US 70 enters the state via the Memphis & Arkansas Bridge on I-55, along with U.S. Routes 61, 64, and 79, along with SR 1. US 70 follows E.H. Crump Avenue, Danny Thomas Boulevard, Union Avenue, East Parkway, and Summer Avenue through Memphis, mostly accompanied with US 64 and US 79, along with some of SR 3.
Much of US 70 from Memphis to the west side of Nashville is accompanied by the secret designation of Tennessee State Route 1, with the exception of a few streets in downtown Memphis. US 70 has two concurrencies with SR 1 in the western half of the state, one in the downtown area, and the other from the east side of Memphis to western Davidson County. The brief one in downtown Nashville is the third SR 1 concurrency along with US 70S/US 431 along Broadway.[3][4][5]
Nashville area
In Nashville, US 70 begins to be paired with SR 24 after lending SR 1 to the Memphis-Bristol Highway (U.S. Route 70S). US 70 continues into downtown Nashville, following Charlotte Avenue, 14th Avenue (13th Avenue for US 70's westbound lanes along I-40/I-65), Broadway, First Avenue, and Hermitage Avenue. At the 14th Avenue intersection on Charlotte Avenue, US 70 acts as collector/distributor roads for I-40/I-65 for two blocks before joining U.S. 431 and U.S. 70S on a brief overlap.
After US 431 and US 70S splits from the main route on Broadway, US 70 progresses eastward, roughly paralleling the Cumberland River, ducking under the western split of I-40 and I-24, and continuing to an interchange with SR 155 (Briley Parkway) east of downtown, and then Old Hickory Boulevard in Hermitage.[6]
Mount Juliet to Lenoir City
East of Nashville, US 70 enters Wilson County near Mount Juliet. US 70 then bypasses the downtown area of Lebanon with intersections with US 231 (SR 10) and US 70N (SR 24), and including a concurrency with SR 141 before turning southeast to DeKalb and White Counties. US 70 is paired with Tennessee State Route 26 from Lebanon all the way to the state route's terminus in Sparta. Near the US 70S junction in Sparta, SR 1 returns to US 70 for its route from there, to Crossville, to the Harriman/Kingston area, all the way into the north side of Lenoir City, and after US 11 (SR 2) joins US 70, it eventually enters the Knoxville area.[7]
Knoxville to the North Carolina border
In downtown Knoxville, US 70, along with US 11, follows Neyland Drive, south of the campus of University of Tennessee, then exits onto Hall of Fame Drive north to Magnolia Avenue. US 11/70 follows Magnolia Avenue out of downtown. At the US 11W/11E split, US 70 begins to follow US 11E, while SR 1 follows US 11W. Before crossing the Tennessee River for a second time, US 25W begins to follow US 70 (SR 9) from the east side of Knoxville until it merges with US 25E at Newport. US 70 carries US 25 into North Carolina east of Newport.[8]
Major intersections
The mileposts listed in the following table is only an estimated calculation. Actual mile markers may vary.
US 70/SR 24 gets divided between 14th and 13th Avenues serving as local-express lanes; I-40 Exits 209 and 209A; I-40 west accessible via 13th Avenue only
Eastern end of SR 1 concurrency; US 11 splits into US 11E and US 11W; western end of US 11E and unsigned SR 168 concurrency; eastern terminus of unsigned SR 168
State Route 26 (SR 26) runs concurrently with US 70 for its entire existence through Wilson, De Kalb and White Counties in Middle Tennessee. The 59.25 miles (95.35 km) long state highway runs from Lebanon downtown Sparta.
History
It was signed solely as SR 26 until sometime in the 1960s or 1970s when US 70 was designated on that alignment, but retains the state route designation as a secret, or hidden designation.[10]
^Tennessee Department of Transportation (2017). Tennessee's Official Transportation Map [front](PDF) (Map) (2017 ed.). Nashville: Tennessee Department of Transportation. § D2 and D3. Retrieved February 28, 2017.
^Tennessee Department of Transportation (2017). Tennessee's Official Transportation Map [front](PDF) (Map) (2017 ed.). Nashville: Tennessee Department of Transportation. § C4-C5 and B5-B8. Retrieved February 28, 2017.
^Tennessee Department of Transportation (2017). Tennessee's Official Transportation Map [front](PDF) (Map) (2017 ed.). Nashville: Tennessee Department of Transportation. § E2, D2-D4, C4-C6, and B6-B9. Retrieved February 28, 2017.
^Rand McNally (2016). "Tennessee" (Map). The Road Atlas (2016 Walmart ed.). 1 in≈19 mi. Chicago: Rand McNally. p. 94. Nashville inset. §§ L5-L6 and K6-K10. ISBN0-528-01329-7.
^Tennessee Department of Transportation (2017). Tennessee's Official Transportation Map [back](PDF) (Map) (2017 ed.). Nashville: Tennessee Department of Transportation. § B9 and C9-C13. Retrieved February 28, 2017.
^Tennessee Department of Transportation (2017). Tennessee's Official Transportation Map [back](PDF) (Map) (2017 ed.). Nashville: Tennessee Department of Transportation. § C13-C15. Retrieved February 28, 2017.