ALABAMA STATE ROUTE 22

(Redirected from State Route 22 (Alabama))

'State Route 22' is a 168-mile state highway that extends from Safford in Dallas County to the Georgia state line near Roanoke in Randolph County. The route runs across most of the state from west to east.

Contents
Description
Cities and intersections
References
External links

Description


Starting at a junction with S.R. 5 in Safford, the route runs northeast through Selma and Maplesville. At Clanton the highway is co-routed for eight miles with U.S. Highway 31, including an intersection with Interstate 65 near the geographical center of the state. The route proceeds towards Verbena and then crosses Mitchell Lake.
The route continues east-northeast through Rockford, Alexander City, New Site and Roanoke on its way to the Georgia border, where the road becomes State Route 34. The route is paved throughout and occasionally multi-lane. Counties traversed by the route include Dallas, Chilton, Coosa, Tallapoosa, Chambers, and Randolph.

Cities and intersections


From west to east, S.R. 22 passes through the following cities and towns:

Safford
Orrville
Selma
Maplesville

Clanton
Rockford
Alexander City
New Site

Daviston
Wadley
Roanoke

S.R. 22 intersects the following Interstate highways, U.S. highways, and major state routes in Alabama:

State Route 5 at Safford
U.S. Highway 80 at Selma
U.S. Highway 82 at Maplesville
U.S. Highway 31 at Clanton
Interstate 65 southeast of Clanton
U.S. Highway 231 at Rockford

State Route 9 east of Rockford
U.S. Highway 280 at Alexander City
State Route 63 at Alexander City
State Route 49 at New Site
State Route 77 at Wadley
U.S. Highway 431 at Roanoke

References


1. Southeastroads.com Alabama state route list


★ ''Rand McNally: The Road Atlas 2002'', Rand McNally and Company 2001 ISBN 0-528-84446-6

External links



Southeastroads.com web page on AL 22 with photos

★ Alabama Department of Transportation county road maps for Dallas, Chilton, Coosa, Tallapoosa, Chambers, and Randolph (Adobe Acrobat reader required for maps; enlargement of maps necessary for legibility)

This article provided by Wikipedia. To edit the contents of this article, click here for original source.

psst.. try this: add to faves