24, 2013.</ref> The only fatality during the collapse was a dog trapped in a car belonging to local reporter Leonard Coatsworth of Tacoma.<ref name="HL-TNB4"/>

A second, 5,979-foot-long (1,822 m) Tacoma Narrows Bridge was constructed between 1948 and 1951,<ref name="wsdot-tnb2"/> officially opening to traffic on October 14, 1950. The bridge was designed to let wind pass through the structure with perforated girders and open grating in the deck.<ref name="HL-TNB5"/> Traffic on the four-lane bridge began increasing from 6,000 vehicles in 1960 to nearly 67,000 vehicles by 1990, according to WSDOT AADT data.<ref name="HL-TNB5"/><ref name="ATR-1960">Staff (1960). "Annual Traffic Report, 1960" (PDF). Washington State Highway Commission, Department of Highways. p. 128. Archived from the original (PDF) on March 13, 2011. Retrieved March 24, 2013.</ref><ref name="ATR-1990">Staff (1990). "1990 Annual Traffic Report" (PDF). Washington State Department of Transportation. p. 53. Retrieved March 24, 2013.</ref> The increased traffic prompted the Washington State Legislature to approve the construction of a tolled eastbound bridge in 1999, to be finished during the early 2000s.<ref name="SR-1999">"Public-private partnership to build new Narrows bridge". The Spokesman-Review. June 16, 1999. p. B2. Retrieved March 24, 2013.</ref> The 5,400-foot-long (1,600 m) eastbound bridge was constructed between 2002 and 2007,<ref name="wsdot-tnb"/><ref>Carson, Rob (October 6, 2002). "Giant step for 2nd bridge". The News Tribune. p. B1. Retrieved November 22, 2022 – via Newspapers.com.</ref> opening on July 15, 2007, during ceremonies attended by 60,000 people, including Governor Christine Gregoire.<ref name="HL-TNB6">Long, Priscilla (July 17, 2007). "New Tacoma Narrows Bridge is dedicated on July 15, 2007". HistoryLink. Retrieved March 24, 2013.</ref><ref name="SPI-2007">"Thousands turn out for opening day of new Tacoma Narrows bridge". Seattle Post-Intelligencer. Associated Press. July 15, 2007. Retrieved March 24, 2013.</ref> The newer eastbound bridge provided the debut for the Good to Go RFID pass from WSDOT, which allows frequent users to bypass the toll booths by way of a prepaid transponder placed on the inside of the windshield and reducing the toll.<ref name="KOMO-2007">"New Narrows bridge finally opens". KOMO-TV. July 15, 2007. Retrieved March 24, 2013.</ref>

Special routes

Spur route

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SR 16 has a 0.39-mile-long (0.63 km) spur route located in Gorst that travels west from SR 16 to southbound SR 3.<ref name="log"/><ref name="diagram-3"/> The spur route was added to the state highway system in 1988 after SR 16 was re-aligned to avoid traffic signals in Gorst.<ref name="ATR-1988"/> WSDOT included the road in its annual AADT survey in 2012 and calculated that between 4,100 and 8,600 vehicles used the spur route.<ref name="ATR"/>

Alternate route

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SR 16 AR is an unsigned 0.68-mile-long (1.09 km) alternate route serving traffic passing through the eastbound toll plaza (rather than using electronic toll collection) approaching the Tacoma Narrows Bridge in Pierce County.<ref name="log"/><ref name="diagram-MP8-24"/> The route was added to the state highway system in 2007 after the completion of the eastbound Tacoma Narrows Bridge on July 15.<ref name="HL-TNB6"/><ref name="log-2007"/> WSDOT included the road in its annual AADT survey in 2012 and calculated that 9,100 vehicles used the alternate route.<ref name="ATR"/>

Exit list

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References

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External links

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