New Mexico State Road 28

New Mexico State Road 28 (NM 28) is a 30.346-mile-long (48.837 km) paved, two-lane state highway in Doña Ana County, in the U.S. state of New Mexico. It travels south-to-north roughly paralleling the Rio Grande.

State Road 28
Lou Henson Highway
Route information
Maintained by NMDOT
Length30.346 mi[1] (48.837 km)
Existed1905[2]–present
Major junctions
South end FM 259 at the Texas state line
 
North end NM 478 in Las Cruces
Location
CountiesDoña Ana
Highway system
  • State Roads in New Mexico
NM 27 NM 29

The southern terminus of NM 28 is at the Texas state line west of Canutillo where Farm to Market Road 259 (FM 259; Canutillo La Union Avenue) ends. The northern terminus is in Las Cruces where it intersects NM 478. It also has an interchange with Interstate 10 (I-10) in Las Cruces, shortly before its terminus.

Route description

The highway begins west of Canutillo at the New Mexico - Texas state line where Texas FM 259 highway ends. It continues west-northwest for approximately 0.423 miles (0.681 km) before turning mostly north following the Rio Grande on the west side. NM 28 passes through agricultural communities of the Mesilla Valley such as La Union, Anthony, Vado, Chamberino and La Mesa. The highway passes through a multitude of fields, dairy farms, vineyards, and pecan orchards. After 23.04 miles (37.08 km) the road crosses the Rio Grande over a 369.1-foot-long (112.5 m) bridge, built in 1989, and continues on to Mesilla. After passing through downtown Mesilla as Avenida de Mesilla, NM 28 turns northeast and at 29.674 miles (47.756 km) the highway crosses Interstate 10. NM 28 then continues northeast for another 0.672 miles (1.081 km) until its end at the junction with NM 478.

History

NM 28 was originally created in 1905 by the Territorial Legislative Assembly, and in 1909 it was designated as State Road 28 by the Territorial Roads Commission. After New Mexico attained statehood in 1912, the newly created State Highway Commission redesignated NM 28 as an official state highway. Originally the north terminus of the highway was at intersection with Route 1 in Mesquite. In mid-1930s the highway was extended all the way to Las Cruces. Between mid-1940s and mid-1960s NM 28 was lengthened all the way to US 80/US 85 in Doña Ana and Radium Springs. By late 1960s the highway's northern terminus was shifted back to Las Cruces.[2][3]

New Mexico governor Bill Richardson originally requested the State Transportation Commission to consider renaming NM 28 as the Lou Henson Highway. Reynold E. Romero, General Counsel for the Department of Transportation, appeared before the State Transportation Commission on February 17, 2005, and requested Commission approval of Resolution 2005-02, dedicating State Highway 28 from Las Cruces to Sunland Park as the Lou Henson Highway. The State Transportation Commission approved the resolution to name the southern New Mexico highway after Lou Henson, a retired New Mexico State University basketball coach. Governor Bill Richardson dedicated the historic highway on March 30, 2005, as the Lou Henson Highway, in recognition of the coach.[2]

Major intersections

The entire route is in Doña Ana County.

Locationmi[4]kmDestinationsNotes
La Union0.0000.000 FM 259 CanutilloSouthern terminus
0.4230.681 NM 273 south Sunland ParkNorthern terminus of NM 273
3.1405.053 NM 182 south La UnionNorthern terminus of NM 182
3.2105.166 NM 183 east VintonWestern terminus of NM 183
Anthony6.24610.052 NM 225 east AnthonyWestern terminus of NM 225
7.85212.637 NM 186 east AnthonyWestern terminus of NM 186
Chamberino10.94917.621 NM 226 east BerinoWestern terminus of NM 226
La Mesa14.52923.382 NM 189 east VadoWestern terminus of NM 189
San Miguel19.02530.618 NM 192 east MesquiteWestern terminus of NM 192
Las Cruces27.85144.822 NM 373
28.08645.200 NM 101 northSouthern terminus of NM 101
28.59846.024 NM 359 westEastern terminus of NM 359
28.65146.109 NM 292 northSouthern terminus of NM 292
29.63147.686 I-10 / US 180 Las Cruces, El PasoI-10 exit 140
29.93448.174 NM 188
30.34648.837 NM 478Northern terminus
1.000 mi = 1.609 km; 1.000 km = 0.621 mi

See also

  •  U.S. Roads portal

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.