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New Mexico State Road 26

Route map:
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

State Road 26 marker
State Road 26
Map
NM 26 highlighted in red
Route information
Maintained by NMDOT
Length47.862 mi[1] (77.026 km)
Existed1905–present
Major junctions
West end US 180 north of Deming
Major intersections
East end I-25 / US 85 north of Hatch
Location
CountryUnited States
StateNew Mexico
CountiesLuna, Sierra, Doña Ana
Highway system
  • New Mexico State Highway System
NM 25 NM 27

New Mexico State Road 26 (NM 26) is a 47.862-mile-long (77.026 km) paved, two-lane state highway in Luna, Sierra, and Doña Ana counties in the U.S. state of New Mexico. It travels southwest-to-northeast largely following the main trunk of the ATSF railroad.

The western terminus of NM 26 is at intersection with US 180 north of Deming. The eastern terminus is north of Hatch at the interchange with I-25. NM 26 is an important connecting road between I-10 and I-25 west of Las Cruces. In the vicinity of Deming NM 26 is also known as Hatch Highway.

Route description

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The highway begins just north of Deming at the intersection with US 180. For the first 3.25 miles the road travels mostly east-northeast until it closes in with the ATSF railroad trunk. From that point on the highway turns northeast and follows the railroad track. The road travels through the Chihuahuan Desert with southern slopes of Cooke's Range mountains skirting from the north. At approximately 14 mile mark Cooke's Peak, named after Captain Philip St. George Cooke, and the tallest mountain in the Cooke's Range, can be seen to the north of the highway. At 14.45 miles NM 26 intersects with CR A019 (Cooke's Canyon Rd) providing access to Cooke's Canyon, Cooke's Spring and Fort Cummings historic site. At 22.53 miles wind turbines can be seen to the north of NM 26 which are part of the Macho Springs Wind Farm built in 2011 and generating 50 MW of windpower. After 27.722 miles (44.614 km) NM 26 intersects with NM 27 in a ghost town of Nutt and changes direction to slightly more easterly. At 36.261 miles (58.356 km) the road leaves the Luna County and briefly enters Sierra County and exits it into Doña Ana County at 37.146 miles (59.781 km). The highway continues following the railroad tracks and passes by Hatch Municipal Airport at 44.575 miles (71.737 km). After about a mile, NM 26 reaches community of Placitas where it intersects with NM 187 turning eastward. Travelling through Hatch NM 26 meets with NM 185 0.327 miles (0.526 km) further and turns north at the intersection. At 47.454 miles (76.370 km) NM 26 crosses the Rio Grande river over a 691.3 feet (210.7 m) bridge, built in 1965, and arrives at its northeastern terminus 0.380 miles (0.612 km) later.

History

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NM 26 contains sections of the original Routes 26 and 27 created in 1905 by the Territorial Legislative Assembly. It contains a segment of the old Route 26 from Deming to Nutt and a stretch from Nutt to Hatch which was the original Route 27. During early 1940s Route 26 was re-routed towards Hatch, and the road to Hillsboro became Route 27.[2] On 1927 map Route 26 is shown as a "first class" road between Deming and Hillsboro while a stretch between Nutt and Hatch is shown as "third class" road. On 1938 map both Routes 26 and 27 shown as "graded" and 1941 map shows both stretches of Route 26 and 27 as having "oil and concrete" surface. By 1950s the entire road was paved.

Major intersections

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CountyLocationmi[3]kmDestinationsNotes
Luna0.0000.000

US 180 to I-10 / US 70 – Deming, Silver City
Western terminus; to I-10 and US 70 via US 180 east
Nutt27.72244.614
NM 27 north – Hillsboro
Southern terminus of NM 27
Sierra
No major junctions
Doña AnaHatch46.12474.229
NM 187 north – Caballo
Southern terminus of NM 187
46.52174.868
NM 185 south – Las Cruces
Northern terminus of NM 185
47.86277.026 I-25 / US 85 – Las Cruces, AlbuquerqueEastern terminus; I-25 Exit 41
1.000 mi = 1.609 km; 1.000 km = 0.621 mi

See also

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References

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  1. ^ "NMDOT Posted Route - Legal Description" (PDF). New Mexico Department of Transportation. p. 8. Retrieved October 29, 2017.
  2. ^ "Details of New Mexico State Routes 26-50". Steve Riner Highways. Retrieved October 29, 2017.[self-published source]
  3. ^ "TIMS Road Segments by Posted Route/Point with AADT Info" (PDF). New Mexico Department of Transportation. June 8, 2016. p. 12. Retrieved August 28, 2017.
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