Utah State Route 248

Utah State Route 248

Infobox road
state=UT
type=SR
route=248
alternate_name=Kearns Boulevard
section=128
maint=UDOT


length_mi=14.481
length_round=3
length_ref=cite web | title=State Route 248 Highway reference | publisher=Utah Department of Transportation | url=http://www.dot.utah.gov/main/uconowner.gf?n=7163425252822170 ]
established=1953
direction_a=South
terminus_a=jct|state=UT|SR|224 in Park City
junction=jct|state=UT|US|40 near Park City
direction_b=North
terminus_b=jct|state=UT|SR|32 in Kamas
previous_type=SR
previous_route=244
next_type=SR
next_route=252

State Route 248 is a highway in northern Utah that connects Park City with Kamas. In Summit County it is known as Kearns Boulevard.

Route description

From its western terminus in Park City, SR-248 heads west towards Wasatch County. Once it leaves Park City, SR-248 has a grade-separated interchange with US-40. It then crosses into Wasatch County and terminates at SR-32 in Kamas.

History

The first state roads in the Park City area were designated in 1910, and met at Kamas Junction, a three-way intersection at coord|40.655|N|111.414|W|format=DMS|type:landmark_region:US, now located between the Jordanelle Reservoir and the present alignment of SR-248 in Jordanelle State Park. One of these highways headed west to Park City Junction, north to Kimball Junction, and west to Salt Lake City, generally following the present SR-248, SR-224, and I-80. Another went east to Kamas and then north via Wanship to Echo near the present SR-248, SR-32, and I-80, and the third went south to Heber City through the valley now flooded by the reservoir and along US-40. A cutoff from Kimball Junction east to Wanship, added in 1917, shortened the distance between Salt Lake City and Echo.Utah Department of Transportation, [http://www.udot.utah.gov/main/f?p=100:pg:5285268476414239680:::1:T,V:1348, Highway Resolutions] : PDFlink|1= [http://www.udot.utah.gov/main/uconowner.gf?n=200609121732583 Route 4] |2=11.2 MB, updated September 2007, accessed May 2008] Utah Department of Transportation, [http://www.udot.utah.gov/main/f?p=100:pg:5285268476414239680:::1:T,V:1348, Highway Resolutions] : PDFlink|1= [http://www.udot.utah.gov/main/uconowner.gf?n=200609121733213 Route 6] |2=17.4 MB, updated September 2007, accessed May 2008] Utah Department of Transportation, [http://www.udot.utah.gov/main/f?p=100:pg:5285268476414239680:::1:T,V:1348, Highway Resolutions] : PDFlink|1= [http://www.udot.utah.gov/main/uconowner.gf?n=200609140938401 Route 34] |2=7.88 MB, updated October 2007, accessed May 2008] Utah Department of Transportation, [http://www.udot.utah.gov/main/f?p=100:pg:5285268476414239680:::1:T,V:1348, Highway Resolutions] : PDFlink|1= [http://www.udot.utah.gov/main/uconowner.gf?n=200609140939311 Route 35] |2=15.6 MB, updated October 2007, accessed May 2008] Utah Department of Transportation, [http://www.udot.utah.gov/main/f?p=100:pg:5285268476414239680:::1:T,V:1348, Highway Resolutions] : PDFlink|1= [http://www.udot.utah.gov/main/uconowner.gf?n=200609201343351 Route 248] |2=10.2 MB, updated November 2007, accessed May 2008] The State Road Commission assigned route numbers in the 1920s, with SR-4 (later US-530 east of Kimball Junction) running via Salt Lake City, Kimball Junction, Wanship, and Echo, and SR-6 (later US-40) splitting at Kimball Junction and running via Park City Junction, Kamas Junction, and Heber City.Rand McNally [http://www.broermapsonline.org/members/NorthAmerica/UnitedStates/NorthernRockies/Utah/ Auto Road Atlas] , 1926] The roadway from Kamas Junction to Wanship via Kamas did not receive a number until 1927, when the state legislature labeled the Kamas Junction-Kamas portion as State Route 34 and the remainder as part of SR-35, which continued southeast from Kamas to Tabiona. [cite UTSR law|year=1927|quote=34. From Kamas Junction on the Park City-Heber road, to Kamas." "35. From Wanship Summit county, via Peoa Kamas and Stockmore to Tabiona Duchesne county.] At that time, the present extent of SR-248 - Park City Junction to Kamas - was part of SR-6 (US-40) and all of SR-34.

With the addition of two other connections between SR-6 and SR-35 - SR-196 (Browns Canyon) in 1931 [cite UTSR law|year=1931 (note that it was designated SR-125 in 1931 and SR-124 in 1933)] and SR-151 (now part of SR-32) in 1933 [cite UTSR law|year=1933|chapter=30] - SR-34 was no longer necessary, and was removed from the state highway system in 1953. To the west, SR-6 was moved to a shorter alignment between SR-4 at Silver Creek Junction and the former route northeast of Park City in 1953, and the old route via Park City Junction became SR-248, [cite UTSR law|year=1953|quote=Route 248. From Kimball Junction on route 6 via Park City Junction to route 6 near the Wasatch-Summit County line.] initially signed as US-40 Alternate.Utah State Road Commission (Rand McNally), Utah Official Highway Map, 1956] In 1969, the portion north of Park City Junction was transferred to SR-224, which continued south from the junction into downtown Park City. Now SR-248 was a short connection between SR-224 and SR-6 (US-40).

The Utah Department of Transportation built a relocation of US-40 in the late 1980s to get it out of the valley that would be filled by the Jordanelle Reservoir. At the time, US-189 overlapped US-40 from Heber City north to Hailstone (now covered by the lake), where it turned east and north along the present SR-32 to Wanship. Because US-189 east of Hailstone would be covered by the lake, UDOT built a new alignment, roughly following the pre-1953 SR-34, going west from Kamas to existing US-40 near the north end of the lake, where it would head northwest along existing US-40 to that route's new alignment, and then turn south for a longer overlap. What would remain of the old US-189 between Hailstone and Francis would become a county road , along with a new connection to US-40 south of the reservoir; the short piece from Francis to Kamas would be part of a new SR-32 that would also replace SR-35. This was all carried out in 1989, but Summit and Wasatch Counties did not wish to maintain the roadway west from Francis, and the Federal Highway Administration pointed out that the realignment of US-189 would take it out of the way by more than 15 miles (24 km), so in 1990 the change was partially reversed and modified. SR-35 was restored east of Francis, US-189 was moved to overlap US-40 all the way to Silver Creek Junction, and SR-32 replaced former US-189 north of Kamas, as well as the county road to US-40 south of the reservoir. The road that had been built as a realignment of US-189, from US-40 north of the reservoir to Kamas, instead became an extension of SR-248. At the same time, portions of SR-190, SR-220, and SR-224 were given to Wasatch County to maintain, resulting in an approximately equal mileage swap.Utah Department of Transportation, [http://www.udot.utah.gov/main/f?p=100:pg:5285268476414239680:::1:T,V:1348, Highway Resolutions] : PDFlink|1= [http://www.udot.utah.gov/main/uconowner.gf?n=200609121729253 Route 189] |2=20.5 MB, updated November 2007, accessed May 2008]


=Major intersections=

Jctint
state=UT
county=Summit
cspan=2
location=Park City
lspan=2
type=
mile=0.000
road=jct|state=UT|SR|224|name1=Park Avenue
notes=Western terminus
Jctint
state=UT
type=
mile=3.118
road=jct|state=UT|US|40|city1=Heber City
notes=Grade-separated intersection
Jctint
state=UT
county=Wasatch
location=Kamas
type=
mile=14.481
road=jct|state=UT|SR|32|name1=Main StreetJordanelle Reservoir, Oakley
notes=Eastern terminus

References


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