End of US highway 400 |
1994-1996
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1996-present
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As of 2018, US 400 measured 481 miles in total length.
US 400 was commissioned in 1994. Its east end is outside Joplin, at its interchange with I-44.
Originally the west end of US 400 was in Garden City; there was only one issue of the Kansas official state highway map illustrating that: |
Today the bypass carries US 83, and US 50-400 traffic is routed onto it too. But when it was first commissioned, the US 400 designation ended at that interchange. One could argue that US 400 should not have ever made it even as far west as Garden City -- there is no good reason why it couldn't end at its junction with US 50 in Dodge City. But clearly KDoT had a different opinion: for whatever reason, they must have wanted US 400 to run across the entire state, because within two years US 400 had been signed even further west with US 50, through the remainder of Kansas. Since then, the west end of US 400 is about 15 miles west of the Kansas border, in Granada. In other words, the westernmost 131 miles of US 400 are on a pointless overlap with US 50.
That sign is between Holly and Granada; it was posted just past Prowers Co. Rd. 30, which goes north to serve the town of Hartman. Not far ahead, travelers reach the town of Granada -- these photos were looking west on Goff Avenue (US 50). US 400 is co-signed with US 50 to this point, but here at Main Street (US 385) that designation ends:
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That was the only mention of US 400 at its terminus in Granada; by 2005 the other sign assemblies had also been replaced, but none of the others included any reference to US 400. (Incidentally, it is odd that there was a CO hwy. 196 marker on that eastbound assembly. To get there, one crosses the Arkansas River via US 385, and then 196 begins by heading back to the west -- likely not a very common traffic pattern. The intention may have been to have that marker included on the westbound assembly, but a mistake was made somewhere along the line.)
That was about a half-mile east of Granada. US 400 is irksome for several reasons: read more here.
Research and/or photo credits: Alex Nitzman; Steve Riner; Dale Sanderson; Mike Wiley
Page originally created 2000;
last updated Apr. 09, 2021.
last updated Apr. 09, 2021.