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North Dakota Highway 30

Route map:
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

North Dakota Highway 30 marker
North Dakota Highway 30
Map
ND 30 highlighted in red
Route information
Maintained by NDDOT
Length131.427 mi[1] (211.511 km)
Existedbefore 1940–present
Southern segment
Length42.426 mi (68.278 km)
South end ND 13 in Lehr
North end I-94 near Medina
Central segment
Length64.800 mi (104.285 km)
South end US 52 / ND 200 near Sykeston
North end US 2 near York
Northern segment
Length24.201 mi (38.948 km)
South end ND 66 near Mylo
Major intersections US 281 / ND 5 in Rolla
North end PTH 18 near St. John
Location
CountryUnited States
StateNorth Dakota
CountiesLogan, Stutsman, Wells, Benson, Pierce, Rolette
Highway system
  • North Dakota State Highway System
I-29 ND 31

North Dakota Highway 30 (ND 30) is a state highway in the U.S. state of North Dakota. The highway is currently broken up into three separate segments across the eastern half of North Dakota.

Route description

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Southern section

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ND 30 begins at ND 13 in Lehr and runs north for 25.4 miles before turning left to remain north at ND 46's western terminus near Streeter. ND 30 remains heading due north until it breaks at I-94 near Medina. The road beyond the interchange leads to a county highway connecting I-94 to Medina.

Central section

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The longest section of ND 30 starts at US 52 and ND 200 near Sykeston, and runs north for 13 miles until coming to a three way intersection with ND 15. ND 30 turns west for a 4.5 mile long concurrency before turning right to head back north again. For the next 30 miles, ND 30 connects Hamberg and Maddock with ND 19, and continues further north for 17.2 miles, breaking again at US 2 near York. Harlow is another community that ND 30 connects along the way.

Northern section

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ND 30 resumes again, this time at ND 66 near Mylo, and runs north for 13.8 miles before intersecting US 281 and ND 5 in Rolla. North of Rolla, ND 30 ends at the Canadian border with no major intersections between the two, though it comes close to both Turtle Mountain State Forest, and the International Peace Garden, with a paved side road (106th Street NE) providing access.

Major intersections

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CountyLocationmi[1]kmDestinationsNotes
McIntoshLehr0.0000.000 ND 13 – Wishek, KulmBeginning of southern section
Logan16.88027.166
ND 34 west – Napoleon
Southern end of ND 34 overlap
17.62628.366
ND 34 east
Northern end of ND 34 overlap
LoganStutsman
county line
25.40140.879
ND 46 east – Gackle
Stutsman42.42668.278 I-94 – Jamestown, BismarckEnd of southern section
Gap in route
WellsSykeston88.284142.079 US 52 / ND 200 – Carrington, McCluskyBeginning of central section
101.277162.990
ND 15 east – New Rockford
Southern end of ND 15 overlap
105.773170.225
ND 15 west – US 52, Fessenden
Northern end of ND 15 overlap
Benson135.822218.584 ND 19 – Esmond, Minnewaukan
York153.084246.365 US 2 – Leeds, Rugby, Devils LakeEnd of central section
Gap in route
Rolette181.274291.732 ND 66 – Rolette, BisbeeBeginning of northern section
Rolla195.080313.951 US 281 / ND 5 – Dunseith, Rocklake
US–Canada border205.475330.680St. John Port of Entry; end of northern section
Killarney-Turtle Mountain PTH 18 north – KillarneyContinuation into Manitoba
1.000 mi = 1.609 km; 1.000 km = 0.621 mi

Notes

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  1. ^ a b Cartography Section, Planning/Asset Management Section (2015). Route and Mileage Map (PDF) (Map). c. 1:1,900,800. Bismarck: North Dakota Department of Transportation. Retrieved July 20, 2016.
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KML is from Wikidata