U.S. Route 27 in Ohio

(Redirected from Ohio State Route 223 (1923))

U.S. Route 27 (US 27) in Ohio runs for 40.58 miles (65.31 km) between the Kentucky and Indiana state lines: 18.5 miles (29.8 km) in Hamilton County and another 22.1 miles (35.6 km) in Butler County. The route crosses into Ohio and Downtown Cincinnati via the Taylor–Southgate Bridge over the Ohio River. US 27 follows Mehring Way, Central Avenue, Ezzard Charles Drive, and Central Parkway through Downtown Cincinnati. US 27 briefly runs concurrent with Interstate 75 (I-75), exiting at I-74 for another brief concurrency before exiting onto Colerain Road. US 27 then continues northwest eventually to Oxford and then reaches the Indiana border another six miles (9.7 km) northwest at College Corner.

U.S. Route 27 marker
U.S. Route 27
Map
US 27 in red; US 27 directional alternate in blue
Route information
Maintained by ODOT
Length40.58 mi[1] (65.31 km)
Major junctions
South end US 27 at Kentucky state line in Cincinnati
Major intersections
North end US 27 at Indiana state line near Oxford
Location
CountryUnited States
StateOhio
CountiesHamilton, Butler
Highway system
  • Ohio State Highway System
SR 26 SR 28

Route description

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Hamilton County

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US 27 enters Ohio on the Taylor–Southgate Bridge over the Ohio River as a four-lane highway. After the bridge ends, the highway makes a loop to the east around a parking structure on Pete Rose and Mehring ways, concurrent with US 52. Mehring Way curves towards the west and passes under the Taylor–Southgate Bridge. After the bridge, the street parallels the Ohio River and Smale Riverfront Park on the south side of the road and the Heritage Bank Center and Great American Ball Park on the north side. The street passes under the John A. Roebling Suspension Bridge and then passes to the south of Paycor Stadium.

On the southwest corner of the stadium, US 27 and US 52 turn north onto Central Avenue. Central Avenue passes on the west side of the stadium. The route continues north, passing the west side of the Duke Energy Convention Center, Cathedral Basilica of St. Peter in Chains, and Romanesque Cincinnati City Hall. At Central Avenue and West 3rd Street, US 27 and US 127 begin their concurrency. At Central Avenue and 6th Street, northbound US 27 continues north along Central Avenue whereas the southbound lanes use Central Parkway and Plum Street; both directions of travel merge back together to follow Central Parkway at Ezzard Charles Drive. US 27 and US 127 end their concurrency at Hopple Street as US 127 continues north along Central Parkway and US 27 becomes concurrent with I-75 and then I-74 for a short while.

The route then follows Colerain Avenue, ascending through the Mount Airy Forest from an elevation of 490 to 930 feet (150 to 280 m) in two miles (3.2 km), passing the Cincinnati Water Tanks on North Bend Road. The remaining stretch in Hamilton County is a quite busy multilane highway that passes through the Mount Airy neighborhood, then exits Cincinnati to briefly pass through the corner of Green Township. It then becomes the main commercial thoroughfare through Colerain Township, traveling along a broad ridge that roughly separates the watersheds of the Great Miami River to the west from that of West Fork Mill Creek to the east.

The road then splits at an intersection with Struble Road, with the old alignment of Colerain Avenue branching off, and US 27 following a modern freeway section, passing the "Mount Rumpke" landfill and descending to and crossing the Great Miami River at an elevation of 525 feet (160 m).

Butler County

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A herringbone brick intersection of Chestnut Street and Patterson Avenue is at the southeast corner of Oxford at US 27. The highway northwest of Oxford is straight and rural. This final section passes to the west of the Oxford Walmart and within a mile (1.6 km) of the Butler County highpoint before reaching College Corner.[2]

History

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The road between Strubble and Oxford was called the highway to heaven by 1986. There were at times at least 80 crosses along the highway. After this publicity, the road was widened, curves were straightened, and the speed limit was lowered to 45 mph (72 km/h).

Major intersections

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CountyLocationmi[1]kmDestinationsNotes
Ohio River0.000.00 
 
US 27 south (York St)
Continuation into Kentucky
Taylor–Southgate Bridge
HamiltonCincinnati0.230.37 
 
US 52 east (Pete Rose Way)
Eastern end of SR 52 concurrency
1.422.29 
 
 
 
US 42 west / US 127 south
Southern end of US 42/US 172 concurrency
1.602.57  
 
 
 
US 22 begin / SR 3 south / SR 264 west
Western terminus of US 42; southern terminus of SR 3; eastern terminus of SR 264 eastbound
1.692.72 
 
 
 
SR 264 west to US 50
Westbound SR 264
1.772.85 
 
 
 
 
 
US 22 east / US 42 east / SR 3 north (Central Pkwy)
4.767.66 
 
I-75 south – Lexington
4.867.82 
 
US 127 north (Central Pkwy)
Northern end of US 127 concurrency
4.947.95 
 
I-75 south – Lexington
Northbound US 27/US 52 to I-75 only; southern end of I-75 concurrency
5.528.88 
 
 
 
I-75 north / I-74 west – Dayton
Northern end of I-75 concurrency; southern end of I-74 concurrency; eastern terminus of I-74
6.039.70 
 
 
 
I-74 west / US 52 west – Indianapolis
Northern end of I-74/US 52 concurrency
6.84–
6.90
11.01–
11.10
   I-74 / US 52
11.69–
11.87
18.81–
19.10
 
 
SR 126 east / Ronald Reagan Cross County Highway
Southern end of SR 126 concurrency
14.0822.66  
 
 
 
I-275 to I-74 / I-75
Butler19.12–
19.32
30.77–
31.09
 
 
  SR 126 west / SR 128 – Ross
Interchange. Northern end of SR 126 concurrency
Millville24.4439.33 
 
SR 129 west – Brookville
Southern end of SR 129 concurrency
24.7339.80 
 
SR 129 east – Hamilton
Northern end of SR 129 concurrency
29.0046.67 
 
SR 130 east – Hamilton
Western terminus of SR 130
Oxford34.0954.86 
 
SR 73 east – Trenton
34.9056.17  SR 732
College Corner40.5865.31 
 
US 27 north – Liberty, Richmond
Continuation into Indiana
1.000 mi = 1.609 km; 1.000 km = 0.621 mi

References

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  1. ^ a b "Straight Line Diagrams". Ohio Department of Transportation. June 16, 2023. Archived from the original on January 4, 2024. Retrieved December 14, 2023.
  2. ^ "Overview Map of U.S. Route 27 in Ohio" (Map). Google Maps. Retrieved May 24, 2019.
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KML is not from Wikidata


  U.S. Route 27
Previous state:
Kentucky
Ohio Next state:
Indiana