U.S. Bicycle Route 10
U.S. Bicycle Route 10 is a United States Bicycle Route that is planned to follow U.S. Route 2 across the northern United States, beginning in Anacortes, Washington and ending in St. Ignace, Michigan., only of the planned corridor is designated, within the states of Washington, Idaho, and Michigan.
The Washington segment was designated in May 2014 as the first national bicycle route in the state. The designation of the Michigan segment came shortly thereafter in November 2014, followed by an extension of the western segment into Idaho in May 2015.
Route description
Western segment
USBR 10 begins at a Washington State Ferries terminal in Anacortes, Washington, at the terminus of State Route 20 Spur. The route travels east along the Guemes Channel into downtown Anacortes, where it leaves the highway and uses city streets; USBR 10 leaves Anacortes on the Tommy Thompson Trail, crossing over Fidalgo Bay on a former railroad trestle to March Point. The route follows State Route 20 across Washington Pass and northern Washington to Newport, where it crosses into Idaho.Within Bonner County, Idaho, the route follows U.S. Route 2 to Sandpoint and State Highway 200 towards the Montana border.
Eastern segment
The Michigan segment of USBR 10 begins in Iron Mountain, and follows U.S. Route 2 across the southern portion of the Upper Peninsula. The route ends at an intersection with USBR 35 in St. Ignace, at the northern end of the Mackinac Bridge.History
Planning for a national bicycle touring route across the northernmost states of the United States began in the early 2000s, under efforts by the American Association of State Highway and Transportation Officials to expand the United States Bicycle Route System, established in 1982 and not expanded since. The northern route, which had been marketed as the "Northern Tier" by Adventure Cycling, was identified in 2008 as a priority corridor for the renewed system and later numbered "USBR 10".The first segment of USBR 10, located in the state of Washington and traveling along State Route 20, was approved in May 2014 by AASHTO. The segment, following State Route 20 from Anacortes to Newport, was dedicated in September. The Michigan segment was designated in November 2014, followed by the Idaho segment in May 2015. Completion of the Idaho segment was celebrated with a ribbon-cutting ceremony on October 11, 2015, in Sandpoint. A segment in Washington near the Idaho state line was realigned in 2018, shortening the route by.