U.S. Route 431 in Alabama
U.S. Route 431, internally designated by the Alabama Department of Transportation as State Route 1, is a major north–south state highway across the eastern part of the U.S. state of Alabama. Although US 431's south end is in Dothan, SR 1 continues south for about along US 231 to the Florida state line.
Route description
SR 1 is primarily the unsigned partner route assigned to US 431.The two routes run concurrently from the southern terminus of US 431 at Dothan to the Tennessee state line. South of Dothan, SR 1 is assigned to US 231.US 431 enters Alabama running concurrently with US 231. The route descends into Huntsville, becoming Memorial Parkway, a major thoroughfare across the city. The route engages in a concurrency with US 72 before a major interchange with I-565. Less than a mile later, US 431 turns off Memorial Parkway onto Governor's Drive, which it follows across Monte Sano Mountain. Descending into a valley, the route turns directly south, serving several bedroom communities of Huntsville.
The route crosses the Tennessee River downstream of Guntersville Dam, serving the fishing city of Guntersville. Climbing up a 7% grade, the route crests Sand Mountain, serving the local hubs of Albertville and Boaz before descending down into the Coosa Valley. Outside Attalla, the route intersects US 278. US 431 and US 278 run concurrently throughout Attalla, where the routes have a brief concurrency with US 11 and junction with I-59, and Gadsden, where the routes intersect US 411 and cross the Coosa River. East of the city, US 278 turns east while US 431 continues south.
The route continues south through the Ridge and Valley Province until it reaches Anniston, where the route follows a recently-opened bypass of the city. The route traverses Weisner Ridge before descending to its junctions with US 78 and I-20.
After a concurrency with I-20, the route turns south, where it traverses the Talladega National Forest and climbs into the Piedmont, where it follows a notoriously dangerous routing. The route serves Wedowee, Roanoke, and Lafayette before following a bypass of Opelika, where it junctions with I-85 and US 280.
Turning east overlapping US 280, the route descends down into the Gulf Coastal Plain before entering Phenix City. The route follows a bypass of the city, with a brief concurrency with US 80. The route turns off US 280 to the south of the city. The route heads inland, traversing rolling hills before descending into Eufaula, where it engages in another concurrency with US 82. Leaving US 82, the route turns inland, heading south into the Dougherty Pain and Alabama Wiregrass Region.
The route eventually reaches the Ross Clark Circle, which is US 84 at this point. It joins it as it passes through east Dothan. It loses US 84 and continues southwest independently with SR 210, the Ross Clark Circle. It junctions with SR 53 once again as it nears its southern terminus. The beltway turns to the northwest and junctions with US 231 and US 231 Bus. and US 431 Bus., both of which pass through Dothan. SR 1 turns south with US 231, The two business routes end, and US 431 ultimately ends its long journey across east Alabama.
History
Four-lane routing
One of the criticisms of US 431 in its entirety from Kentucky to Alabama was that it was mainly a two-lane road. ALDOT has prioritized four-laning the route in Alabama as a viable north–south road corridor in the eastern part of the state.Of particular concern was the segment from Seale south to the Barbour County line, where rolling hills along the original alignment limit the visibility of oncoming traffic, contributing to poor decisions by motorists to pass, resulting in numerous head-on collisions. In this segment alone, 31 people were killed in crashes between 1992 and 2006, leading Reader's Digest to proclaim it one of "America's Deadliest Highways" in 2000. After being contacted by and subsequently meeting the family of a fatal crash victim in 2003, ALDOT Director Joe McInnes decided to expedite the construction on the last remaining stretch of two-lane road between Seale and the Barbour County line. This section was completed and opened in late 2010. The old alignment in Russell County is still open to traffic and is now labeled County Route 137.
Traveling south from Tennessee, as of mid-2009, US 431 is a four-lane route to Oxford. Then, after diverting from I-20 east of Oxford at exit 191, it reverts to a two-lane highway southward to Opelika, with a brief four-lane stretch just south of Wedowee. From Opelika southward to its southern terminus in Dothan, US 431 is now open as a four-lane highway.
Anniston Eastern Bypass
The Anniston Eastern Bypass, officially named the McClellan Veterans Parkway, is a realigned US 431, east of downtown Anniston and downtown Oxford. Since the early 1990s, bypasses have been planned on both sides of town to alleviate traffic on Quintard Avenue, the main north–south traffic artery in the region. Despite being planned for years, construction did not begin until after receiving funding in a 2009 economic stimulus bill. Prior to the start of construction, archeological work on part of the route that passed through Fort McClellan located Native American spearpoints and an American Civil War homestead.The bypass runs from I-20 exit 188, following the Golden Springs Road northwards, and cross the Choccolocco Foothills, then crosses over SR 21/McClellan Boulevard. It is complete from McIntosh Road to where the former alignment of US 431 merged with SR 21 which was resconstructed. The northern portion, which began construction in 2010, is built with two at-grade intersections and one trumpet interchange. Much development has been the result of this highway in the past decade along I-20 in Oxford and it is regarded as a way to redevelop McClellan as well as north Anniston.
The total cost of the project was $164 million; the final stretch of the road to be constructed is complete as of December 2015, and work on the US 431 tie-in continued into 2016 before completion. US 431 follows this route from I-20 northward.