U.S. Route 95 Business is cosigned with SR 599 (Rancho Drive) in Las Vegas, Nevada. This distinction is noted on US 95 freeway signs and many maps (including those published by the Nevada Department of Transportation[2]). However, no business route signs are posted along the highway itself and relatively few SR 599 shields can be found on the route.
US-95 Spur starts at its terminus with US-95 in the southern part of the city of Payette and travels northward along S. Main Street Approximately 1.1 miles (1.8 km) then continues a short distance on S 7th St to its terminus at State Highway 52.[7]
This was the original routing of US 95 through downtown Payette before it was rerouted to its current alignment east of downtown along 16th Street.[8][9]
The Oregon section of US 95 Spur is designated the Weiser Spur No. 491 (see Oregon highways and routes).
The route now known as US 95 Spur was previously known as US 630 and US 30N. US 630 was an east–west United States highway. It was decommissioned in or around 1931. With a length of around 3 miles (4.8 km), it was the shortest US route ever signed. It was concurrent with US 30N for its entire length. An earlier route numbered US-630 was proposed from Echo, Utah (northeast of Coalville) to Ogden, Utah, but was never signed in the field. U.S. Route 30N was a split route off of US 30 and was coterminous with US 630 at its west end in Oregon. East of Weiser, it was concurrent with what is now US-95 to Fruitland, Idaho, where it reconnected with US-30.
U.S. Route 95 Truck (US 95 Truck) was a 0.45-mile (0.72 km) long truck route of US 95 in San Luis, Arizona.[11] The route was originally established by the Arizona Department of Transportation (ADOT) on November 16, 1984.[10] US 95 Truck began at the San Luis border gate at A Street (now Urtuzuastegu Street) and traveled north on 1st Street, before turning west onto D Street, ending at the intersection with US 95 (Main Street) and D Street.[11] In 2015, US 95 truck was retired after US 95 was reconfigured into a one-way pair around downtown San Luis.[12] Former US 95 Truck is now entirely one-way in a northbound direction and has been replaced by northbound US 95 proper.[13]
^ abStaff. "ADOT Right-of-Way Resolution 1984-11-A-075". Arizona Department of Transportation. Retrieved May 6, 2015. Establish San Luis streets state highway and designate U.S. 95 Truck Route.
^Special Committee on U.S. Route Numbering (July 6, 1977). "Route Numbering Committee Agenda"(PDF) (Report). Washington, DC: American Association of State Highway and Transportation Officials. p. 1. Retrieved October 3, 2018 – via Wikimedia Commons.