Cascadian Interstate 203

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{{Infobox road/shieldmain/|province=¬|state=Alaska|type=I|county=|route=203|subtype=}}

{{Infobox road/name/|province=¬|state=Alaska|type=I|subtype=|route=203|county=}}
Jaketon Loop
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Route information
Length: 47.40 mi (76.28 km)
Existed: 2014 – present
Major junctions
South end: 20pxState Highway 7
  20pxInterstate 3
North end: 20pxCR 215
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Highway system
{{Infobox road/browselinks/|province=¬|state=Alaska|type=I|county=|route=203}}


Interstate 203 (I-203) in Alaska, also known as the Jaketon Loop, is a 47.40 miles (76.28 km) bypass route in Jaketon, in the center of the state. As a spur of Interstate 3, I-203 runs concurrently with it for 10 miles in eastern Jaketon.

Route description

The southern terminus is an at-grade traffic light with Main St(Alaska Highway 7) and Lake St(Alaska Spur Highway 203). A mile east of the western terminus. The interstate heads east through Jaketon until meeting I-3, the highway then runs concurrently with it to the north for about 10 miles. In northeastern Jaketon, the freeway leaves from I-3 and turns to the west through the northern edge of Jaketon, then Lake Jaketon, before having its northern terminus with Cascadian National Route 215 in N. Easton.

All of I-203 is included as part of the National Highway System, a system of roadways important to the nation's economy, defense, and mobility.

History

Interstate 203 opened to traffic in 2014.

Exit list