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Tennessee State Route 273

Route map:
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State Route 273 marker
State Route 273
Map
SR 273 highlighted in red
Route information
Maintained by TDOT
Length36.9 mi (59.4 km)
ExistedJuly 1, 1983[1]–present
Major junctions
West end SR 166 near Prospect
Major intersections
East end
US 64 Byp. / US 231 / US 431 in Fayetteville
Location
CountryUnited States
StateTennessee
CountiesGiles, Lincoln
Highway system
SR 272 SR 274

State Route 273 (SR 273) is a 36.9-mile-long (59.4 km) east–west state highway traversing the hills of southern Middle Tennessee.[2]

Route description

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SR 273 begins in Giles County at an intersection with SR 166. It winds its way east through some hills and begins paralleling the Elk River, which it does for the rest of the highway's length, to pass through the community of Prospect. The highway then turns northeast and passes through more Hill and then farmland, where it crosses a bridge over Richland Creek, before entering Elkton and coming to an intersection with US 31/SR 7. It turns north along a short concurrency with US 31/SR 7 to pass by several homes and businesses before splitting off and going northeast again to have an interchange with I-65 (Exit 6).[3] SR 273 then crosses into Lincoln County and continues winding its way northeast through a mix of farmland and wooded hills to pass through the community of Dellrose. The highway has an intersection with SR 274 before coming to an intersection and becoming concurrent with US 64/SR 15. Prior to this point, the entire route of SR 273 is a two-lane highway. SR 273 becomes unsigned as it continues east along US 64/SR 15 as a 4-lane undivided highway to enter Fayetteville along Washington Street to come to an intersection with US 64 Bypass (Wilson Parkway). The highway then narrows to 2-lane and passes through residential areas, where they make turns onto Morgan Avenue and College Street, before entering downtown and coming to an intersection with US 431/SR 50 (Main Avenue), where SR 50 heads east along US 64/SR 15 while SR 273 heads south along US 431 and Main Avenue. They head south through downtown before coming to the banks of the Elk River, where SR 273 comes to an end at an intersection with US 64 Bypass/US 231/SR 10 (Wilson Parkway/Thornton Taylor Parkway), with US 431 continuing south along US 231/SR 10 and Main Avenue.[4]

Major intersections

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CountyLocationmikmDestinationsNotes
Giles0.00.0 SR 166 (Bethel Road) – Pulaski, Bethel, Elkmont, ALWestern terminus
Carter-Nelson Bridge over Richland Creek
Elkton
US 31 south (Elkton Pike/SR 7 south) – Ardmore
Western end of US 31/SR 7 concurrency

US 31 north (Elkton Pike/SR 7 north) – Pulaski
Eastern end of US 31/SR 7 concurrency
I-65 – Nashville, HuntsvilleI-65 exit 6
Lincoln
SR 274 south (Old Railroad Bed Road) – Taft
Northern terminus of SR 274

US 64 west (Pulaski Highway/SR 15 west) – Pulaski
Western end of US 64/SR 15 concurrency; SR 273 becomes unsigned
Fayetteville

US 64 Byp. east (Wilson Parkway) – Winchester
Western terminus of US 64 Bypass
US 64 (College Street/SR 15 east/SR 50 east) – Winchester, Lynchburg

US 431 north (Main Avenue/SR 50 west) – Petersburg, Lewisburg
Eastern end of US 64/SR 15 concurrency; western end of US 431 concurrency
36.959.4

US 64 Byp. / US 231 north (Wilson Parkway/Thornton Taylor Parkway/SR 10 north) – Pulaski, Shelbyville, Winchester


US 231 south / US 431 south (Main Avenue/SR 10 south) – Park City, Huntsville, AL
Eastern terminus; SR 273 ends as an unsigned highway
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.
  2. ^ "TN-273 · Tennessee".
  3. ^ "Map of Giles County" (PDF). tn.gov. Retrieved 15 September 2023.
  4. ^ "Map of Lincoln County" (PDF). tn.gov. Retrieved 15 September 2023.