Washington State Route 20 - Major Intersections

Major Intersections

County Location Mile Destinations Notes
Jefferson County 0.00 US 101 – Quilcene, Olympia, Port Angeles
7.79 SR 19 south – Port Ludlow
Port Townsend 12.57 Port Townsend-Keystone Ferry across Admiralty Inlet
Island
16.00 SR 525 south – Mukilteo Ferry
Skagit Anacortes 47.45
SR 20 Spur – Anacortes, San Juan Ferry
54.07 Farm to Market Road, Best Road Former SR 237
54.62 SR 536 east – Mount Vernon No access from SR 20 west to SR 536 east
Burlington 59.10 I-5 – Vancouver, BC, Seattle Interchange
Sedro-Woolley 64.37 SR 9 south – Arlington West end of SR 9 overlap
65.64 SR 9 north – Sumas East end of SR 9 overlap
Rockport 97.21 SR 530 west – Darrington, Arlington
105.63 Cascade Road – Marblemount Former PSH 17
Okanogan 179.08 Lost River Road – Mazama Former PSH 16
Twisp 200.93 Second Avenue Former PSH 17
203.48 SR 153 south – Chelan, Wenatchee
229.99 Old 97 – Malott, Brewster Former US 97 south; proposed SR 213
Okanogan 232.20
SR 215 north / US 97 Bus. north / SR 20 Bus. east – Okanogan, Omak
West end of US 97 Bus. overlap
232.70 US 97 south – Wenatchee East end of US 97 Bus. overlap; west end of US 97 overlap
Omak 237.76 SR 155 south – Omak, Grand Coulee Dam
238.84
SR 215 south / US 97 Bus. south / SR 20 Bus. west – Omak
Tonasket 261.34 US 97 north – Penticton East end of US 97 overlap
Ferry Republic 302.03 SR 21 south – Keller, Wilbur West end of SR 21 overlap
304.59 SR 21 north – Curlew, Grand Forks East end of SR 21 overlap
341.43 US 395 north – Laurier, Grand Forks West end of US 395 overlap
Stevens 344.18 SR 25 – Marcus, Northport, Davenport
Colville 354.33 US 395 south – Spokane East end of US 395 overlap
Pend Oreille 389.66 SR 31 north – Metaline Falls
420.70 SR 211 south – Spokane, Davis Lake, Sacheen Lake
Newport 436.13 US 2 – Sandpoint, Spokane

Read more about this topic:  Washington State Route 20

Famous quotes containing the word major:

    All of the great leaders have had one characteristic in common: it was the willingness to confront unequivocally the major anxiety of their people in their time. This, and not much else, is the essence of leadership.
    John Kenneth Galbraith (b. 1908)