Sterling Highway

The Sterling Highway is a 142-mile (229-km) highway in the Southcentral region of the U.S. state of Alaska, leading from the Seward Highway at Tern Lake Junction, 90 miles (140 km) south of Anchorage, to Homer.

Construction of the highway began in 1947 and was completed in 1950. It is part of Alaska Route 1. It leads mainly west from Tern Lake to Soldotna, paralleling the Kenai River, at which point it turns south to follow the eastern shore of Cook Inlet. It is the only highway in the western and central Kenai Peninsula, and most of the population of the Kenai Peninsula Borough lives near it. The highway also gives access to many extremely popular fishing and recreation areas, including the Kenai, Funny, and Russian rivers.

The southern end of the highway is at the tip of the Homer Spit, a sandbar extending five miles (8 km) into Kachemak Bay. A ferry terminal here connects the road to the Alaska Marine Highway.

Mileposts along the Sterling Highway do not begin with 0 (zero). Instead, they begin with Mile 37 (km 59), continuing the milepost numbering of the Seward Highway where the two highways intersect near Tern Lake. The 0 (zero) mile marker for the Seward Highway is at its terminus in downtown Seward at the intersection of 3rd Avenue and Railway Avenue. Thus, mileposts along the Sterling Highway reflect distance from Seward, which is not actually on the Sterling Highway.

Read more about Sterling Highway:  Towns and Places Along The Sterling Highway, Gallery

Famous quotes containing the words sterling and/or highway:

    Family is the first school for young children, and parents are powerful models.
    —Alice Sterling Honig (20th century)

    The improved American highway system ... isolated the American-in-transit. On his speedway ... he had no contact with the towns which he by-passed. If he stopped for food or gas, he was served no local fare or local fuel, but had one of Howard Johnson’s nationally branded ice cream flavors, and so many gallons of Exxon. This vast ocean of superhighways was nearly as free of culture as the sea traversed by the Mayflower Pilgrims.
    Daniel J. Boorstin (b. 1914)