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・ Georgia State Route 338
・ Georgia State Route 339
・ Georgia State Route 34
・ Georgia State Route 341
・ Georgia State Route 347
・ Georgia State Route 352
・ Georgia State Route 354
・ Georgia State Route 355
・ Georgia State Route 356
・ Georgia State Route 358
・ Georgia State Route 36
・ Georgia State Route 360
・ Georgia State Route 362
・ Georgia State Route 365
・ Georgia State Route 368
Georgia State Route 369
・ Georgia State Route 37
・ Georgia State Route 370
・ Georgia State Route 371
・ Georgia State Route 372
・ Georgia State Route 374
・ Georgia State Route 376
・ Georgia State Route 377
・ Georgia State Route 378
・ Georgia State Route 380
・ Georgia State Route 382
・ Georgia State Route 383
・ Georgia State Route 384
・ Georgia State Route 385
・ Georgia State Route 388


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Georgia State Route 369 : ウィキペディア英語版
Georgia State Route 369

State Route 369 (SR 369) is a west-to-east state highway in the northern part of the U.S. state of Georgia. It travels from its intersection with SR 20 near the community of Macedonia in eastern Cherokee County, through northern Forsyth County, bisecting the county, to its eastern terminus in the northeastern part of Gainesville in Hall County.
==Route description==
SR 369 begins at an intersection with SR 20 (Canton Highway) near the community of Macedonia in eastern Cherokee County, and travels in a loop to the east, through unincorporated and generally rural (though becoming somewhat exurban) areas of Cherokee and Forsyth counties. This includes Matt, for which the road is named Matt Highway west of SR 9 (Dahlonega Highway), while running southeast from Matt to Coal Mountain.
The intersection of SR 369 and US 19/SR 400 is just north of the end of the limited-access portion of US 19/SR 400 at exit 17. East of US 19/SR 400, now locally known as Browns Bridge Road, SR 369 crosses the northern branches of Lake Lanier in Forsyth County, before crossing the main channel (originally the Chattahoochee River) of the lake via Browns Bridge into Hall County. The route then becomes Jesse Jewell Parkway once it reaches SR 13 in Gainesville, and forms a major thoroughfare in Gainesville, before it reaches its eastern terminus at I-985/US 23.〔〔
The Georgia Department of Transportation average annual daily traffic (AADT) numbers for the year 2011 show an average of about 5,600 vehicles per day between the route's western terminus and Old Federal Road in Forsyth County, with the exception of an average vehicle load of 9,960 on a short stretch of the route around Yellow Creek Road, which is a south-to-north feeder route to the Big Canoe residential development in Pickens County. SR 369's vehicle load continues to increase as it travels to the east, going from 6,470 west of Matt to just over 11,000 east of Matt to SR 9. The average vehicle count then fluctuates from 16,340 between SR 9 and SR 400 to just 7,400 east of SR 400 to SR 306, peaks at 21,430 east of SR 306 to the Hall County line, and then holds at around 12,000 as the route loops around Lake Lanier. Once SR 369 reaches the Gainesville area, the vehicle loads increases greatly to around 27,000 between SR 53 and SR 13, with a peak of 36,750 in downtown Gainesville.〔

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
ウィキペディアで「Georgia State Route 369」の詳細全文を読む



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