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・ Washington State Senate election, 2006
・ Washington State Senate election, 2008
・ Washington State Senate election, 2010
・ Washington State Senate election, 2012
・ Washington State Senate election, 2014
・ Washington State Senate election, 2016
・ Washington State Route 168
・ Washington State Route 169
・ Washington State Route 17
・ Washington State Route 170
・ Washington State Route 170 (1965–67)
・ Washington State Route 171
・ Washington State Route 172
・ Washington State Route 173
・ Washington State Route 174
Washington State Route 18
・ Washington State Route 181
・ Washington State Route 19
・ Washington State Route 193
・ Washington State Route 194
・ Washington State Route 20
・ Washington State Route 202
・ Washington State Route 203
・ Washington State Route 204
・ Washington State Route 206
・ Washington State Route 207
・ Washington State Route 21
・ Washington State Route 211
・ Washington State Route 213
・ Washington State Route 215


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Washington State Route 18 : ウィキペディア英語版
Washington State Route 18

State Route 18 (SR 18) is a state highway in the U.S. state of Washington, serving southeastern King County. The highway travels northeast, primarily as a controlled-access freeway, from an intersection with SR 99 and an interchange with Interstate 5 (I-5) in Federal Way through the cities of Auburn, Kent, Covington, and Maple Valley. SR 18 becomes a two-lane rural highway near Tiger Mountain as it approaches its eastern terminus, an interchange with I-90 near the cities of Snoqualmie and North Bend.
SR 18 was established during the 1964 state highway renumbering as the successor to the Auburn–Federal Way branch of Primary State Highway 5 (PSH 5) and the Auburn–North Bend branch of PSH 2, which were created in 1931 and 1949, respectively. The initial two-lane highway, named the Echo Lake Cutoff, was completed in December 1964 after the opening of a section around Tiger Mountain, which would later be the site of over 170 accidents in the 1980s. SR 18 was gradually widened into a four-lane freeway beginning in Auburn in 1992 and most recently finishing in Federal Way in 2007. The highway around Tiger Mountain and near the I-90 interchange remains a two-lane road, with an unfunded project planned to re-build the existing interchange with I-90.
==Route description==

SR 18 begins as South 348th Street at a signalized intersection with SR 99, named the Pacific Highway, in the city of Federal Way. The highway travels due east through an intersection with the Enchanted Parkway, which carries SR 161 southwards towards Wild Waves Theme Park and the city of Puyallup, to a hybrid cloverleaf-stack interchange with I-5, providing access to Seattle and Vancouver, British Columbia to the north, and Tacoma and Portland, Oregon to the south. SR 18 becomes a full four-lane freeway as it descends into Peasley Canyon east of a diamond interchange with Weyerhaeuser Way, located south of the Weyerhaeuser headquarters.〔(【引用サイトリンク】url=http://www.weyerhaeuser.com/Company/CorporateAffairs/Directions )
After exiting the canyon, the freeway enters the city of Auburn and intersects West Valley Highway, signed as SR 181 until 1991, and SR 167, named the Valley Freeway, in a complex hybrid partial cloverleaf and diamond interchange. SR 18 continues east past The Outlet Collection Seattle and over the mixed-use Interurban Trail as it approaches a folded cloverleaf interchange with C Street Southwest and a partial cloverleaf interchange with SR 164 at Auburn Way. The freeway passes an exit serving Green River Community College via Southeast Auburn-Black Diamond Road before crossing over the Green River into unincorporated King County.〔〔
SR 18 continues northeast along the southeastern city limits of Kent, through an interchange with Southeast 304th Street, towards Covington. The freeway intersects SR 516 in a diamond interchange and 256th Street Southeast in a partial cloverleaf interchange before leaving Covington. SR 18 intersects Southeast 231st Street in a diamond interchange located north of Maple Valley, providing a connection to SR 169, while the freeway travels on an overpass over SR 169 towards a partial cloverleaf interchange with 244th Avenue. The SR 18 freeway ends northeast of a partial cloverleaf interchange with Issaquah-Hobart Road at the base of Tiger Mountain, becoming a two-lane highway with at-grade intersections for the remainder of its route. The highway travels on the east side of Tiger Mountain in the Issaquah Alps and provides access to a trailhead in Tiger Mountain State Forest before it reaches its eastern terminus, a diamond interchange with I-90 located west of North Bend. I-90 provides access to the cities of Issaquah and Seattle to the west and North Bend and Spokane to the east, traveling over the Cascade Mountains through Snoqualmie Pass. The roadway continues past the interchange as Snoqualmie Parkway into the city of Snoqualmie, intersecting SR 202.〔〔
Every year, the Washington State Department of Transportation (WSDOT) conducts a series of surveys on its highways in the state to measure traffic volume. This is expressed in terms of average annual daily traffic (AADT), which is a measure of traffic volume for any average day of the year. In 2012, WSDOT calculated that the busiest section of SR 18 was its interchange with SR 167 in Auburn, serving 97,000 vehicles, while the least busiest section of the highway was its eastern terminus at I-90, serving 19,000 vehicles. SR 18 is designated as part of the National Highway System for its whole length, classifying it as important to the national economy, defense, and mobility. WSDOT designates the entire route of SR 18 as a Highway of Statewide Significance, which includes highways that connect major communities in the state of Washington.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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