U.S. Route 550
From Wikipedia the free encyclopedia
Million Dollar Highway | |||||||
Route information | |||||||
Auxiliary route of US 50 | |||||||
Length | 305.104 mi[1][2] (491.017 km) | ||||||
Existed | 1926–present | ||||||
Major junctions | |||||||
South end | I-25 / US 85 / NM 165 in Bernalillo, NM | ||||||
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North end | US 50 at Montrose, CO | ||||||
Location | |||||||
Country | United States | ||||||
States | New Mexico, Colorado | ||||||
Counties | NM: Sandoval, Rio Arriba, San Juan CO: La Plata, San Juan, Ouray, Montrose | ||||||
Highway system | |||||||
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U.S. Route 550 (US 550) is a spur of U.S. Highway 50 that runs from Bernalillo, New Mexico to Montrose, Colorado in the western United States. The section from Silverton to Ouray is frequently called the Million Dollar Highway.[3] It is one of the roads on the Trails of the Ancients Byway, one of the designated New Mexico Scenic Byways.[4]
Route description
[edit]New Mexico
[edit]U.S. 550 begins just north of Albuquerque at Bernalillo and passes through the towns of San Ysidro, Cuba, Bloomfield, and Aztec. Except for sections passing through the above listed towns, U.S. 550 in New Mexico has been widened to four lanes, offering a faster (70 mph) connection for Farmington, New Mexico and Durango, Colorado to Albuquerque and Santa Fe.
Colorado
[edit]Most of U.S. 550 in Colorado is two-lane mountainous highway. It is one of only two north–south U.S. Highways in Colorado which runs west of the Continental Divide. (The other route is US 491.) The route travels north through the San Juan Mountains.
The Million Dollar Highway stretches for about 25 miles (40 km) in western Colorado and follows the route of U.S. 550 between Silverton and Ouray, Colorado. It is part of the San Juan Skyway Scenic Byway. Between Durango and Silverton the Skyway loosely parallels the Durango and Silverton Narrow Gauge Railroad.
Although the entire stretch has been called the Million Dollar Highway, it is actually just the twelve miles (19 km) south of Ouray through the Uncompahgre Gorge to the summit of Red Mountain Pass which gives the highway its name. This stretch through the gorge is challenging and potentially hazardous to drive; it is characterized by steep cliffs, narrow lanes, and a lack of guardrails; the ascent of Red Mountain Pass is marked with a number of hairpin curves used to gain elevation, narrow lanes for traffic—many cut directly into the sides of mountains. During this ascent, the remains of the Idarado Mine are visible. Travel north from Silverton to Ouray allows drivers to hug the inside of curves; travel south from Ouray to Silverton perches drivers on the vertiginous outside edge of the highway. Large RVs travel in both directions, which adds a degree of challenge to people in cars.[6][failed verification] The road is kept open year-round. Summer temperatures can range from highs between 70–90 °F (21–32 °C) at the ends of the highway to 50–70 °F (10–21 °C) in the mountain passes. The snow season starts in October, and snow will often close the road in winter. Chains may be required to drive.[7]
North of Durango, the highway passes by Trimble Springs, hot springs that have been open for visitors since the late 19th century. The highway runs north along the Animas River, under the Hermosa Cliffs. It enters the San Juan National Forest and goes past Haviland Lake and Electra Lake. Drivers pass by Engineer Mountain and Twilight Peak before crossing Coal Bank Pass. Next is Molas Pass, which offers a panoramic view of Molas Lake, the Animas River Gorge, and Snowdon Peak. Northbound travelers then pass through the town of Silverton, elevation 9,320 feet (2841 m), surrounded by 13,000 foot (4000 m) peaks Sultan Mountain, Kendall Mountain, and Storm Peak.[7]
The highway leaves Silverton and proceeds up Mineral Creek Valley before ascending to Red Mountain Pass. The ruins of the Longfellow Mine are visible along the way. The highway then goes through a series of steep grades and hairpin turns before reaching Lookout Point, which offers a view of the town of Ouray.[7]
This section of the route passes over three mountain passes:
- Coal Bank Pass, elevation 10,640 ft (3,240 m).
- Molas Pass, elevation 10,970 ft (3,340 m).
- Red Mountain Pass, elevation 11,018 ft (3,358 m).
The origin of the name Million Dollar Highway is disputed. There are several legends, though, including that it cost a million dollars a mile to build in the 1920s, and that its fill dirt contains a million dollars in gold ore.[3]
There are seventy named avalanche paths that intersect Highway 550 in the 23 mi (37 km) between Ouray and Silverton, Colorado.[8]
U.S. 550 ends at the corner of Townsend Avenue and San Juan Avenue in Montrose, Colorado at the junction of its parent route U.S. Highway 50.
History
[edit]The original portion of the Million Dollar Highway was a toll road built by Otto Mears in 1883 to connect Ouray and Ironton.[3] Another toll road was built over Red Mountain Pass from Ironton to Silverton. In the late 1880s Otto Mears turned to building railroads and built the Silverton Railroad north from Silverton over Red Mountain Pass to reach the lucrative mining districts around Red Mountain, terminating at Albany just eight miles (13 km) south of Ouray. The remaining eight miles (13 km) were considered too difficult and steep for a railroad. At one point a cog railroad was proposed, but it never made it beyond the planning stage.
In the early 1920s, the original toll road was rebuilt at considerable cost and became the present day US 550. The Million Dollar Highway was completed in 1924.[7] Today the entire route is part of the San Juan Skyway Scenic Byway.
US 550 was part of the original 1926 federal highway system. The original highway extended 110 miles (177 km) from Montrose, Colorado at U.S. Highway 50 to U.S. Highway 450 (now U.S. Highway 160) at Durango, Colorado. In 1934, Highway 550 was extended through Farmington to Shiprock, New Mexico. In 1989, the western end of US 550 was replaced with US 64 between Farmington and Shiprock. In 2000, US 550 was extended further south from Aztec to Bernalillo to replace the newly widened NM 44 and NM 544, at which time all of US 550 in New Mexico was four lanes.
In 2009 US 50 was re-routed onto the San Juan Avenue bypass to avoid downtown Montrose. As a result, U.S. 550 was extended approximately one mile northwest to intersect with the new U.S. 50 alignment.
On July 17, 2024, the segment of US 550 leading into Durango from the south was realigned onto a four-lane divided highway tying into the Grandview Interchange. This realignment bypasses a former steep, curvy alignment up Farmington Hill and includes a new roundabout.[9]
Major intersections
[edit]State | County | Location | mi[1][2] | km | Destinations | Notes | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
New Mexico | Sandoval | Bernalillo | 0.000 | 0.000 | NM 165 east – Placitas | Continuation east beyond southern terminus | ||
I-25 / US 85 north (CanAm Highway) – Santa Fe, Las Vegas, Raton I-25 / US 85 south (CanAm Highway) – Albuquerque | Southern terminus; I-25 exit 242 | |||||||
NM 313 north (Camino Del Pueblo) – Santa Ana Pueblo, Algodones, San Felipe Pueblo NM 313 south (Camino Del Pueblo) – Pueblo of Sandia Village, North Valley | ||||||||
2.440 | 3.927 | NM 528 south – Rio Rancho | Northern end of NM 528 | |||||
San Ysidro | 23.225 | 37.377 | NM 4 north – San Ysidro | Southern end of NM 4 | ||||
| 63.381 | 102.002 | NM 197 south – Torreon | Northern end of NM 197 | ||||
Cuba | 64.346 | 103.555 | NM 126 east – Santa Fe National Forest | Western end of NM 126 | ||||
| 68.025 | 109.476 | NM 96 north – La Jara | Southern end of NM 96 | ||||
| 85.485 | 137.575 | NM 537 north | Southern end of NM 537 | ||||
Rio Arriba | No major junctions | |||||||
San Juan | | 123.470 | 198.706 | NM 57 south | Northern end of NM 57 | |||
Bloomfield | 151.746 | 244.212 | US 64 west – Farmington, Taos | Southern end of US 64 concurrency | ||||
152.061 | 244.718 | US 64 east – Navajo City | Northern end of US 64 concurrency | |||||
Aztec | 159.584 | 256.826 | NM 516 west (Aztec Boulevard) – Farmington | Eastern end of NM 516 | ||||
161.470 | 259.861 | NM 173 east – Navajo State Park | Western end of NM 173 | |||||
174.885 0.000 | 281.450 0.000 | New Mexico–Colorado line | ||||||
Colorado | La Plata | | 16.561 | 26.652 | US 160 east – Pagosa Springs | Southern end of US 160 concurrency | ||
Durango | 18.369 | 29.562 | SH 3 north | Southern end of SH 3 | ||||
20.916 | 33.661 | US 160 west – Cortez | Northern end of US 160 concurrency | |||||
San Juan | No major junctions | |||||||
Ouray | Ridgway | 103.702 | 166.892 | SH 62 west – Placerville | Eastern end of SH 62 | |||
Montrose | Montrose | 129.306 | 208.098 | SH 90 west (Main Street) – Naturita | Eastern end of SH 90 | |||
130.219 | 209.567 | US 50 east (North San Juan Avenue) – Sapinero, Gunnison North Grand Avenue west | Northern terminus | |||||
US 50 west (North Townsend Avenue) – Olathe, Delta, Grand Junction | Continuation north beyond northern terminus | |||||||
1.000 mi = 1.609 km; 1.000 km = 0.621 mi
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Related routes
[edit]See also
[edit]References
[edit]- ^ a b Statewide Milepost/Point Map (PDF) (Map). New Mexico Department of Transportation. 2007. Retrieved August 16, 2014.
- ^ a b "Highway Data Explorer". Colorado Department of Transportation. Archived from the original on September 10, 2012. Retrieved August 16, 2014.
- ^ a b c Road Trip America – Million Dollar Highway by Mark Sedenquist accessed Oct 21, 2007
- ^ Trail of the Ancients. Archived August 21, 2014, at the Wayback Machine New Mexico Tourism Department. Retrieved August 14, 2014.
- ^ New Mexico Geologic Highway Map, New Mexico Geologic Society, New Mexico Bureau of Geology and Mineral Resources, 2005.
- ^ Totty, Patrick (May 2002). "The "Million Dollar Highway"". The Cultured Traveler. ISSN 1538-893X. Archived from the original on August 14, 2007. Retrieved October 21, 2007.
- ^ a b c d Million Dollar Highway
- ^ Leath Tonino (February 23, 2017). "Keep Your Hands on the Wheel and Don't Look Down". Outside Magazine. Retrieved May 4, 2017.
- ^ Burney, Christian (July 17, 2024). "U.S. Highway 550 connection finally opens in Durango". The Durango Herald. Ballantine Communications. Retrieved July 23, 2024.
External links
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