U.S. Route 27 Alternate (Georgia)

From the AARoads Wiki: Read about the road before you go
Jump to navigation Jump to search

U.S. Highway 27 Alternate

Route information
Maintained by GDOT
Length98.060 mi[1] (157.812 km)
Major junctions
South end US 27 / SR 1 / SR 85 in Columbus
Major intersections
North end US 27 / SR 1 / SR 16 / SR 166 in Carrollton
Location
CountryUnited States
StateGeorgia
CountiesMuscogee, Harris, Talbot, Meriwether, Coweta, Carroll
Highway system
  • Georgia State Highway System

U.S. Highway 27 Alternate (US 27 Alt.) is an alternate route of US 27. It travels from the northwestern corner of Columbus northeast to just before Shiloh, north to Greenville, and northwest to Carrollton.

Route description

The alternate route starts at an intersection with the US 27 mainline in Columbus in Muscogee County and initially runs northeast into Harris County, concurrent with State Route 85 (SR 85). Within Ellerslie, the route has a short concurrency with SR 315. The route splits from SR 85 south of Shiloh, on the Harris–Talbot county line, while moving onto SR 85 Alt. and briefly SR 116 before it cuts across the northwestern corner of Talbot County. It then enters Meriwether County, running along the southeastern edge of F. D. Roosevelt State Park while briefly crossing SR 190 and curving from the northwest to the northeast. Heading briefly northwest again through F. D. Roosevelt State Park this time and then north into Warm Springs, now cosigned with SR 41, the route turns north and heads into a traffic circle with SR 18 which joins US 27 Alt. through Greenville which leaves the concurrency at SR 109. Later, it runs through Luthersville where it intersects SR 54 before heading into Coweta County.

In Moreland, US 27 Alt. is joined by a concurrency with US 29, which also serves as the northern terminus of SR 41. Like its parent route, however, it joins the alternate in another concurrency. US 27 Alt./US 29/SR 14 serves as the main road through downtown Moreland, and, after passing by the Lewis Grizzard Museum,[2] the Atlanta and West Point Railroad (AWP) main line moves to the west side of the road at a powerline right-of-way. It curves away from the tracks again at the intersection of "Old Highway 29", and, after winding around the northwestern edge of Newnan–Coweta County Airport, Interstate 85 (I-85) is encountered at a diamond interchange (exit 41). Just north of that interchange, it encounters the southern terminus of a concurrency with SR 16. Together, US 27 Alt./US 29/SR 14/SR 16 run through marshland around Pearl Springs Lake and East Newnan Lake as it enter Newnan. The routes cross over that AWP railroad line between Newnan South Industrial Road and Corinth Road. From there, it runs through the Greenville Street-LaGrange Street Historic District (signed as the Greenville-LaGrange Historic District), before passing the Coweta County Superior Courthouse and running over a bridge above a former Central of Georgia Railway line. Greenville Street ends at Salbide Avenue and US 27 Alt./US 29/SR 14/SR 16 becomes a one-way pair along Jefferson and LaGrange streets, both of which are part of the Newnan Commercial Historic District. It also runs along both sides of the historic Coweta County Courthouse between Broad and Washington streets. At Posey Street, the routes are joined by another concurrency with SR 34. The routes turn left onto Clark Street as they join another concurrency with westbound SR 34, only for US 29/SR 14 to leave the US 27 Alt./SR 16/SR 34 concurrency one block later at Jackson Street. As US 27 Alt./SR 16/SR 34 moves from Clark Street to Temple Avenue, they begin to head northwest out of Newnan, only for SR 34 to leave that concurrency at Franklin Road.

Crossing a bridge over the Chattahoochee River, and thus the Coweta–Carroll county line, the routes run through Whiteburg where they intersect SR 5 before briefly turning west-northwest between the communities of Banning and Clem, then turns back to the northwest. At the intersection with SR 166 in Carrollton, US 27 Alt./SR 16 makes a left turn with westbound SR 166 joining that concurrency until finally reaching its northern terminus, at a diamond interchange with US 27/SR 1. SR 166 continues west toward Ranburne, Alabama, while SR 16 continues north along US 27 through downtown Carrollton until breaking away and running to the northwest toward SR 100 south of I-20 near Tallapoosa and Waco.

The following portions of US 27 Alt. are part of the National Highway System, a system of routes determined to be the most important for the nation's economy, mobility, and defense:

  • The entire Muscogee County portion[3]
  • From the I-85 interchange (on US 29/SR 14), just south of East Newnan, to just north of the southern end of the SR 34 concurrency (on US 29/SR 14/SR 16) in Newnan[4]
  • From an indeterminate point southeast of Carrollton to its northern terminus in the city.[4]

History

Major intersections

CountyLocationmi[1]kmDestinationsNotes
MuscogeeColumbus0.0000.000 US 27 / SR 1 / SR 85Southern terminus of US 27 ALT; southern terminus of concurrency with SR 85
1.32.1 I-185Interchange
3.65.8Warm Springs RoadInterchange
58.0Miller RoadInterchange
Midland6.710.8 US 80 / SR 22 (J.R. Allen Parkway) / SR 540 (Fall Line Freeway) – Phenix City, MaconInterchange
10.617.1County Line RoadInterchange
HarrisEllerslie14.323.0
SR 315 west
Southern terminus of concurrency with SR 315
14.823.8
SR 315 east
Northern terminus of concurrency with SR 315
Waverly Hall20.533.0 SR 208
Talbot27.644.4


SR 85 north / SR 85 Alt. north / SR 116 east – Manchester
Northern terminus of concurrency with SR 85; southern terminus of concurrencies with SR 85 ALT/SR 116
HarrisShiloh29.547.5
SR 116 west – Hamilton
Northern terminus of concurrency with SR 116
TalbotNo major intersections
MeriwetherF. D. Roosevelt State Park32.752.6 SR 190 (Pine Mountain Highway) – Pine Mountain, Manchester
Warm Springs36.258.3

SR 85 Alt. north (Whitehouse Parkway) / SR 41 south (Broad Street) – Woodbury, Manchester
Northern end of SR 85 Alternate concurrency; southern end of SR 41 concurrency
36.959.4
SR 194 west – Durand
42.468.2
SR 18 south – Pine Mountain
Southern terminus of concurrency with SR 18
Greenville46.675.0

SR 18 east / SR 109 east – Woodbury
Northern terminus of concurrency with SR 18
48.578.1
SR 362 east
Luthersville59.595.8
SR 54 Spur north
59.796.1
SR 54 west – Hogansville
CowetaMoreland

US 29 south / SR 14 south / SR 41 – Grantville
Southern terminus of concurrency with US 29 and SR 14; northern terminus of concurrency with SR 41

I-85 north – Atlanta

SR 16 east – Sharpsburg
Southern terminus of concurrency with SR 16
Newnan


US 29 north / SR 14 north / SR 34 east – Palmetto, Peachtree City
Northern terminus of concurrency with US 29 and SR 14; southern terminus of concurrency with SR 34

SR 34 west – Franklin
Northern terminus of concurrency with SR 34

SR 34 Byp. east – Newnan
CarrollWhitesburg SR 5 – Roopville, Douglasville
Carrollton
SR 166 east – Campbellton
Northern terminus of concurrency with SR 166
98.060157.812 US 27 / SR 1 / SR 16 / SR 166Northern terminus of US 27 ALT; northern terminus of concurrency with SR 16; southern terminus of concurrency with SR 166
1.000 mi = 1.609 km; 1.000 km = 0.621 mi

References

  1. ^ a b "County GIS Base map shapefiles/geodatabases (varies by county)". Georgia Department of Transportation. Retrieved December 14, 2012.
  2. ^ "Lewis Grizzard Museum". Explore Georgia.
  3. ^ National Highway System: Columbus, GA (PDF) (Map). Federal Highway Administration. May 9, 2019. Retrieved August 21, 2019.
  4. ^ a b National Highway System: Georgia (PDF) (Map). Federal Highway Administration. May 8, 2019. Retrieved August 19, 2019.

External links