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・ Kansas State Wildcats football statistical leaders
・ Kansas State Wildcats men's basketball
・ Kansas State Wildcats women's basketball
・ Kansas State Wildcats women's volleyball
・ Kansas statistical areas
・ Kansas suffrage referendum, 1867
・ Kansas Supreme Court
・ Kansas Supreme Court Nominating Commission
・ Kansas Technical Institute
・ Kansas Territory
・ Kansas Territory's at-large congressional district
・ Kansas Township, Edgar County, Illinois
・ Kansas Township, Illinois
・ Kansas Township, Woodford County, Illinois
・ Kansas Traditional Republican Majority
Kansas Turnpike
・ Kansas Turnpike Authority
・ Kansas Turnpike Bridges
・ Kansas University Rangers
・ Kansas v. Cheever
・ Kansas v. Colorado
・ Kansas v. Crane
・ Kansas v. Hendricks
・ Kansas v. Marsh
・ Kansas vs. Darwin
・ Kansas Wesleyan Coyotes
・ Kansas Wesleyan University
・ Kansas Wildcats
・ Kansas wine
・ Kansas Wing Civil Air Patrol


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Kansas Turnpike : ウィキペディア英語版
Kansas Turnpike

|direction_a=South
|terminus_a= at the Oklahoma state line
|junction=
|direction_b=East
|terminus_b= in Kansas City
|established=October 1956
|browse=
}}
The Kansas Turnpike is a , freeway-standard toll road that lies entirely within the U.S. state of Kansas. It runs in a general southwest-northeast direction from the Oklahoma border to Kansas City. It passes through several major Kansas cities, including Wichita, Topeka, and Lawrence. The turnpike is owned and maintained by the Kansas Turnpike Authority (KTA), which is headquartered in Wichita.
The Kansas Turnpike was built from 1954 to 1956, predating the Interstate Highway System. While not part of the system's early plans, the turnpike was eventually incorporated into the Interstate system in late 1956, and is designated today as four different Interstate Highway routes: I-35, I-335, I-470, and I-70. The turnpike also carries a piece of U.S. Routes 24 and 40 in Kansas City.
Because it predates the Interstate Highway System, the road is not engineered to current Interstate Highway standards, and notably lacks a regulation-width median. To reduce the risk of head-on collisions, the Kansas Turnpike now has a continuous, permanent Jersey barrier in the median over its entire length. On opening, there was no fixed speed limit on the highway; drivers were merely asked to keep to a "reasonable and proper" limit, although shortly afterward signs were erected in certain stretches indicating a maximum speed of . Since 2011, the turnpike's speed limit is set at .
Around 120,000 drivers use the turnpike daily. The road features numerous services, including a travel radio station and six service areas. One of these service areas is notable for the presence of a memorial to University of Notre Dame football coach Knute Rockne, who died near the current highway's route. The turnpike is self-sustaining; it derives its entire revenue from the tolls collected and requires no tax money for maintenance or administration.
==History==


抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
ウィキペディアで「Kansas Turnpike」の詳細全文を読む



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