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What are the Strategic Highway Corridors?
In a nutshell, the Strategic Highway Corridors are a set of primarily existing highways vital
to moving people and goods to destinations within and just outside North Carolina. The corridors
include 55 major or "parent" corridors along with the associated "spurs" (denoted by letters),
totaling 5,378 center-line miles, including all existing and proposed interstates.
These corridors only account for approximately 7% (6.82%) of the
entire state-maintained highway system (78,844 miles), yet they carry approximately 45% (45.4%)
of the state's traffic (39,417,784,000 VMT of out 86,873,796,000 VMT statewide).
"Spurs" include interstate loops
and spurs, business interstates, and other major facilities that connect the parent corridor
to the activity center or destination. This includes connections to the central business
districts of major cities, airports, military bases, and state ports. The selection of these
corridors was coordinated with Virginia, South Carolina, Georgia, and Tennessee to ensure
connectivity to the appropriate facilities across North Carolina's borders.
View the
Strategic Highway Corridors List (404 KB).
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