This sign in Oklahoma City, Oklahoma lists control cities of Wichita, Kansas and Ft. Smith, Arkansas for Interstate 35 and Interstate 40 respectively.
This sign in Petersburg, Virginia aids long-distance travelers, by listing the cities of Miami, Florida (920 miles away) and Atlanta, Georgia (500 miles away).
A control city is a city or locality posted on a traffic sign indicating forward destinations on a certain route. Signs indicating such cities are usually found at highway junctions to show where the intersecting road goes, or on mileage signs on longer routes. United States
The American Association of State Highway and Transportation Officials (AASHTO) has standardized all control cities used on the Interstate highway system in the United States. The published standard is not always followed, either because major destinations have since appeared that were not on the original list or because of state highway departments' hesitancy to sign destinations in other states. An example is a sign on eastbound Interstate 10 near Palm Springs, California, which, though Phoenix, Arizona, is the nearest major forward destination, signs only the small city of Indio, California, and "other Desert Cities". [1]. Sometimes, the opposite is true. In Washington, Vancouver, British Columbia is the control city for northbound Interstate 5 north of Seattle, even though Interstate 5 never touches Vancouver. A control city is not always a major city. For instance, Interstate 76 heading westbound out of Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, uses Valley Forge, a historic but minor locality where I-76 joins the Pennsylvania Turnpike. Occasionally, a large city will not be a control city because a larger city is located farther along a highway. For example, highway signs in Maryland on Interstate 95 northbound between the Interstate 395 junction in Baltimore and the Mason-Dixon Line at the Delaware border use New York City as their control city, even though I-95 directly passes through the closer Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. CanadaControl cities are particularly necessary for highways that do not follow strict linear directions. Ontario's Queen Elizabeth Way, for example, wraps around the western end of Lake Ontario, with segments proceeding both east and west at different points. Compass directions are not used at all in its central sections, and the control cities of Toronto and (for the opposite direction) Hamilton/Niagara Falls/Fort Erie are the only bearings provided. Highway directions in Montréal, Québec indicate control cities as far as Toronto and Ottawa on major Autoroutes 20 and 40. External links
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