Tennessee State Route 350

State Route 350 (SR 350) is a state highway in Greene County, Tennessee.

State Route 350 marker

State Route 350

Map
TN 350 highlighted in red
Route information
Maintained by TDOT
Length7.5 mi (12.1 km)
ExistedJuly 1, 1983[1]–present
Major junctions
South end SR 351 near Camp Creek
Major intersections US 321 / SR 107 in Downtown Greeneville

US 11E Bus. in Downtown Greeneville
North end
US 11E / US 321 Truck / SR 70 in Greeneville
Location
CountryUnited States
StateTennessee
CountiesGreene
Highway system
SR 349 SR 351

Route description edit

SR 350 begins in Greeneville unsigned with a concurrency with US 11E Bus and SR 70 at their intersection with US 11E, it continues south where SR 70 heads south and SR 350 and US 11E Bus head east to US 321 and SR 107 where SR 350 heads south along US 321 and US 11E Bus heads north, it then branches off of US 321 heads more southeastward to end at SR 351 in south central Greene County south of Greeneville and north of Camp Creek.

The entire route is in Greene County.

Major intersections edit

The entire route is in Greene County.

LocationmikmDestinationsNotes
  SR 351 (SR-107 Cutoff) / Greystone Road – Camp CreekSouthern terminus
Greeneville 
 
 
 
US 321 south / SR 107 west (S Main Street/SR 35 south) – Newport
Southern end of unsigned concurrency with US 321/SR 107/SR 35; SR 350 becomes unsigned
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
US 11E Bus. south (W Summer Street) / US 321 north / SR 107 east (S Main Street/SR 35 north) – Tusculum
Northern end of unsigned concurrency with US 321/SR 107/SR 35; southern end of unsigned wrong-way concurrency with US 11E Business
 
 
 
 
 
US 321 Truck south / SR 70 south (70 Bypass) – Asheville, NC
Southern end of unsigned concurrency with US 321 Truck/SR 70
  
 
 
 
 
US 11E / US 321 Truck north / SR 70 north (W Andrew Johnson Highway/SR 34) – Johnson City, Morristown, Mosheim, Tusculum
Northern terminus of SR 350; southern terminus of US 11E Business; interchange; Road continues as Blue Springs Parkway to Moshiem
1.000 mi = 1.609 km; 1.000 km = 0.621 mi

References edit

KML is not from Wikidata
  1. ^ "The Road To 100 Years" (PDF). Tennessee Road Builder. Vol. 17, no. 5. September 2014. p. 22. Retrieved April 6, 2019.