Colorado State Highway 14

Colorado State Highway 14

State Highway 14 marker

State Highway 14
Route information
Maintained by CDOT
Length: 236.92 mi[1] (381.29 km)
Major junctions
West end: US 40 near Muddy Pass on the continental divide
East end: US 6 – Sterling
Location
Counties: Jackson, Larimer, Weld, Logan
Highway system

Colorado State Highways

SH 13 SH 15

State Highway 14 in the U.S. state of Colorado is an east–west state highway approximately 237 miles (381 km) long. One of the longest state highways in Colorado, it traverses four counties along the northern edge of the state, spanning a geography from the continental divide in the Rocky Mountains to the Great Plains, and including North Park, the Poudre Canyon, and the Pawnee National Grassland. It provides the most direct route from Fort Collins westward via Cameron Pass to Walden and Steamboat Springs, and eastward across the plains to Sterling.

The highway is two-lane along its entire route, except for portions near Fort Collins where it is concurrent with U.S. Highway 287, and east of Fort Collins near its interchange with Interstate 25.

The western terminus of the highway is on the continental divide, at a junction with U.S. Highway 40 at the summit of Muddy Pass along the border between Jackson and Grand counties. The eastern terminus is at a junction with U.S. Highway 6 in Sterling.

The entire length of the highway is kept open year-round. Despite its western end being on the continental divide itself, Route 14 through Cameron Pass can be one of the more reliable routes across the Front Range mountains in stormy winter weather.

Contents

Route description

SH 14, here concurrent with US 287, north of Bellvue at Teds Place. Goat Hill near Bellvue can be seen in the background.

Going eastward from Muddy Pass southeast of Steamboat Springs,[2] it transverses through North Park, first going northeast to Walden, then southeast through Gould along the valley of the Michigan River. It then transverses along the southern end of the Medicine Bow Mountains at Cameron Pass, where it enters Larimer County. It then descends through the pass to the northwest along the valley of Joe Wright Creek to Chambers Lake, traveling though the mountains along the valley of the Cache la Poudre River and passing through the Poudre Canyon. It joins U.S. Highway 287 southbound at Teds Place, a longtime local landmark just east of the mouth of the Poudre Canyon. It is concurrent with U.S. Highway 287 southward to Fort Collins, where it splits from 287, going east from downtown Fort Collins along East Mulberry Avenue and reaching Interstate 25 at exit 269. East of I-25, it enters Weld County and passes through Ault, where it intersects U.S. Highway 85. East of Ault, it enters a sparsely populated area of the high plains in eastern Weld County, where it passes through three small towns, Briggsdale, New Raymer, and Stoneham. Along this stretch it passes alongside several parcels of the Pawnee National Grasslands. Its eastern terminus at Sterling is in central Logan County, along the South Platte River, just across the river from Interstate 76.

History

SH 14 crossing the Colorado plains in rural Weld County, near the Pawnee National Grassland.

The section of the road in Fort Collins that is concurrent with Jefferson Street and Riverside Avenue follows a section of the Overland Trail, a stage route and emigrant trail used in the 1860s. The section in Fort Collins was known as the "Denver Road". The section up the Poudre Canyon was built in the 1920s.

The route as a Colorado state highway was established in the 1920s from its current western terminus all the way to Nebraska. In 1926, US 38 took over its routing from Sterling, its current eastern terminus, to Nebraska. The route was paved in 1936 from Fort Collins to Ault.[3] The entire route was paved by 1963, and the eastern section of the route concurrent with U.S. Route 6 east of Sterling was eliminated in 1968.[3] The only gap left was eliminated in 1979.

Major intersections

County Location Mile Destination Notes
Jackson 0.000 US 40 start of route at Muddy Pass
Walden 32.968 SH 125 south begin SH 125 concurrency
34.090 SH 125 north end SH 125 concurrency
Larimer 121.713 US 287 north begin US 287 concurrency
Fort Collins 128.934 SH 1 north
134.770 US 287 south end US 287 concurrency
138.968 I-25
Weld 144.152 SH 257 south
Ault 153.370 US 85
Raymer 205.236 SH 52 south
211.807 SH 71 north begin SH 71 concurrency
215.828 SH 71 south end SH 71 concurrency
Logan Sterling 236.824 US 6 southwest
236.924 US 6 northeast end of route
1.000 mi = 1.609 km; 1.000 km = 0.621 mi

References

  1. ^ Colorado Department of Transportation. "Segment list for SH 14". http://www.dot.state.co.us/app_DTD_DataAccess/Highways/index.cfm?fuseaction=Description&route=014&begRefPt=0&endRefPt=500&Printable=true. Retrieved 2007-05-12. 
  2. ^ National Geographic (October 2006). The United States (Map). 
  3. ^ a b Salek, Mathew E (December 19, 2009). "Colorado SH 14". http://www.mesalek.com/colo/co14.html. Retrieved April 3, 2010. 

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