North Dakota Highway 20
North Dakota Highway 20 | ||||
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ND 20 highlighted in red | ||||
Route information | ||||
Maintained by NDDOT | ||||
Length | 170.550 mi[1] (274.474 km) | |||
Existed | 1939–present | |||
Major junctions | ||||
South end | US 52 / US 281 in Jamestown | |||
North end | PTH 34 near Sarles | |||
Location | ||||
Country | United States | |||
State | North Dakota | |||
Counties | Stutsman, Foster, Eddy, Benson, Ramsey, Cavalier | |||
Highway system | ||||
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North Dakota Highway 20 (ND 20) is a 170.550-mile-long (274.474 km) north–south highway in North Dakota. It runs from U.S. Route 52 (US 52) and US 281 in Jamestown to the Canada–United States border near Sarles. The highway continues into Manitoba as PTH 34.
A portion of ND 20 between mile markers 87 and 90 was closed in April 2010 due to flooding at Devils Lake and Spring Lake.[2][3]
Route description
Starting at US 52 in downtown Jamestown, ND 20 follows 4th Street NE until 5th Avenue NE, then curves onto 13th Street NE until 12th Avenue NE where ND 20 follows 12th Avenue out of Jamestown. 21.3 miles away from the intersection, ND 20 turns right onto ND 9 and continues for about six miles before turning off in Courtenay and running for 16.8 miles until intersecting with ND 200 in Glenfield. Another 16.3 miles north, ND 15 joins ND 20 for eight miles before turning off in Eddy County. ND 20 then continues northwest for 28.3 miles, passing by Warrick and Tokio before reaching the northern terminus of ND 57 and turning north again. The intersection is located on a causeway of Devils Lake. Continuing along the shores of Devils Lake, ND 20 shortly enters the city of Devils Lake and intersects US 2. 11.8 miles north of downtown Devils Lake, ND 20 passes through Webster, and then by Garske roughly five miles later. ND 17 joins ND 20 four miles later and passes west of Starkweather before ND 17 turns off to the west and ND 20 continues north. ND 20 comes across a brief concurrency with ND 66, and passes west of Munich before turning onto ND 5 for 5.8 miles. ND 20 spends its last 14.5 miles traversing rural areas, with the last important population center along the highway being in Calvin.
Major intersections
County | Location | mi[4] | km | Destinations | Notes | |||
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Stutsman | Jamestown | 0.000 | 0.000 | US 52 / US 281 (1st Avenue N) | Southern terminus | |||
| 22.620 | 36.403 | ND 9 west (13th Street SE) – Kensal | Western end of ND 9 concurrency | ||||
Courtenay | 28.003 | 45.066 | ND 9 east (1st Street) | Eastern end of ND 9 concurrency | ||||
Foster | Glenfield | 44.903 | 72.264 | ND 200 (3rd Street NE) – Carrington, Cooperstown | ||||
Eddy | | 61.198 | 98.489 | ND 15 east – New Rockford | Southern end of ND 15 concurrency | |||
| 69.313 | 111.548 | ND 15 east (27th Street NE) – Pekin, McVille | Northern end of ND 15 concurrency | ||||
Benson |
No major junctions | |||||||
Ramsey | | 97.709 | 157.247 | ND 57 west – Fort Totten | Eastern terminus of ND 57 | |||
Devils Lake | 102.654 | 165.206 | US 2 – Rugby, Grand Forks | |||||
103.348 | 166.322 | ND 19 west – Minnewaukan | Eastern terminus of ND 19 | |||||
| 124.464 | 200.305 | ND 17 east (69th Street NE) – Edmore, Park River | Southern end of ND 17 concurrency | ||||
| 129.463 | 208.351 | ND 17 west (74th Street NE) – Cando | Northern end of ND 17 concurrency | ||||
Cavalier | | 141.255 | 227.328 | ND 66 east (84th Street NE) – Alsen, Loma | Southern end of ND 66 concurrency | |||
| ND 66 west (84th Street NE) – Calio | Northern end of ND 66 concurrency | ||||||
| 150.270 | 241.836 | ND 5 east (93rd Street NE) – Langdon, Cavalier | Eastern end of ND 5 concurrency | ||||
| 156.034 | 251.112 | ND 5 west (95th Street NE) – Rocklake, Rolla | Western end of ND 5 concurrency | ||||
| 170.550 | 274.474 | PTH 34 north – Crystal City, Pilot Mound | Continuation into Manitoba | ||||
1.000 mi = 1.609 km; 1.000 km = 0.621 mi
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See also
References
- ^ Mileage retrieved from North Dakota Highways 1 to 30 Archived 2013-10-14 at the Wayback Machine unless otherwise noted.
- ^ "Major Road Closed in Devils Lake Region". Retrieved June 14, 2010.
- ^ "North Dakota Emergencies". North Dakota Department of Transportation. August 27, 2010. Archived from the original on June 19, 2010.
- ^ "Route and Mileage Map Insets" (PDF). North Dakota Department of Transportation. Retrieved May 3, 2017.
External links
- The North Dakota Highways Page by Chris Geelhart
- North Dakota Signs by Mark O'Neil