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I'm in the process of adding external links to he highway guides I've created for many North American Highway. Someone suggested that I should let the highway community know I'm doing that so they don't think I'm link spamming. I've got detailed photos and text of lots of stuff along the highways in Canada, Mexico and USA. I'd welcome your thoughts on my project and the links. If folks want to use photos (I've got thousands of lovely photos) from my highway guides, feel free to use them but do give credit. Thanks, James Love James Love 13:45, 11 January 2006 (UTC)
Now someone ( 70.176.158.100 ( talk · contribs)) has added a link from every highway article to
I don't see any ads, presumably it's commercial. What do we do about this and "Mile By Mile"? Keep any of or all of these links? - Will Beback 08:58, 12 January 2006 (UTC)
I have put new SVG markers for California. I would like to encourage the use of the Caltrans term marker for the standalone sign "California 72", etc. and shield for just the overlay sign with the number "22 Long Beach". at least for the naming in templates The new markers are not perfect, but they are in a vector format that should be modifiable. The biggest problems are that the nose of the 3-digit ones are too pointed, routes that have a "1" in them are inappropriately spaced, and certain numbers need to be aligned by hand (see California 4). The 2-digit ones do meet spec, before anyone asks. Joydawg 18:38, 28 January 2006 (UTC)
Has anyone been working on junction templates? Creating smaller icons suitable for the junction box? The Major cities box on California State Route 1 looks bad. Any suggestions for a new design? Joydawg 18:38, 28 January 2006 (UTC)
I believe the current box is fine as is. We might consider limiting it to "Major" cities and remove the reference to the California Highway code and possibly shrinking the legend vertically. But other then that the current box should stay as is. JohnnyBGood 01:19, 7 March 2006 (UTC)
Anyone know why the SVG images aren't taking on routes like California State Route 150? Gateman1997 06:06, 3 February 2006 (UTC)
Anyone going to upload the SVG version of Image:CA-blank.gif? Templates that still use the old gif are now looking out of place. -- Geopgeop 15:46, 6 March 2006 (UTC)
I have just created Portal:U.S. Roads. If you have any feedback, please place it under "Portal" at Wikipedia talk:WikiProject U.S. Roads. Rt66lt 03:21, 11 February 2006 (UTC)
If a county road joins a state route, and the county road has an article of its own, can/should those be included in the infobox junction list, or is that reserved for just state and federal highways? (E.g., the north end of TUO J59 where it hits SR-108.) — RandallJones 02:09, 2 March 2006 (UTC)
This area is for discussion on possible changes to the CA routebox. Certain users, specifically SPUI have objections to the current userbox. Personally I think the current box is fine provided it is tweaked a little (specifically removing or shrinking the legend and ensuring that only MAJOR cities are listed). Please discuss your opinions on the matter here. Gateman1997 02:40, 7 March 2006 (UTC)
An example of what I'd like to see done would be as follows (and I'll use California State Route 17 as an example since we're all familiar with it. First I think the legend should be minimized or eliminated all together. It does admittedly add to cluttered look to the page in it's current state. Second I'd agree with putting the "CS&HC Sec. 317" link as a link from the "Route 17" indentifier currently above it as SPUI has in his infobox model, this would also consolidate and eliminate clutter. Third, can we move the KM distance measurement to the same line as the milage, this would eliminate an unneeded vertical line. Fourth would be for the extremely long routes like 1 and 99 to consolidate the infobox listing to major interchanges only. I believe these changes come to a nice middle ground between the current box and those who object to the current box. It would significantly shrink and consolidate the current box incorporating some of SPUIs design without giving much of the current box's content or any need to retag any existing pages. Gateman1997 08:36, 7 March 2006 (UTC)
How do people feel about the changes I've made to the box? I used Gateman's suggestions as a guide. The only thing left to do is to make the Route name in the box the link to the Calif Hwy code. I tried doing it but was not able to. If someone could assist I'd be grateful. JohnnyBGood 01:31, 8 March 2006 (UTC)
Calling a vote below. -- Rschen7754 ( talk - contribs) 23:09, 22 March 2006 (UTC)
For the information of all: Revert wars have broken out at the California and New York State Highway/route WikiProjects. Mass moves of pages and removal of routeboxes have occurred. -- Rschen7754 ( talk - contribs) 23:36, 10 March 2006 (UTC)
Wikipedia:Mediation Cabal/Cases/2006-03-12 U.S. Roads has been opened. -- Rschen7754 ( talk - contribs) 05:46, 12 March 2006 (UTC)
I am not going to go through the edit summaries to figure out who the editor is, but someone, probably associated with this WikiProject, can't spell San Bernardino correctly. I just corrected a bunch of internal links to San Bernardino, California and San Bernardino County, California in California state route articles that were originally spelled San Bernadino. Blank Verse 21:03, 13 March 2006 (UTC)
User:Joydawg has uploaded about 80+ highway signs but failed to put any source or license tag on them. I am turning this problem over to you fine folks at this project. Please make it go away. Here's a dynamically updated list (at the m:toolserver). Thanks! JesseW, the juggling janitor 01:34, 14 March 2006 (UTC)
I guess it was worth a shot at doing, but next time I'll ask, Rschen and SPUI.
By the way, Rschen's robot unabbreviated the "U.S. 101" links in the junction box. I now read "U.S. Route 101" in full. Fix it, thanks, and keep up the good work! -- Geopgeop 11:40, 19 March 2006 (UTC)
I strongly advise all parties to not use the term "vandalism" when making reverts. I think this is what is going wrong with some of the issues that are debated on CA roads. Y'all have a MedCab case, try to work it out. Thank you. User:Zscout370 (Return Fire) 06:14, 21 March 2006 (UTC)
As no one has created State Route 264's article as of yet, I would like to point out, as said on its new talk page, that it is a pre-1964 route only, and that I just want to know, should it redirect to a specific pre-1964 routes page, or redirect to its present-day State Route 223? -- Geopgeop 11:45, 22 March 2006 (UTC)
The result of the debate was Modify {{ routeboxca2}} per below. -- Rschen7754 ( talk - contribs) 18:45, 27 May 2006 (UTC)
As SPUI is intent on removing {{ routeboxca2}} and replacing it with his less-informative {{ Infobox CA Route}} regardless of consensus, this is a vote/ consensus-making page/ whatever you want to call it. Please vote Keep {{ routeboxca2}} as is, Modify {{ routeboxca2}} or Change to {{ Infobox CA Route}}. At the end of five days (minimum), the result of the discussion will be carried out. If consensus (70-80%) forms then that consensus will be taken. Otherwise, we will go with majority (since there has to be a infobox). -- Rschen7754 ( talk - contribs) 23:13, 22 March 2006 (UTC)
This vote seems premature, divisive, and generally ill-considered. I look back up the page a bit and everyone was making some effort to work out a mutually acceptable solution that everyone hated equally. Rather then trying to jam something down the throat of the world with a vote, can't everyone just take two valium and go back to working together eh? But while I'm here, I like the smaller more concise templete, otherwise it's creeping towards the horror of Bundesautobahn 1. - brenneman {L} 13:19, 23 March 2006 (UTC)
It's been a long time. Next time I'm on if noone objects I'll close debate with 75% consensus to make modifications but keep {{ routeboxca2}}. -- Rschen7754 ( talk - contribs) 02:55, 27 May 2006 (UTC)
[5] It might be interesting (not necessarily in an article) to compare the "secondary" routes with the ones that are being relinquished. -- SPUI ( talk - don't use sorted stub templates!) 22:21, 24 March 2006 (UTC)
# | Secondary piece | Notes (including current status) |
---|---|---|
SR 1 | Route 5 south of San Juan Capistrano to Route 10 in Santa Monica; Route 280 near the south boundary of the City and County of San Francisco to Route 101 near the approach to the Golden Gate Bridge in San Francisco | some relinquishment considered on south part |
SR 2 | Route 1 near Santa Monica to Route 101 in Los Angeles | partly relinquished and deleted |
SR 3 | Route 36 near Peanut to Route 299 near Douglas City; Route 5 near Yreka to Montague | nothing |
SR 9 | Route 1 near Santa Cruz to Route 17 near Los Gatos via Waterman Gap and Saratoga Gap and along the ridge between the San Lorenzo and Pescadero Creeks | full route; nothing |
SR 12 | Route 1 near Valley Ford to Route 116 in Sebastopol | unbuilt |
SR 13 | Route 61 near the Oakland International Airport to Route 580; Route 24 near Lake Temescal to Route 61 near Emeryville | mostly unbuilt; rest is surface road |
SR 14 | Route 1 north of the intersection of Sunset Boulevard northwest of Santa Monica to Route 5 near Tunnel Station | unbuilt |
SR 18 | Route 10 near San Bernardino to Route 30 | unbuilt |
SR 19 | Route 1 near Long Beach to Route 164 near Pico Rivera | full route; partly relinquished and deleted |
SR 22 | Route 1 near Long Beach to Studebaker Road | nothing |
SR 23 | Route 1 near Aliso Canyon to Route 101 | nothing |
SR 24 | Route 680 in Walnut Creek to Route 4 near Pittsburg | unbuilt |
SR 26 | Route 12 to Route 88 near Pioneer Station via Mokelumne Hill and West Point | nothing |
SR 33 | Route 166 in Maricopa to Route 5 near Oilfields via Coalinga; Route 5 to Route 152 via the vicinity of Mendota; Route 152 west of Los Banos to Route 5 near Santa Nella; Route 5 near Santa Nella to Route 140; Route 140 to Route 5 near Vernalis | nothing |
SR 34 | Route 1 between Point Mugu and the City of Oxnard to Route 118 near Somis | full route; nothing |
SR 35 | Route 17 at Summit Road to Route 92 via Skyline Boulevard; Route 92 to Route 280 at Bunker Hill Drive; Route 280 via Skyline Boulevard to Route 1 in San Francisco | full route; nothing |
SR 36 | Route 139 north of Susanville to Route 395 near Termo | nothing |
SR 37 | Route 251 near Nicasia to Route 101 near Novato | unbuilt |
SR 39 | Route 1 near Huntington Beach to Route 72 in La Habra via Beach Boulevard; Beach Boulevard to Harbor Boulevard in La Habra via Whittier Boulevard; Whittier Boulevard in La Habra to Route 2 via Harbor Boulevard to the vicinity of Fullerton Road, then to Azusa Avenue, Azusa Avenue to San Gabriel Canyon Road, San Gabriel Avenue southbound between Azusa Avenue and San Gabriel Canyon Road, and San Gabriel Canyon Road | full route; partly relinquished and deleted |
SR 43 | Route 119 to Route 46 in Wasco; Route 46 in Wasco to Route 99 near Selma | full route; nothing |
SR 45 | Route 113 near Knights Landing to Route 20 near Sycamore; Route 20 near Colusa to Route 32 near Hamilton City | full route; nothing |
SR 48 | Route 14 near Lancaster to Route 122 near the San Bernardino county line | full route; unbuilt |
SR 56 | Route 15 to Route 67 | unbuilt? |
SR 58 | Route 101 near Santa Margarita to Route 33; Route 33 to Route 5 | nothing |
SR 59 | Route 152 northerly to Route 99 near Merced; Route 99 near Merced to Snelling | full route; nothing |
SR 61 | Route 84 near Newark to Route 580 near Albany via the vicinity of San Leandro and Oakland International Airport and via Alameda | full route; partly unbuilt |
SR 64 | Route 1 near Malibu Beach to Route 5 south of San Fernando | full route; unbuilt |
SR 65 | Route 198 near Exeter to Route 80 near Roseville on a route along the easterly side of the San Joaquin Valley, which route may include all or portions of any existing state highway route | unbuilt |
SR 66 | Route 30 near San Dimas to Route 215 in San Bernardino | full route; some relinquishment considered |
SR 68 | Asilomar Beach State Park to Route 1 | nothing |
SR 72 | Route 39 to Atlantic Boulevard near the City of Los Angeles | full route; some relinquishment considered |
SR 74 | Route 111 in Palm Desert to Route 10 near Thousand Palms | unbuilt |
SR 75 | Route 5 to Route 282 via the Silver Strand | nothing |
SR 76 | Route 15 to Route 79 near Lake Henshaw | nothing |
SR 77 | Route 880 near 42nd Avenue to a connection with Route 580 near High Street in Oakland; Route 580 in Oakland to Route 24 near Lafayette | full route; mostly unbuilt |
SR 81 | Route 215 east of Riverside to Route 15 south of Devore | full route; unbuilt |
SR 82 | Route 101 near Blossom Hill Road in San Jose to Route 280 in San Francisco | full route; nothing |
SR 83 | Route 71 to Route 30 near Upland | full route; nothing |
SR 84 | Route 1 near San Gregorio to Route 280; Route 580 in Livermore to Route 4 near Brentwood; Route 12 at Rio Vista to Route 80 near Bryte via Ryer Island | some relinquishment considered |
SR 86 | Route 111 to Route 8 near El Centro; Route 8 near El Centro to Route 78 near Brawley | nothing |
SR 90 | Route 405 to Route 91 in Santa Ana Canyon passing near La Habra | mostly unbuilt; partly relinquished and deleted |
SR 91 | Route 1 near Hermosa Beach to Route 110 near Gardena | relinquished and deleted |
SR 92 | Route 238 to Route 580 near Castro Valley and Hayward | unbuilt |
SR 93 | Route 77 near Moraga to Route 24 near Orinda; Route 24 near Orinda to Route 80 in Richmond and Pinole; Route 80 to Route 580 in Richmond via San Pablo and north Richmond | full route; unbuilt |
SR 94 | Route 188 near Tecate to Route 8 west of Jacumba via Campo | nothing |
SR 96 | Route 299 near Willow Creek via the vicinity of Weitchpec to Route 5 near the confluence of the Shasta and Klamath Rivers | full route; nothing |
SR 98 | Route 8 near Coyote Wells to Route 8 via Calexico | full route; nothing |
SR 100 | the junction of Routes 1 and 17 to Route 1 west of the San Lorenzo River via the beach area in Santa Cruz | full route; unbuilt |
US 101 | Route 80 near Division Street in San Francisco to the junction of Route 1, Funston approach, and the approach to the Golden Gate Bridge in the Presidio of San Francisco | nothing |
SR 104 | Route 99 near Arno to Route 88 near Ione; Route 88 west of Martell to Route 88 southwest of Pine Grove via the vicinity of Sutter Creek. | full route; nothing |
SR 107 | Route 1 near Torrance to Route 405 near Lawndale | full route; partly relinquished and deleted |
SR 108 | Route 5 near Crows Landing to Route 99 | unbuilt |
SR 109 | Route 84 to Route 101 | full route; partly unbuilt |
SR 111 | Route 10 near Indio to Route 10 near Whitewater, passing near Palm Desert | partly relinquished and deleted |
SR 112 | Route 61 to Route 185 in San Lorenzo | full route; nothing |
SR 113 | Route 12 to Route 80 near Dixon; Route 5 near Woodland to Route 99 | nothing |
SR 114 | Route 101 in East Palo Alto to Route 84 | full route; nothing |
SR 115 | Route 8 southeasterly of Holtville to Route 78; Route 78 east of Brawley to Route 111 at Calipatria | full route; nothing |
SR 119 | Route 33 at Taft to Route 99 near Greenfield | full route; nothing |
SR 120 | Route 395 near Mono Lake to Route 6 near Benton Station | nothing |
SR 122 | Route 14 south of Palmdale to Route 138; Route 138 to Route 48; Route 48 northeasterly to Route 58 | full route; unbuilt |
SR 123 | Route 580 at San Pablo Avenue in Oakland to Route 80 in Richmond at Cutting Boulevard | full route; nothing |
SR 129 | Route 1 near Watsonville to Route 101 in San Benito County | full route; nothing |
SR 130 | Route 101 in San Jose to Route 33 near Patterson via the vicinity of Mount Hamilton | full route; partly unbuilt |
SR 131 | Route 101 to Tiburon | full route; nothing |
SR 135 | Route 101 near Los Alamos to Route 1 south of Orcutt; Route 1 near Orcutt to Route 101 in Santa Maria | full route; nothing |
SR 137 | Route 43 near Corcoran to Route 65 near Lindsay via Tulare | full route; nothing |
SR 142 | Route 90 near Brea to Route 71 near Chino; Route 71 near Chino to Route 30 near Upland | full route; partly unbuilt |
SR 143 | Route 99 near Elk Grove to Route 244 near Carmichael | full route; unbuilt |
SR 144 | Route 101 in Santa Barbara to Route 192 via Sycamore Canyon | full route; some relinquishment considered |
SR 146 | Pinnacles National Monument to Route 25 in Bear Valley | nothing |
SR 147 | Route 89 near Canyon Dam to Route 36 near Westwood | full route; nothing |
SR 150 | Route 101 near the Ventura-Santa Barbara county line to Route 126 near Santa Paula | full route; nothing |
SR 151 | Shasta Dam to Route 5 near Project City | full route; nothing |
SR 152 | Route 1 near Watsonville via Hecker Pass to Route 101 in Gilroy | nothing |
SR 153 | Route 49 near Coloma to Marshall's Monument | full route; nothing |
SR 155 | Route 99 near Delano to Route 178 near Isabella via Glennville | full route; nothing |
SR 158 | Route 395 near June Lake to Route 395 near Rush Creek, via the vicinity of June Lake, Silver Lake, and Grant Lake | full route; nothing |
SR 160 | Route 5 in Sacramento to Route 51 in Sacramento | relinquished and deleted |
SR 162 | Route 101 near Longvale to Route 5 near Willows via the vicinity of Covelo and Mendocino Pass; Route 5 near Willows to Route 45; Route 45 to Route 99 near Biggs; Route 99 near Richvale to Route 70 near Oroville; Route 70 near Oroville to Foreman Creek Road via Bidwell Bar Bridge | full route; partly unbuilt |
SR 164 | Route 605 near Pico Rivera to Route 210 near Pasadena | full route; partly unbuilt; partly relinquished and deleted |
SR 165 | Route 5 south of Los Banos to Route 99 near Turlock | full route; nothing |
SR 167 | Route 395 north of Mono Lake to the Nevada state line in the vicinity of the Pole Line Road | full route; nothing |
SR 168 | Route 395 at Big Pine to Route 266 at Oasis | nothing |
SR 169 | Route 101 near Klamath to Route 96 near Weitchpec | full route; partly unbuilt |
SR 170 | Los Angeles International Aiport to Route 90; Route 2 to Route 101 in Los Angeles | some relinquishment considered |
SR 172 | Route 36 at Mineral to Route 36 near Morgan Summit | full route; nothing |
SR 173 | Route 138 to Route 18 via Lake Arrowhead | full route; nothing |
SR 174 | Route 80 near Colfax to Route 20 near Grass Valley | full route; nothing |
SR 175 | Route 101 at Hopland to Route 29 near Lakeport; Route 29 near Kelseyville to Route 29 at Middletown | full route; nothing |
SR 177 | Route 10 near Desert Center to Route 62 near Granite Pass | full route; nothing |
SR 178 | The vicinity of the San Bernardino/Kern county line to Route 127; Route 127 to the Nevada state line in Pahrump Valley | partly unbuilt |
SR 179 | Route 80 near Vacaville to Route 128 near Berryessa Reservoir | full route; unbuilt |
SR 181 | Route 116 near Forestville to Route 101 | full route; unbuilt |
SR 182 | Route 395 near Bridgeport to the Nevada state line via Walker River | full route; nothing |
SR 185 | Route 92 in Hayward to Route 77 in Oakland | full route; nothing |
SR 186 | the international boundary near Algodones to Route 8 | full route; nothing |
SR 187 | Lincoln Boulevard to Route 10 via Venice Boulevard | full route; nothing |
SR 189 | Route 18 near Strawberry Peak to Route 173 near Lake Arrowhead via Strawberry Flat | full route; nothing |
SR 191 | Route 70 near Wicks Corner to Paradise | full route; nothing |
SR 192 | Route 154 near Santa Barbara to Route 150 near the Ventura-Santa Barbara county line via Foothill Boulevard | full route; nothing |
SR 193 | Route 65 near Lincoln to Route 80 near Newcastle; Route 49 near Cool to Route 49 near Placerville via Georgetown | full route; nothing |
SR 195 | Route 86 near Oasis to Route 111 near Mecca via Pierce Street and Avenue 66 | full route; possibly deleted |
SR 197 | Route 199 to Route 101 staying north of the Smith River | full route; nothing |
SR 198 | Route 101 near San Lucas to Route 33 at Coalinga; Route 33 near Oilfields to Route 5 near Oilfields | nothing |
SR 200 | Route 101 to Route 299 staying north of the Mad River | full route; nothing |
SR 201 | Route 99 near Kingsburg easterly to Route 63; Route 63 easterly to Route 245 | full route; nothing |
SR 202 | California Correctional Institution at Tehachapi to Route 58 near Tehachapi | full route; some relinquishment considered |
SR 204 | Route 58 to Route 99 near Bakersfield via Union Avenue and Golden State Avenue | full route; nothing |
SR 207 | Route 4 near Lake Alpine to the Mt. Reba Ski Area | full route; nothing |
SR 209 | Point Loma to Route 5 in San Diego | full route; relinquished and deleted |
SR 211 | Route 1 near Rockport to Route 101 near Fernbridge | full route; partly unbuilt |
SR 213 | 25th Street in San Pedro to Route 405 via Western Avenue | full route; nothing |
SR 216 | Visalia to Route 198 near Lemon Cove via Woodlake | full route; nothing |
SR 217 | Route 101 near Ellwood to the campus of the University of California at Santa Barbara; The campus of the University of California at Santa Barbara to Route 101 northwest of the City of Santa Barbara | full route; some relinquishment considered |
SR 218 | Route 1 to Route 68 via Canyon del Rey | full route; nothing |
SR 219 | Route 99 at Salida easterly to Route 108 | full route; nothing |
SR 220 | Route 84 on Ryer Island to Route 160 | full route; nothing |
SR 222 | Route 101 near Ukiah easterly to East Side Road in Talmage | full route; nothing |
SR 224 | Route 101 in Carpinteria to Carpinteria State Beach | full route; relinquished and deleted |
SR 225 | Route 101 near Santa Barbara to Route 101 near Montecito via the coast | full route; partly relinquished and deleted |
SR 227 | Route 1 south of Oceano to Route 101 in San Luis Obispo | full route; some relinquishment considered |
SR 228 | Route 86 approximately two and one-half miles southwest of Brawley to Route 86 approximately two miles west of Brawley | full route; unbuilt; deleted |
SR 229 | Route 58 near Santa Margarita to Route 41 near Creston | full route; relinquished and deleted |
SR 230 | Route 101 near the south city limits of San Francisco to Route 280 in San Francisco | full route; unbuilt |
SR 232 | Route 1 near El Rio to Route 118 near Saticoy | full route; nothing |
SR 233 | Route 152 to Route 99 at Chowchilla via Robertson Boulevard | full route; nothing |
SR 234 | Route 5 near French Camp to Route 99 | full route; unbuilt |
SR 235 | Route 5 to Route 99 north of the Calaveras River in Stockton | full route; unbuilt |
SR 236 | Route 9 in Boulder Creek to Route 9 near Waterman Gap via Governor's Camp in Big Basin Redwoods State Park | full route; nothing |
SR 238 | Route 880 to Route 61 near San Lorenzo | unbuilt |
SR 239 | Route 580 west of Tracy to Route 5 near Brentwood | full route; unbuilt |
SR 245 | Route 198 to Route 180 near General Grant Grove section of Kings Canyon National Park | full route; nothing |
SR 246 | Current west city limits of Lompoc to Route 1; Route 1 to Route 154 near Santa Ynez | full route; nothing |
SR 251 | Route 580 near Point San Quentin to Route 101 near Greenbrae; Route 101 near San Rafael to Route 1 near Point Reyes Station | full route; unbuilt |
SR 253 | Route 128 near Boonville to Route 101 near Ukiah | full route; nothing |
SR 254 | Route 101 near the Sylvandale interchange to Route 101 south of Stafford | full route; nothing |
SR 255 | Route 101 in Eureka to Route 101 in Arcata via the Humboldt Bay Bridge and the Samoa Peninsula | full route; nothing |
SR 257 | Route 34 to Route 101 near Ventura | full route; unbuilt |
SR 258 | Route 405 near Torrance to Route 101 near Hollywood | full route; unbuilt |
SR 260 | Route 61 in Alameda to Route 880 in Oakland near Seventh and Harrison Streets | full route; some relinquishment considered |
SR 263 | Route 3 near the north city limits of Yreka northeasterly to Route 96 near the confluence of the Shasta and Klamath Rivers | full route; nothing |
SR 265 | Route 97 in Weed northwesterly to Route 5 at North Weed Interchange | full route; nothing |
SR 266 | the Nevada state line easterly of Oasis to the Nevada state line northerly of Oasis | full route; nothing |
SR 269 | Route 33 at Avenal to Route 145 near Five Points | full route; nothing |
SR 270 | Route 395 south of Bridgeport to Bodie State Historic Park | full route; nothing |
SR 271 | Route 101 near Cummings to Route 101 near the Humboldt-Mendocino county line | full route; nothing |
SR 273 | Route 5 near Anderson to Route 299 in Redding; Route 299 in Redding to Route 5 northeast of Redding | full route; nothing |
SR 274 | Route 5 near Balboa Avenue to Route 15 | full route; relinquished and deleted |
SR 275 | Route 50 near Westacre Road west of Sacramento to the junction of Capitol Avenue and Ninth Street in Sacramento | full route; relinquished and deleted |
SR 276 | Route 198 near Three Rivers to Oak Grove | full route; unbuilt |
SR 281 | Route 29 south of Lakeport to Route 29 southerly of Konocti Bay and via the vicinity of Soda Bay | full route; partly unbuilt |
SR 283 | Route 101 south of Rio Dell to the north end of the Eel River Bridge and Overhead in Rio Dell | full route; nothing |
SR 284 | Route 70 at Chilcoot to Frenchman Reservoir | full route; nothing |
SR 285 | Route 70 on West Street in Portola northwesterly to the north city limits, then to Lake Davis via Humbug Canyon, and then easterly to Grizzly Reservoir via the south shore of the lake | full route; relinquished and deleted |
SR 299 | Route 395 near Alturas to the Nevada state line via Cedarville | nothing |
SR 380 | Route 1 near Pacifica to Route 280 in San Bruno | unbuilt |
It might also be interesting to look for routes that have been relinquished but weren't proposed as secondary. SR 160 from the south line of Sacramento north to I-5 is one example. -- SPUI ( talk - don't use sorted stub templates!) 00:28, 25 March 2006 (UTC)
Please see its talk page: Talk:California State Route 272. -- Geopgeop 06:44, 31 March 2006 (UTC)
All [[California State Route *]] articles have been created, not including the pre-1964 legislative routes. Let's finish up with the tweaking and expanding and redirecting! -- Geopgeop 07:54, 31 March 2006 (UTC)
If we used this PDF, it could have saved us some amount of work, considering it's from Caltrans itself (although this document is from 1995, and it's only meant as a quick reference document.) Actually, much of the Caltrans website is accessible to the public, no 403 errors so far. -- Geopgeop 07:29, 6 April 2006 (UTC)
Even though the completion list, Wikipedia:WikiProject California State Highways/Completion list is in our namespace, I wanted to make the list look better. So I created this, User:Geopgeop/WP:CASH completion list, down to Route 7 using data from the existing list. Also, the template used on that page, Template:casr list, may have its contents replaced by the text in User:Geopgeop/CASR list. If the rest of the project members like this, I may replace our old one with this, as I think the long strings of text, even if it's only part of our project, just makes things too hard to look at. -- Geopgeop 07:34, 16 April 2006 (UTC)
Okay, I have a complete working page now, but this table is 85 kilobytes long, divided into three sections. It MIGHT be editable by older browsers by sections, and I guess it's longer than I thought it would be. I removed the template, because if it's only in one page repeated many times, that's too much as well. Now here's the choice: long text that's hard to distinguish from each other, or repeating numbers that shows the name when hovered on, plus special names and shields? -- Geopgeop 08:42, 22 April 2006 (UTC)
While I'm not a fan of replacing Template:routeboxca2 with Template:Infobox CA Route (see above), the green browse box in the latter does make the article cleaner, and also replaces Template:Routeboxcamini. I do hear some proposals such as moving the browse box to the bottom of the article, but mainly for now I propose to modify routeboxca2 to include multiple routes (see California State Route 19 (164) vs. California State Route 74 (740)) and delete routeboxcamini in the process. (Funny, I helped make routeboxcamini in the first place when I asked for one a while back.) -- Geopgeop 14:53, 24 April 2006 (UTC)
As seeing that these move wars have yet to cease to stop, I'm offering a slight break from mainstream policy to try and settle this one. As someone who by nature is neutral in the dispute (I'm from Canada and heck, I don't even know what the official names of the major highways I drive on are) I think it might be easier to go to binding arbitration sans ArbCom as it seems like a lot of other efforts have failed to solve the dispute. If all parties involved are willing, I'd be more than happy to look at the evidence for naming in both syntax-es and find one that can be used. I know its not perfect but this has gone on long enough. If you feel there is someone more qualified yet still impartial to facilitate this, please let me know -- Tawker 18:56, 3 May 2006 (UTC)
Seeing SPUI is leery of the binding arbitration, how about we try something non binding but will hopefully open up the discussion. Can both of you please make arguments below, maybe it will help see each others position and maybe a compromise can be reached -- Tawker 19:54, 3 May 2006 (UTC)
My argument is much the same as Rschen's. Someone searching for these routes isn't going to search for just "State Route X" as they're not stupid. They will use a qualifier and putting the state name first is the most natural and I would argue the most used method. No one will search for it by parathesis and in this case I believe common names should definitely trump disabiguation if not for common sense then because the common names policy is older. And per common names policy the article should reside where most likely to be searched. Not to mention that the state of California isn't even clear on what it officially calls them per info presented both below and elsewhere. Yes they use State Route X more then anything, but they also use California State Route X and Route X. JohnnyBGood t c 23:35, 3 May 2006 (UTC)
The name is State Route X. For instance, there are 32400 matches for "State Route" vs. 119 matches for "California State Route" on the Caltrans website. Google News gives similar results of 84 (for California "State Route" - see the results to verify that they are about California) vs. 1 (for "California State Route"). As the name is "State Route X", disambiguation is to be done with parentheses. There is no such thing as "California State Route X" under our disambiguation conventions, just as there is no such thing as "UK politician John Smith" or "politician Jim Brown". There are various other arguments at Talk:State Route 2 (California), but it all boils down to "California State Route X" being a method of disambiguation that we don't use. -- SPUI ( T - C - RFC) 20:04, 3 May 2006 (UTC)
Um... they are known as "California State Routes." If you were sitting in a restaurant in Alabama (for example) you would call it "California State Route 55" since Alabama has state routes too. Since Wikipedia is written for an international audience then that is what you need to do. Disambiguation is not effective here since they are actually known as California State Routes. -- Rschen7754 ( talk - contribs) 23:07, 3 May 2006 (UTC)
Apologies for my presumptiousness in adding a subsection for myself; this is going to be kind of long. Against my better judgment, as I do feel this is likely to be a
waste of time, I'll wade in here with my own view. If nothing else, it's an opportunity to refine my argument in advance of the binding arbitration that's inevitably going to have to happen
is probably about to happen.
WP:D defines disambiguation as "the process of resolving ambiguity—the conflict that occurs when a term is closely associated with two or more different topics." In addition, the parenthentical method of disambiguation is used to differentiate article titles that would otherwise be identical. Now, it may appear as though I just said the same thing twice using different words, but there's actually a subtle difference between the two.
As Nohat notes, Wikipedia actually uses several different methods to "disambiguate" similarly named topics. For example, there are seven kings named Charles I on Wikipedia, and not one of them gets parentheses. There's an article at Watergate scandal, while Watergate (scandal) doesn't even exist as a redirect. Turning our attention back to California, we can see that Proposition 13 redirects to a disambiguated page… but it's disambiguated by the date, not the location: California Proposition 13 (1978). I could go on like this all day, but I think my point is made.
So why do some disambiguated articles get parentheses, and some don't? I believe there's a method to the madness.
In proper English usage, a parenthetical phrase within a sentence can be dropped and the sentence will still be gramatically correct. Likewise, an unwritten (as far as I know) but widely followed convention has evolved at Wikipedia that holds that parentheses are used for articles that, for lack of a better term, "wish" they could exist at the undisambiguated title. Probably the most well-known example of parenthetical disambiguation on the English Wikipedia is Georgia (country) vs. Georgia (U.S. state). The state in the American South and the country in the Caucasus have the misfortune to share exactly the same verbal identity. Atlanta is the capital of what? "Georgia," period, end of discussion. Tblisi is the capital of what? "Georgia," period, end of discussion. They get disambiguated with parentheses because each one has an equal, logical claim to the undisambiguated article title and neither one can have it. Just as dropping a parenthetical phrase from a sentence should allow the sentence to stand on its own, it should be possible to ignore a parenthetical disambiguation and have the remainder of the article title stand as a full, accurate, and logical descriptor of the article's subject matter.
Governor of California doesn't have the same kind of claim on the name " Governor" as either of the Georgias does on "Georgia," nor does Charles I of Spain have the same kind of claim on " Charles I." In both cases, the location is an important part of their verbal identity. Try answering the question: What is Arnold Schwarzenegger's job? "He's the governor." I assure you, that answer leaves a lot to be desired up here, where we have a governor of our own and it's sure as hell not Arnold Schwarzenegger. "He's the governor of California"—now we're getting somewhere.
(stay with me--this is the important part)
The practical application of this convention is that when parentheses are used to disambiguate articles, it should be at least somewhat plausible that someone looking for one of the disambiguated articles would go to the "root" page first. If someone's interested in the state of Georgia, is it believable that they might go to Georgia first? Absolutely. If someone's interested in the governor of California, is it believable that they might go to Governor first? No. They would go to "Governor of California." I challenge anyone anywhere to prove me wrong. Imagine a disambiguation page at Governor:
I hope we can all agree that this would be, to put it lightly, absurd. Is this not also the case with, say, " Route 8"? I can think of exactly three state (i.e., non-Interstate, non-U.S.) highways in the United States that someone who doesn't actually live in the state might search for at an undisambiguated title: Highway 1 in California, Highway A1A in Florida, and maybe Highway 17 in California. Everything else, jeez, you'd have to be crazy to seek out an article called "Route 8" except out of some weird listcrufty desire to find out how many locales have a highway designated "8."
I recognize that not everyone is going to see this "verbal identity" thing as I do, and for what it's worth I think the other side's arguments have considerable merit as well. This is merely my attempt at an explanation of my own thought process on the matter, and I hope it helps people understand it better. — phh ( t/ c) 01:23, 4 May 2006 (UTC)
I know I'm slow to respond here; it's difficult when this discussion is taking place in at least five different places.
My response to User:PHenry? Hurrah to the voice of reason! Each side in this dispute has made some valid points, but is too stubborn to see the points the other side has made. I think we've all gotten to the point where we can agree that the legal, official, and dare I say correct name for the road (not necessarily the article) is "State Route XX". People who call it "California State Route XX" are not wrong, they are performing a type of disambiguation that is conventional outside of Wikipedia.
Despite what SPUI says, people who call it "California State Route XX" do exist. SPUI and Polaron cited Google searches to attempt to disprove this. I found it hard to believe this data, so I performed a Google search of my own. I used Google News instead the main search engine because it would give me far fewer results, and an opportunity to actually study my data. Sure enough, I got 89 results for California "State Route" and 0 for "California state route", and of course the logical reaction is that this proves what SPUI's been saying. But not necessarily. Of those 89, 65 were from California news sources, who have no need to disambiguate within their own state, and 21 were from sources from other states, talking about state routes within those states, and just happened to mention the word "California" somewhere else in the article. One of the links was dead, leaving 2 news articles that simply used "state route" to refer to a road outside their own state. Interestingly, neither of these articles were about state routes in California, but let's pretend for a moment that they were. 2 out of 89 actually prove the point SPUI was trying to make. If we extrapolate that to the main data listed above, that would mean that less than 43,000 of the 1.9 million search results Polaron cites actually apply, compared to the 62,000 search results for "California state route".
If that didn't make sense, don't worry. My only point with that statistical breakdown is that citing a search result makes no sense. The fact is you have a large number of people right here on Wikipedia who are more than happy to call it "California State Route XX".
Whether or not putting the word "California" in front of that name is mere disambiguation is irrelevant because parentheses are not the only way to disambiguate on Wikipedia. Polaron says, "If look at the label "State Route X" as a proper noun then the parenthetical disambiguation would make more sense." Maybe, but maybe not. How does that explain the Charles I disambiguation that PHenry cited: Charles I of England, Charles I of France, Charles I of Spain, etc. It uses the disambiguation convention that people use outside of Wikipedia in everyday speech. What about Philadelphia (disambiguation) which leads to such articles as Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, Tennessee, and Philadelphia, Mississippi? There's plenty of precedent for using an outside convention taken from everyday speech, and that's what I feel should be done here.-- Northenglish 19:12, 13 May 2006 (UTC)
For disambiguating specific topic pages, several options are available: 1. When there is another word (such as Cheque instead of Check) or more complete name that is equally clear (such as Titan rocket), that should be used. 2. A disambiguating word or phrase can be added in parentheses. The word or phrase in parentheses should be: * the generic class that includes the topic (for example, Mercury (element), Seal (mammal)); or * the subject or context to which the topic applies (for example, Union (set theory), Inflation (economics)). 3. Rarely, an adjective describing the topic can be used, but it's usually better to rephrase the title to avoid parentheses.
This is in response to several comments made either below, on my talk page, or the discussion on AN/I reagarding User:Freakofnurture's move warring.
As I, and several others, have said several times before, we all agree that the correct, official, proper name is "State Route X". However, this is not and has never been the sole consideration for titling Wikipedia articles. Even if it were, we need to disambiguate, and as I have said just a few lines above, parentheses are not the only way to disambiguate on Wikipedia, WP:D is clear on this.
So why am I repeating myself? ... Well... I suppose just to introduce my other points. Freakofnature states on my talk page that my city, state disambiguation example above does not apply, because "the postal service uses a comma to disambiguate cities, making the resulting ordered pairs the de facto names for U.S. cities" (emphasis mine). But I remind you, just because something is de facto does not make it official; there are many, many people who would be extremely angry with you if you tried to claim English was the official language of the United States, even though its usage makes it so de facto. If these designations by the postal service were official, the article New York City would instead be located at New York, New York. It is not even located at its actual official name, City of New York. As for Freakofnurture about how we use the comma disambiguation even when the name is completely disambiguous, such as Prudhoe Bay, Alaska and Gun Barrel City, Texas, he's right, we do, just as we use disambiguation on articles like Washington State Route 539 and Washington State Route 302 Spur (or with parentheses if you prefer) even though as far as I can tell these are the only articles on Wikipedia about any State Route 539 or 302 Spur. We use disambiguation even when it is theoretically unnecessary for two reasons: first, because in practice it actually becomes necessary, and second, to maintain consistency. If anything, this makes the proposed state route disambiguation more similar to the city, state disambiguation, not less.
As per WP:D, we should disambiguate using the more complete name, not by overusing parentheses when a perfectly good rephrase will do. -- Northenglish 23:45, 18 May 2006 (UTC)
An argument from the other side is always that "would someone search 'state route 58 (california) with the parentheses'? Common names, c'mon!'. This has a number of faults to it, foremost being that the disambiguaion policy of wikipedia is already at odds with common names. I would not search " The X Files (film)," but i'd search " The X Files movie" or just " X-Files movie". Furthermore, there are already a number of parenthesis-disambiguated roads on wikipedia, such as Autoroute (Quebec). There are autoroute systems in more than one province in quebec, and it's not Quebec Autoroute -- that is a redirect, which is fine with me. Another example, which is rather related to roads, are rivers -- different rivers, with the same name, flowing in different places. The Rio Hondo is one of them. If i wanted to search for the Rio Hondo River in California, i'd probably search sometihng like "California Rio Hondo River" or "Rio Hondo River in California", not where the article currently resides, Rio Hondo (California). Same with the other Rio Hondo Rivers, like Rio Hondo (Belize). Many other rivers also use this disambiguation scheme, Such as Rio Grande. For further arguments about the "common names", if i were to search for the Courier font, i'd type in Courier font if i was new to wikipedia, not Courier (typeface). This is a clear example where the correct name is State Route X as defined by caltrans, and it is State Route X in the state of California becuse Washington also has their state highways marked as State Route X, so parentheses are used in this case, State Route X (California) and State Route X (Washington). Some may argue that Caltrans also uses California State Route X at times -- This is ONLY on the CalNEXUS page, listing the exit numbers. This is also being updated -- all the routes before SR-20 have been changed to State Route X instead of California State Route X. They were updated in April 2006, versus the other pages, which were updated in 2004. atanamir 20:52, 3 May 2006 (UTC)
Just a brief comment (from someone passing through) on the debate above about naming conventions for US State Highways. I was wondering why the "location" disambiguation style briefly mentioned above is not more widely adopted? Something like State Highway 17, California? Even failing this, why aren't lots of the red links above (the examples of other possible titles) redirects? If those who are arguing about search terms are serious about people searching for other terms, they would be making all possible combinations of disambiguation titles into redirects. This is not always great fun, but might help. An example is the redirects pointing at Thomas-François Dalibard. There are a total of 21 of them (permutations involving 'ç', the hyphen and an apostrophe), as you can see here: Talk:Thomas-François Dalibard. Carcharoth 12:43, 16 May 2006 (UTC)
Aah, arguments... (looks up)...sigh. Well, I have produced an image that would halt the tensions among the members of this project (for now...sigh again) and direct attention to a simple yet obvious mistake, just made in recent times. It has even gone uncorrected for some time now. Here is "State Route 80": Image:I-80 Chadbourne.jpg. Enjoy. -- Geopgeop 18:31, 7 June 2006 (UTC)
I believe this has been brought up before, in the form of a bad joke: WP:CASH, the shortcut for this WikiProject, is for California State Highways, not for money or making money. Now, to be serious: if anybody is looking for the shortcut to the WikiProject for money and related, Wikipedia:WikiProject Numismatics, the shortcut is WP:NUMIS. This notice might have to be posted on the top of the WikiProject page, if needed. -- Geopgeop 20:47, 19 June 2006 (UTC)
Just in case, I'm creating the exit list for California State Route 1 in my userspace at User:Geopgeop/Exit list of California State Route 1. While I'm not looking to add this to the SR 1 article right now, at least can someone doulbecheck the mileage work from the first concurrency with US 101 and onward? The total mileage and the exit number at Constellation Road are off about a couple of miles and I can't figure out why. -- Geopgeop 14:31, 23 July 2006 (UTC)
I'm new to all this highway project thing, so let me ask a stupid question: why aren't the CA highway articles standardized at all? -- physicq210 00:02, 31 July 2006 (UTC)
Your state is invited to participate in discussions for its highway naming convention. Please feel free to participate in this discussion. If you already have a convention that follows the State Name Type xx designation, it is possible to request an exemption as well. Thanks! -- Rschen7754 ( talk - contribs) 00:29, 4 September 2006 (UTC)
Hi! How about a "route map" of each State Highway? I've seen that in German Autobahn articles (e.g. Bundesautobahn_1) and it looks good. Is there anybody interested in drawing? -- 85.178.25.73 22:03, 12 September 2006 (UTC)
Is there a name for the fast lane to fast lane freeway interchange, such as the one at the intersection of the Long Beach Freeway and Santa Ana Freeway? Blank Verse 09:22, 8 October 2006 (UTC)
This page is an archive of past discussions. Do not edit the contents of this page. If you wish to start a new discussion or revive an old one, please do so on the current talk page. |
I'm in the process of adding external links to he highway guides I've created for many North American Highway. Someone suggested that I should let the highway community know I'm doing that so they don't think I'm link spamming. I've got detailed photos and text of lots of stuff along the highways in Canada, Mexico and USA. I'd welcome your thoughts on my project and the links. If folks want to use photos (I've got thousands of lovely photos) from my highway guides, feel free to use them but do give credit. Thanks, James Love James Love 13:45, 11 January 2006 (UTC)
Now someone ( 70.176.158.100 ( talk · contribs)) has added a link from every highway article to
I don't see any ads, presumably it's commercial. What do we do about this and "Mile By Mile"? Keep any of or all of these links? - Will Beback 08:58, 12 January 2006 (UTC)
I have put new SVG markers for California. I would like to encourage the use of the Caltrans term marker for the standalone sign "California 72", etc. and shield for just the overlay sign with the number "22 Long Beach". at least for the naming in templates The new markers are not perfect, but they are in a vector format that should be modifiable. The biggest problems are that the nose of the 3-digit ones are too pointed, routes that have a "1" in them are inappropriately spaced, and certain numbers need to be aligned by hand (see California 4). The 2-digit ones do meet spec, before anyone asks. Joydawg 18:38, 28 January 2006 (UTC)
Has anyone been working on junction templates? Creating smaller icons suitable for the junction box? The Major cities box on California State Route 1 looks bad. Any suggestions for a new design? Joydawg 18:38, 28 January 2006 (UTC)
I believe the current box is fine as is. We might consider limiting it to "Major" cities and remove the reference to the California Highway code and possibly shrinking the legend vertically. But other then that the current box should stay as is. JohnnyBGood 01:19, 7 March 2006 (UTC)
Anyone know why the SVG images aren't taking on routes like California State Route 150? Gateman1997 06:06, 3 February 2006 (UTC)
Anyone going to upload the SVG version of Image:CA-blank.gif? Templates that still use the old gif are now looking out of place. -- Geopgeop 15:46, 6 March 2006 (UTC)
I have just created Portal:U.S. Roads. If you have any feedback, please place it under "Portal" at Wikipedia talk:WikiProject U.S. Roads. Rt66lt 03:21, 11 February 2006 (UTC)
If a county road joins a state route, and the county road has an article of its own, can/should those be included in the infobox junction list, or is that reserved for just state and federal highways? (E.g., the north end of TUO J59 where it hits SR-108.) — RandallJones 02:09, 2 March 2006 (UTC)
This area is for discussion on possible changes to the CA routebox. Certain users, specifically SPUI have objections to the current userbox. Personally I think the current box is fine provided it is tweaked a little (specifically removing or shrinking the legend and ensuring that only MAJOR cities are listed). Please discuss your opinions on the matter here. Gateman1997 02:40, 7 March 2006 (UTC)
An example of what I'd like to see done would be as follows (and I'll use California State Route 17 as an example since we're all familiar with it. First I think the legend should be minimized or eliminated all together. It does admittedly add to cluttered look to the page in it's current state. Second I'd agree with putting the "CS&HC Sec. 317" link as a link from the "Route 17" indentifier currently above it as SPUI has in his infobox model, this would also consolidate and eliminate clutter. Third, can we move the KM distance measurement to the same line as the milage, this would eliminate an unneeded vertical line. Fourth would be for the extremely long routes like 1 and 99 to consolidate the infobox listing to major interchanges only. I believe these changes come to a nice middle ground between the current box and those who object to the current box. It would significantly shrink and consolidate the current box incorporating some of SPUIs design without giving much of the current box's content or any need to retag any existing pages. Gateman1997 08:36, 7 March 2006 (UTC)
How do people feel about the changes I've made to the box? I used Gateman's suggestions as a guide. The only thing left to do is to make the Route name in the box the link to the Calif Hwy code. I tried doing it but was not able to. If someone could assist I'd be grateful. JohnnyBGood 01:31, 8 March 2006 (UTC)
Calling a vote below. -- Rschen7754 ( talk - contribs) 23:09, 22 March 2006 (UTC)
For the information of all: Revert wars have broken out at the California and New York State Highway/route WikiProjects. Mass moves of pages and removal of routeboxes have occurred. -- Rschen7754 ( talk - contribs) 23:36, 10 March 2006 (UTC)
Wikipedia:Mediation Cabal/Cases/2006-03-12 U.S. Roads has been opened. -- Rschen7754 ( talk - contribs) 05:46, 12 March 2006 (UTC)
I am not going to go through the edit summaries to figure out who the editor is, but someone, probably associated with this WikiProject, can't spell San Bernardino correctly. I just corrected a bunch of internal links to San Bernardino, California and San Bernardino County, California in California state route articles that were originally spelled San Bernadino. Blank Verse 21:03, 13 March 2006 (UTC)
User:Joydawg has uploaded about 80+ highway signs but failed to put any source or license tag on them. I am turning this problem over to you fine folks at this project. Please make it go away. Here's a dynamically updated list (at the m:toolserver). Thanks! JesseW, the juggling janitor 01:34, 14 March 2006 (UTC)
I guess it was worth a shot at doing, but next time I'll ask, Rschen and SPUI.
By the way, Rschen's robot unabbreviated the "U.S. 101" links in the junction box. I now read "U.S. Route 101" in full. Fix it, thanks, and keep up the good work! -- Geopgeop 11:40, 19 March 2006 (UTC)
I strongly advise all parties to not use the term "vandalism" when making reverts. I think this is what is going wrong with some of the issues that are debated on CA roads. Y'all have a MedCab case, try to work it out. Thank you. User:Zscout370 (Return Fire) 06:14, 21 March 2006 (UTC)
As no one has created State Route 264's article as of yet, I would like to point out, as said on its new talk page, that it is a pre-1964 route only, and that I just want to know, should it redirect to a specific pre-1964 routes page, or redirect to its present-day State Route 223? -- Geopgeop 11:45, 22 March 2006 (UTC)
The result of the debate was Modify {{ routeboxca2}} per below. -- Rschen7754 ( talk - contribs) 18:45, 27 May 2006 (UTC)
As SPUI is intent on removing {{ routeboxca2}} and replacing it with his less-informative {{ Infobox CA Route}} regardless of consensus, this is a vote/ consensus-making page/ whatever you want to call it. Please vote Keep {{ routeboxca2}} as is, Modify {{ routeboxca2}} or Change to {{ Infobox CA Route}}. At the end of five days (minimum), the result of the discussion will be carried out. If consensus (70-80%) forms then that consensus will be taken. Otherwise, we will go with majority (since there has to be a infobox). -- Rschen7754 ( talk - contribs) 23:13, 22 March 2006 (UTC)
This vote seems premature, divisive, and generally ill-considered. I look back up the page a bit and everyone was making some effort to work out a mutually acceptable solution that everyone hated equally. Rather then trying to jam something down the throat of the world with a vote, can't everyone just take two valium and go back to working together eh? But while I'm here, I like the smaller more concise templete, otherwise it's creeping towards the horror of Bundesautobahn 1. - brenneman {L} 13:19, 23 March 2006 (UTC)
It's been a long time. Next time I'm on if noone objects I'll close debate with 75% consensus to make modifications but keep {{ routeboxca2}}. -- Rschen7754 ( talk - contribs) 02:55, 27 May 2006 (UTC)
[5] It might be interesting (not necessarily in an article) to compare the "secondary" routes with the ones that are being relinquished. -- SPUI ( talk - don't use sorted stub templates!) 22:21, 24 March 2006 (UTC)
# | Secondary piece | Notes (including current status) |
---|---|---|
SR 1 | Route 5 south of San Juan Capistrano to Route 10 in Santa Monica; Route 280 near the south boundary of the City and County of San Francisco to Route 101 near the approach to the Golden Gate Bridge in San Francisco | some relinquishment considered on south part |
SR 2 | Route 1 near Santa Monica to Route 101 in Los Angeles | partly relinquished and deleted |
SR 3 | Route 36 near Peanut to Route 299 near Douglas City; Route 5 near Yreka to Montague | nothing |
SR 9 | Route 1 near Santa Cruz to Route 17 near Los Gatos via Waterman Gap and Saratoga Gap and along the ridge between the San Lorenzo and Pescadero Creeks | full route; nothing |
SR 12 | Route 1 near Valley Ford to Route 116 in Sebastopol | unbuilt |
SR 13 | Route 61 near the Oakland International Airport to Route 580; Route 24 near Lake Temescal to Route 61 near Emeryville | mostly unbuilt; rest is surface road |
SR 14 | Route 1 north of the intersection of Sunset Boulevard northwest of Santa Monica to Route 5 near Tunnel Station | unbuilt |
SR 18 | Route 10 near San Bernardino to Route 30 | unbuilt |
SR 19 | Route 1 near Long Beach to Route 164 near Pico Rivera | full route; partly relinquished and deleted |
SR 22 | Route 1 near Long Beach to Studebaker Road | nothing |
SR 23 | Route 1 near Aliso Canyon to Route 101 | nothing |
SR 24 | Route 680 in Walnut Creek to Route 4 near Pittsburg | unbuilt |
SR 26 | Route 12 to Route 88 near Pioneer Station via Mokelumne Hill and West Point | nothing |
SR 33 | Route 166 in Maricopa to Route 5 near Oilfields via Coalinga; Route 5 to Route 152 via the vicinity of Mendota; Route 152 west of Los Banos to Route 5 near Santa Nella; Route 5 near Santa Nella to Route 140; Route 140 to Route 5 near Vernalis | nothing |
SR 34 | Route 1 between Point Mugu and the City of Oxnard to Route 118 near Somis | full route; nothing |
SR 35 | Route 17 at Summit Road to Route 92 via Skyline Boulevard; Route 92 to Route 280 at Bunker Hill Drive; Route 280 via Skyline Boulevard to Route 1 in San Francisco | full route; nothing |
SR 36 | Route 139 north of Susanville to Route 395 near Termo | nothing |
SR 37 | Route 251 near Nicasia to Route 101 near Novato | unbuilt |
SR 39 | Route 1 near Huntington Beach to Route 72 in La Habra via Beach Boulevard; Beach Boulevard to Harbor Boulevard in La Habra via Whittier Boulevard; Whittier Boulevard in La Habra to Route 2 via Harbor Boulevard to the vicinity of Fullerton Road, then to Azusa Avenue, Azusa Avenue to San Gabriel Canyon Road, San Gabriel Avenue southbound between Azusa Avenue and San Gabriel Canyon Road, and San Gabriel Canyon Road | full route; partly relinquished and deleted |
SR 43 | Route 119 to Route 46 in Wasco; Route 46 in Wasco to Route 99 near Selma | full route; nothing |
SR 45 | Route 113 near Knights Landing to Route 20 near Sycamore; Route 20 near Colusa to Route 32 near Hamilton City | full route; nothing |
SR 48 | Route 14 near Lancaster to Route 122 near the San Bernardino county line | full route; unbuilt |
SR 56 | Route 15 to Route 67 | unbuilt? |
SR 58 | Route 101 near Santa Margarita to Route 33; Route 33 to Route 5 | nothing |
SR 59 | Route 152 northerly to Route 99 near Merced; Route 99 near Merced to Snelling | full route; nothing |
SR 61 | Route 84 near Newark to Route 580 near Albany via the vicinity of San Leandro and Oakland International Airport and via Alameda | full route; partly unbuilt |
SR 64 | Route 1 near Malibu Beach to Route 5 south of San Fernando | full route; unbuilt |
SR 65 | Route 198 near Exeter to Route 80 near Roseville on a route along the easterly side of the San Joaquin Valley, which route may include all or portions of any existing state highway route | unbuilt |
SR 66 | Route 30 near San Dimas to Route 215 in San Bernardino | full route; some relinquishment considered |
SR 68 | Asilomar Beach State Park to Route 1 | nothing |
SR 72 | Route 39 to Atlantic Boulevard near the City of Los Angeles | full route; some relinquishment considered |
SR 74 | Route 111 in Palm Desert to Route 10 near Thousand Palms | unbuilt |
SR 75 | Route 5 to Route 282 via the Silver Strand | nothing |
SR 76 | Route 15 to Route 79 near Lake Henshaw | nothing |
SR 77 | Route 880 near 42nd Avenue to a connection with Route 580 near High Street in Oakland; Route 580 in Oakland to Route 24 near Lafayette | full route; mostly unbuilt |
SR 81 | Route 215 east of Riverside to Route 15 south of Devore | full route; unbuilt |
SR 82 | Route 101 near Blossom Hill Road in San Jose to Route 280 in San Francisco | full route; nothing |
SR 83 | Route 71 to Route 30 near Upland | full route; nothing |
SR 84 | Route 1 near San Gregorio to Route 280; Route 580 in Livermore to Route 4 near Brentwood; Route 12 at Rio Vista to Route 80 near Bryte via Ryer Island | some relinquishment considered |
SR 86 | Route 111 to Route 8 near El Centro; Route 8 near El Centro to Route 78 near Brawley | nothing |
SR 90 | Route 405 to Route 91 in Santa Ana Canyon passing near La Habra | mostly unbuilt; partly relinquished and deleted |
SR 91 | Route 1 near Hermosa Beach to Route 110 near Gardena | relinquished and deleted |
SR 92 | Route 238 to Route 580 near Castro Valley and Hayward | unbuilt |
SR 93 | Route 77 near Moraga to Route 24 near Orinda; Route 24 near Orinda to Route 80 in Richmond and Pinole; Route 80 to Route 580 in Richmond via San Pablo and north Richmond | full route; unbuilt |
SR 94 | Route 188 near Tecate to Route 8 west of Jacumba via Campo | nothing |
SR 96 | Route 299 near Willow Creek via the vicinity of Weitchpec to Route 5 near the confluence of the Shasta and Klamath Rivers | full route; nothing |
SR 98 | Route 8 near Coyote Wells to Route 8 via Calexico | full route; nothing |
SR 100 | the junction of Routes 1 and 17 to Route 1 west of the San Lorenzo River via the beach area in Santa Cruz | full route; unbuilt |
US 101 | Route 80 near Division Street in San Francisco to the junction of Route 1, Funston approach, and the approach to the Golden Gate Bridge in the Presidio of San Francisco | nothing |
SR 104 | Route 99 near Arno to Route 88 near Ione; Route 88 west of Martell to Route 88 southwest of Pine Grove via the vicinity of Sutter Creek. | full route; nothing |
SR 107 | Route 1 near Torrance to Route 405 near Lawndale | full route; partly relinquished and deleted |
SR 108 | Route 5 near Crows Landing to Route 99 | unbuilt |
SR 109 | Route 84 to Route 101 | full route; partly unbuilt |
SR 111 | Route 10 near Indio to Route 10 near Whitewater, passing near Palm Desert | partly relinquished and deleted |
SR 112 | Route 61 to Route 185 in San Lorenzo | full route; nothing |
SR 113 | Route 12 to Route 80 near Dixon; Route 5 near Woodland to Route 99 | nothing |
SR 114 | Route 101 in East Palo Alto to Route 84 | full route; nothing |
SR 115 | Route 8 southeasterly of Holtville to Route 78; Route 78 east of Brawley to Route 111 at Calipatria | full route; nothing |
SR 119 | Route 33 at Taft to Route 99 near Greenfield | full route; nothing |
SR 120 | Route 395 near Mono Lake to Route 6 near Benton Station | nothing |
SR 122 | Route 14 south of Palmdale to Route 138; Route 138 to Route 48; Route 48 northeasterly to Route 58 | full route; unbuilt |
SR 123 | Route 580 at San Pablo Avenue in Oakland to Route 80 in Richmond at Cutting Boulevard | full route; nothing |
SR 129 | Route 1 near Watsonville to Route 101 in San Benito County | full route; nothing |
SR 130 | Route 101 in San Jose to Route 33 near Patterson via the vicinity of Mount Hamilton | full route; partly unbuilt |
SR 131 | Route 101 to Tiburon | full route; nothing |
SR 135 | Route 101 near Los Alamos to Route 1 south of Orcutt; Route 1 near Orcutt to Route 101 in Santa Maria | full route; nothing |
SR 137 | Route 43 near Corcoran to Route 65 near Lindsay via Tulare | full route; nothing |
SR 142 | Route 90 near Brea to Route 71 near Chino; Route 71 near Chino to Route 30 near Upland | full route; partly unbuilt |
SR 143 | Route 99 near Elk Grove to Route 244 near Carmichael | full route; unbuilt |
SR 144 | Route 101 in Santa Barbara to Route 192 via Sycamore Canyon | full route; some relinquishment considered |
SR 146 | Pinnacles National Monument to Route 25 in Bear Valley | nothing |
SR 147 | Route 89 near Canyon Dam to Route 36 near Westwood | full route; nothing |
SR 150 | Route 101 near the Ventura-Santa Barbara county line to Route 126 near Santa Paula | full route; nothing |
SR 151 | Shasta Dam to Route 5 near Project City | full route; nothing |
SR 152 | Route 1 near Watsonville via Hecker Pass to Route 101 in Gilroy | nothing |
SR 153 | Route 49 near Coloma to Marshall's Monument | full route; nothing |
SR 155 | Route 99 near Delano to Route 178 near Isabella via Glennville | full route; nothing |
SR 158 | Route 395 near June Lake to Route 395 near Rush Creek, via the vicinity of June Lake, Silver Lake, and Grant Lake | full route; nothing |
SR 160 | Route 5 in Sacramento to Route 51 in Sacramento | relinquished and deleted |
SR 162 | Route 101 near Longvale to Route 5 near Willows via the vicinity of Covelo and Mendocino Pass; Route 5 near Willows to Route 45; Route 45 to Route 99 near Biggs; Route 99 near Richvale to Route 70 near Oroville; Route 70 near Oroville to Foreman Creek Road via Bidwell Bar Bridge | full route; partly unbuilt |
SR 164 | Route 605 near Pico Rivera to Route 210 near Pasadena | full route; partly unbuilt; partly relinquished and deleted |
SR 165 | Route 5 south of Los Banos to Route 99 near Turlock | full route; nothing |
SR 167 | Route 395 north of Mono Lake to the Nevada state line in the vicinity of the Pole Line Road | full route; nothing |
SR 168 | Route 395 at Big Pine to Route 266 at Oasis | nothing |
SR 169 | Route 101 near Klamath to Route 96 near Weitchpec | full route; partly unbuilt |
SR 170 | Los Angeles International Aiport to Route 90; Route 2 to Route 101 in Los Angeles | some relinquishment considered |
SR 172 | Route 36 at Mineral to Route 36 near Morgan Summit | full route; nothing |
SR 173 | Route 138 to Route 18 via Lake Arrowhead | full route; nothing |
SR 174 | Route 80 near Colfax to Route 20 near Grass Valley | full route; nothing |
SR 175 | Route 101 at Hopland to Route 29 near Lakeport; Route 29 near Kelseyville to Route 29 at Middletown | full route; nothing |
SR 177 | Route 10 near Desert Center to Route 62 near Granite Pass | full route; nothing |
SR 178 | The vicinity of the San Bernardino/Kern county line to Route 127; Route 127 to the Nevada state line in Pahrump Valley | partly unbuilt |
SR 179 | Route 80 near Vacaville to Route 128 near Berryessa Reservoir | full route; unbuilt |
SR 181 | Route 116 near Forestville to Route 101 | full route; unbuilt |
SR 182 | Route 395 near Bridgeport to the Nevada state line via Walker River | full route; nothing |
SR 185 | Route 92 in Hayward to Route 77 in Oakland | full route; nothing |
SR 186 | the international boundary near Algodones to Route 8 | full route; nothing |
SR 187 | Lincoln Boulevard to Route 10 via Venice Boulevard | full route; nothing |
SR 189 | Route 18 near Strawberry Peak to Route 173 near Lake Arrowhead via Strawberry Flat | full route; nothing |
SR 191 | Route 70 near Wicks Corner to Paradise | full route; nothing |
SR 192 | Route 154 near Santa Barbara to Route 150 near the Ventura-Santa Barbara county line via Foothill Boulevard | full route; nothing |
SR 193 | Route 65 near Lincoln to Route 80 near Newcastle; Route 49 near Cool to Route 49 near Placerville via Georgetown | full route; nothing |
SR 195 | Route 86 near Oasis to Route 111 near Mecca via Pierce Street and Avenue 66 | full route; possibly deleted |
SR 197 | Route 199 to Route 101 staying north of the Smith River | full route; nothing |
SR 198 | Route 101 near San Lucas to Route 33 at Coalinga; Route 33 near Oilfields to Route 5 near Oilfields | nothing |
SR 200 | Route 101 to Route 299 staying north of the Mad River | full route; nothing |
SR 201 | Route 99 near Kingsburg easterly to Route 63; Route 63 easterly to Route 245 | full route; nothing |
SR 202 | California Correctional Institution at Tehachapi to Route 58 near Tehachapi | full route; some relinquishment considered |
SR 204 | Route 58 to Route 99 near Bakersfield via Union Avenue and Golden State Avenue | full route; nothing |
SR 207 | Route 4 near Lake Alpine to the Mt. Reba Ski Area | full route; nothing |
SR 209 | Point Loma to Route 5 in San Diego | full route; relinquished and deleted |
SR 211 | Route 1 near Rockport to Route 101 near Fernbridge | full route; partly unbuilt |
SR 213 | 25th Street in San Pedro to Route 405 via Western Avenue | full route; nothing |
SR 216 | Visalia to Route 198 near Lemon Cove via Woodlake | full route; nothing |
SR 217 | Route 101 near Ellwood to the campus of the University of California at Santa Barbara; The campus of the University of California at Santa Barbara to Route 101 northwest of the City of Santa Barbara | full route; some relinquishment considered |
SR 218 | Route 1 to Route 68 via Canyon del Rey | full route; nothing |
SR 219 | Route 99 at Salida easterly to Route 108 | full route; nothing |
SR 220 | Route 84 on Ryer Island to Route 160 | full route; nothing |
SR 222 | Route 101 near Ukiah easterly to East Side Road in Talmage | full route; nothing |
SR 224 | Route 101 in Carpinteria to Carpinteria State Beach | full route; relinquished and deleted |
SR 225 | Route 101 near Santa Barbara to Route 101 near Montecito via the coast | full route; partly relinquished and deleted |
SR 227 | Route 1 south of Oceano to Route 101 in San Luis Obispo | full route; some relinquishment considered |
SR 228 | Route 86 approximately two and one-half miles southwest of Brawley to Route 86 approximately two miles west of Brawley | full route; unbuilt; deleted |
SR 229 | Route 58 near Santa Margarita to Route 41 near Creston | full route; relinquished and deleted |
SR 230 | Route 101 near the south city limits of San Francisco to Route 280 in San Francisco | full route; unbuilt |
SR 232 | Route 1 near El Rio to Route 118 near Saticoy | full route; nothing |
SR 233 | Route 152 to Route 99 at Chowchilla via Robertson Boulevard | full route; nothing |
SR 234 | Route 5 near French Camp to Route 99 | full route; unbuilt |
SR 235 | Route 5 to Route 99 north of the Calaveras River in Stockton | full route; unbuilt |
SR 236 | Route 9 in Boulder Creek to Route 9 near Waterman Gap via Governor's Camp in Big Basin Redwoods State Park | full route; nothing |
SR 238 | Route 880 to Route 61 near San Lorenzo | unbuilt |
SR 239 | Route 580 west of Tracy to Route 5 near Brentwood | full route; unbuilt |
SR 245 | Route 198 to Route 180 near General Grant Grove section of Kings Canyon National Park | full route; nothing |
SR 246 | Current west city limits of Lompoc to Route 1; Route 1 to Route 154 near Santa Ynez | full route; nothing |
SR 251 | Route 580 near Point San Quentin to Route 101 near Greenbrae; Route 101 near San Rafael to Route 1 near Point Reyes Station | full route; unbuilt |
SR 253 | Route 128 near Boonville to Route 101 near Ukiah | full route; nothing |
SR 254 | Route 101 near the Sylvandale interchange to Route 101 south of Stafford | full route; nothing |
SR 255 | Route 101 in Eureka to Route 101 in Arcata via the Humboldt Bay Bridge and the Samoa Peninsula | full route; nothing |
SR 257 | Route 34 to Route 101 near Ventura | full route; unbuilt |
SR 258 | Route 405 near Torrance to Route 101 near Hollywood | full route; unbuilt |
SR 260 | Route 61 in Alameda to Route 880 in Oakland near Seventh and Harrison Streets | full route; some relinquishment considered |
SR 263 | Route 3 near the north city limits of Yreka northeasterly to Route 96 near the confluence of the Shasta and Klamath Rivers | full route; nothing |
SR 265 | Route 97 in Weed northwesterly to Route 5 at North Weed Interchange | full route; nothing |
SR 266 | the Nevada state line easterly of Oasis to the Nevada state line northerly of Oasis | full route; nothing |
SR 269 | Route 33 at Avenal to Route 145 near Five Points | full route; nothing |
SR 270 | Route 395 south of Bridgeport to Bodie State Historic Park | full route; nothing |
SR 271 | Route 101 near Cummings to Route 101 near the Humboldt-Mendocino county line | full route; nothing |
SR 273 | Route 5 near Anderson to Route 299 in Redding; Route 299 in Redding to Route 5 northeast of Redding | full route; nothing |
SR 274 | Route 5 near Balboa Avenue to Route 15 | full route; relinquished and deleted |
SR 275 | Route 50 near Westacre Road west of Sacramento to the junction of Capitol Avenue and Ninth Street in Sacramento | full route; relinquished and deleted |
SR 276 | Route 198 near Three Rivers to Oak Grove | full route; unbuilt |
SR 281 | Route 29 south of Lakeport to Route 29 southerly of Konocti Bay and via the vicinity of Soda Bay | full route; partly unbuilt |
SR 283 | Route 101 south of Rio Dell to the north end of the Eel River Bridge and Overhead in Rio Dell | full route; nothing |
SR 284 | Route 70 at Chilcoot to Frenchman Reservoir | full route; nothing |
SR 285 | Route 70 on West Street in Portola northwesterly to the north city limits, then to Lake Davis via Humbug Canyon, and then easterly to Grizzly Reservoir via the south shore of the lake | full route; relinquished and deleted |
SR 299 | Route 395 near Alturas to the Nevada state line via Cedarville | nothing |
SR 380 | Route 1 near Pacifica to Route 280 in San Bruno | unbuilt |
It might also be interesting to look for routes that have been relinquished but weren't proposed as secondary. SR 160 from the south line of Sacramento north to I-5 is one example. -- SPUI ( talk - don't use sorted stub templates!) 00:28, 25 March 2006 (UTC)
Please see its talk page: Talk:California State Route 272. -- Geopgeop 06:44, 31 March 2006 (UTC)
All [[California State Route *]] articles have been created, not including the pre-1964 legislative routes. Let's finish up with the tweaking and expanding and redirecting! -- Geopgeop 07:54, 31 March 2006 (UTC)
If we used this PDF, it could have saved us some amount of work, considering it's from Caltrans itself (although this document is from 1995, and it's only meant as a quick reference document.) Actually, much of the Caltrans website is accessible to the public, no 403 errors so far. -- Geopgeop 07:29, 6 April 2006 (UTC)
Even though the completion list, Wikipedia:WikiProject California State Highways/Completion list is in our namespace, I wanted to make the list look better. So I created this, User:Geopgeop/WP:CASH completion list, down to Route 7 using data from the existing list. Also, the template used on that page, Template:casr list, may have its contents replaced by the text in User:Geopgeop/CASR list. If the rest of the project members like this, I may replace our old one with this, as I think the long strings of text, even if it's only part of our project, just makes things too hard to look at. -- Geopgeop 07:34, 16 April 2006 (UTC)
Okay, I have a complete working page now, but this table is 85 kilobytes long, divided into three sections. It MIGHT be editable by older browsers by sections, and I guess it's longer than I thought it would be. I removed the template, because if it's only in one page repeated many times, that's too much as well. Now here's the choice: long text that's hard to distinguish from each other, or repeating numbers that shows the name when hovered on, plus special names and shields? -- Geopgeop 08:42, 22 April 2006 (UTC)
While I'm not a fan of replacing Template:routeboxca2 with Template:Infobox CA Route (see above), the green browse box in the latter does make the article cleaner, and also replaces Template:Routeboxcamini. I do hear some proposals such as moving the browse box to the bottom of the article, but mainly for now I propose to modify routeboxca2 to include multiple routes (see California State Route 19 (164) vs. California State Route 74 (740)) and delete routeboxcamini in the process. (Funny, I helped make routeboxcamini in the first place when I asked for one a while back.) -- Geopgeop 14:53, 24 April 2006 (UTC)
As seeing that these move wars have yet to cease to stop, I'm offering a slight break from mainstream policy to try and settle this one. As someone who by nature is neutral in the dispute (I'm from Canada and heck, I don't even know what the official names of the major highways I drive on are) I think it might be easier to go to binding arbitration sans ArbCom as it seems like a lot of other efforts have failed to solve the dispute. If all parties involved are willing, I'd be more than happy to look at the evidence for naming in both syntax-es and find one that can be used. I know its not perfect but this has gone on long enough. If you feel there is someone more qualified yet still impartial to facilitate this, please let me know -- Tawker 18:56, 3 May 2006 (UTC)
Seeing SPUI is leery of the binding arbitration, how about we try something non binding but will hopefully open up the discussion. Can both of you please make arguments below, maybe it will help see each others position and maybe a compromise can be reached -- Tawker 19:54, 3 May 2006 (UTC)
My argument is much the same as Rschen's. Someone searching for these routes isn't going to search for just "State Route X" as they're not stupid. They will use a qualifier and putting the state name first is the most natural and I would argue the most used method. No one will search for it by parathesis and in this case I believe common names should definitely trump disabiguation if not for common sense then because the common names policy is older. And per common names policy the article should reside where most likely to be searched. Not to mention that the state of California isn't even clear on what it officially calls them per info presented both below and elsewhere. Yes they use State Route X more then anything, but they also use California State Route X and Route X. JohnnyBGood t c 23:35, 3 May 2006 (UTC)
The name is State Route X. For instance, there are 32400 matches for "State Route" vs. 119 matches for "California State Route" on the Caltrans website. Google News gives similar results of 84 (for California "State Route" - see the results to verify that they are about California) vs. 1 (for "California State Route"). As the name is "State Route X", disambiguation is to be done with parentheses. There is no such thing as "California State Route X" under our disambiguation conventions, just as there is no such thing as "UK politician John Smith" or "politician Jim Brown". There are various other arguments at Talk:State Route 2 (California), but it all boils down to "California State Route X" being a method of disambiguation that we don't use. -- SPUI ( T - C - RFC) 20:04, 3 May 2006 (UTC)
Um... they are known as "California State Routes." If you were sitting in a restaurant in Alabama (for example) you would call it "California State Route 55" since Alabama has state routes too. Since Wikipedia is written for an international audience then that is what you need to do. Disambiguation is not effective here since they are actually known as California State Routes. -- Rschen7754 ( talk - contribs) 23:07, 3 May 2006 (UTC)
Apologies for my presumptiousness in adding a subsection for myself; this is going to be kind of long. Against my better judgment, as I do feel this is likely to be a
waste of time, I'll wade in here with my own view. If nothing else, it's an opportunity to refine my argument in advance of the binding arbitration that's inevitably going to have to happen
is probably about to happen.
WP:D defines disambiguation as "the process of resolving ambiguity—the conflict that occurs when a term is closely associated with two or more different topics." In addition, the parenthentical method of disambiguation is used to differentiate article titles that would otherwise be identical. Now, it may appear as though I just said the same thing twice using different words, but there's actually a subtle difference between the two.
As Nohat notes, Wikipedia actually uses several different methods to "disambiguate" similarly named topics. For example, there are seven kings named Charles I on Wikipedia, and not one of them gets parentheses. There's an article at Watergate scandal, while Watergate (scandal) doesn't even exist as a redirect. Turning our attention back to California, we can see that Proposition 13 redirects to a disambiguated page… but it's disambiguated by the date, not the location: California Proposition 13 (1978). I could go on like this all day, but I think my point is made.
So why do some disambiguated articles get parentheses, and some don't? I believe there's a method to the madness.
In proper English usage, a parenthetical phrase within a sentence can be dropped and the sentence will still be gramatically correct. Likewise, an unwritten (as far as I know) but widely followed convention has evolved at Wikipedia that holds that parentheses are used for articles that, for lack of a better term, "wish" they could exist at the undisambiguated title. Probably the most well-known example of parenthetical disambiguation on the English Wikipedia is Georgia (country) vs. Georgia (U.S. state). The state in the American South and the country in the Caucasus have the misfortune to share exactly the same verbal identity. Atlanta is the capital of what? "Georgia," period, end of discussion. Tblisi is the capital of what? "Georgia," period, end of discussion. They get disambiguated with parentheses because each one has an equal, logical claim to the undisambiguated article title and neither one can have it. Just as dropping a parenthetical phrase from a sentence should allow the sentence to stand on its own, it should be possible to ignore a parenthetical disambiguation and have the remainder of the article title stand as a full, accurate, and logical descriptor of the article's subject matter.
Governor of California doesn't have the same kind of claim on the name " Governor" as either of the Georgias does on "Georgia," nor does Charles I of Spain have the same kind of claim on " Charles I." In both cases, the location is an important part of their verbal identity. Try answering the question: What is Arnold Schwarzenegger's job? "He's the governor." I assure you, that answer leaves a lot to be desired up here, where we have a governor of our own and it's sure as hell not Arnold Schwarzenegger. "He's the governor of California"—now we're getting somewhere.
(stay with me--this is the important part)
The practical application of this convention is that when parentheses are used to disambiguate articles, it should be at least somewhat plausible that someone looking for one of the disambiguated articles would go to the "root" page first. If someone's interested in the state of Georgia, is it believable that they might go to Georgia first? Absolutely. If someone's interested in the governor of California, is it believable that they might go to Governor first? No. They would go to "Governor of California." I challenge anyone anywhere to prove me wrong. Imagine a disambiguation page at Governor:
I hope we can all agree that this would be, to put it lightly, absurd. Is this not also the case with, say, " Route 8"? I can think of exactly three state (i.e., non-Interstate, non-U.S.) highways in the United States that someone who doesn't actually live in the state might search for at an undisambiguated title: Highway 1 in California, Highway A1A in Florida, and maybe Highway 17 in California. Everything else, jeez, you'd have to be crazy to seek out an article called "Route 8" except out of some weird listcrufty desire to find out how many locales have a highway designated "8."
I recognize that not everyone is going to see this "verbal identity" thing as I do, and for what it's worth I think the other side's arguments have considerable merit as well. This is merely my attempt at an explanation of my own thought process on the matter, and I hope it helps people understand it better. — phh ( t/ c) 01:23, 4 May 2006 (UTC)
I know I'm slow to respond here; it's difficult when this discussion is taking place in at least five different places.
My response to User:PHenry? Hurrah to the voice of reason! Each side in this dispute has made some valid points, but is too stubborn to see the points the other side has made. I think we've all gotten to the point where we can agree that the legal, official, and dare I say correct name for the road (not necessarily the article) is "State Route XX". People who call it "California State Route XX" are not wrong, they are performing a type of disambiguation that is conventional outside of Wikipedia.
Despite what SPUI says, people who call it "California State Route XX" do exist. SPUI and Polaron cited Google searches to attempt to disprove this. I found it hard to believe this data, so I performed a Google search of my own. I used Google News instead the main search engine because it would give me far fewer results, and an opportunity to actually study my data. Sure enough, I got 89 results for California "State Route" and 0 for "California state route", and of course the logical reaction is that this proves what SPUI's been saying. But not necessarily. Of those 89, 65 were from California news sources, who have no need to disambiguate within their own state, and 21 were from sources from other states, talking about state routes within those states, and just happened to mention the word "California" somewhere else in the article. One of the links was dead, leaving 2 news articles that simply used "state route" to refer to a road outside their own state. Interestingly, neither of these articles were about state routes in California, but let's pretend for a moment that they were. 2 out of 89 actually prove the point SPUI was trying to make. If we extrapolate that to the main data listed above, that would mean that less than 43,000 of the 1.9 million search results Polaron cites actually apply, compared to the 62,000 search results for "California state route".
If that didn't make sense, don't worry. My only point with that statistical breakdown is that citing a search result makes no sense. The fact is you have a large number of people right here on Wikipedia who are more than happy to call it "California State Route XX".
Whether or not putting the word "California" in front of that name is mere disambiguation is irrelevant because parentheses are not the only way to disambiguate on Wikipedia. Polaron says, "If look at the label "State Route X" as a proper noun then the parenthetical disambiguation would make more sense." Maybe, but maybe not. How does that explain the Charles I disambiguation that PHenry cited: Charles I of England, Charles I of France, Charles I of Spain, etc. It uses the disambiguation convention that people use outside of Wikipedia in everyday speech. What about Philadelphia (disambiguation) which leads to such articles as Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, Tennessee, and Philadelphia, Mississippi? There's plenty of precedent for using an outside convention taken from everyday speech, and that's what I feel should be done here.-- Northenglish 19:12, 13 May 2006 (UTC)
For disambiguating specific topic pages, several options are available: 1. When there is another word (such as Cheque instead of Check) or more complete name that is equally clear (such as Titan rocket), that should be used. 2. A disambiguating word or phrase can be added in parentheses. The word or phrase in parentheses should be: * the generic class that includes the topic (for example, Mercury (element), Seal (mammal)); or * the subject or context to which the topic applies (for example, Union (set theory), Inflation (economics)). 3. Rarely, an adjective describing the topic can be used, but it's usually better to rephrase the title to avoid parentheses.
This is in response to several comments made either below, on my talk page, or the discussion on AN/I reagarding User:Freakofnurture's move warring.
As I, and several others, have said several times before, we all agree that the correct, official, proper name is "State Route X". However, this is not and has never been the sole consideration for titling Wikipedia articles. Even if it were, we need to disambiguate, and as I have said just a few lines above, parentheses are not the only way to disambiguate on Wikipedia, WP:D is clear on this.
So why am I repeating myself? ... Well... I suppose just to introduce my other points. Freakofnature states on my talk page that my city, state disambiguation example above does not apply, because "the postal service uses a comma to disambiguate cities, making the resulting ordered pairs the de facto names for U.S. cities" (emphasis mine). But I remind you, just because something is de facto does not make it official; there are many, many people who would be extremely angry with you if you tried to claim English was the official language of the United States, even though its usage makes it so de facto. If these designations by the postal service were official, the article New York City would instead be located at New York, New York. It is not even located at its actual official name, City of New York. As for Freakofnurture about how we use the comma disambiguation even when the name is completely disambiguous, such as Prudhoe Bay, Alaska and Gun Barrel City, Texas, he's right, we do, just as we use disambiguation on articles like Washington State Route 539 and Washington State Route 302 Spur (or with parentheses if you prefer) even though as far as I can tell these are the only articles on Wikipedia about any State Route 539 or 302 Spur. We use disambiguation even when it is theoretically unnecessary for two reasons: first, because in practice it actually becomes necessary, and second, to maintain consistency. If anything, this makes the proposed state route disambiguation more similar to the city, state disambiguation, not less.
As per WP:D, we should disambiguate using the more complete name, not by overusing parentheses when a perfectly good rephrase will do. -- Northenglish 23:45, 18 May 2006 (UTC)
An argument from the other side is always that "would someone search 'state route 58 (california) with the parentheses'? Common names, c'mon!'. This has a number of faults to it, foremost being that the disambiguaion policy of wikipedia is already at odds with common names. I would not search " The X Files (film)," but i'd search " The X Files movie" or just " X-Files movie". Furthermore, there are already a number of parenthesis-disambiguated roads on wikipedia, such as Autoroute (Quebec). There are autoroute systems in more than one province in quebec, and it's not Quebec Autoroute -- that is a redirect, which is fine with me. Another example, which is rather related to roads, are rivers -- different rivers, with the same name, flowing in different places. The Rio Hondo is one of them. If i wanted to search for the Rio Hondo River in California, i'd probably search sometihng like "California Rio Hondo River" or "Rio Hondo River in California", not where the article currently resides, Rio Hondo (California). Same with the other Rio Hondo Rivers, like Rio Hondo (Belize). Many other rivers also use this disambiguation scheme, Such as Rio Grande. For further arguments about the "common names", if i were to search for the Courier font, i'd type in Courier font if i was new to wikipedia, not Courier (typeface). This is a clear example where the correct name is State Route X as defined by caltrans, and it is State Route X in the state of California becuse Washington also has their state highways marked as State Route X, so parentheses are used in this case, State Route X (California) and State Route X (Washington). Some may argue that Caltrans also uses California State Route X at times -- This is ONLY on the CalNEXUS page, listing the exit numbers. This is also being updated -- all the routes before SR-20 have been changed to State Route X instead of California State Route X. They were updated in April 2006, versus the other pages, which were updated in 2004. atanamir 20:52, 3 May 2006 (UTC)
Just a brief comment (from someone passing through) on the debate above about naming conventions for US State Highways. I was wondering why the "location" disambiguation style briefly mentioned above is not more widely adopted? Something like State Highway 17, California? Even failing this, why aren't lots of the red links above (the examples of other possible titles) redirects? If those who are arguing about search terms are serious about people searching for other terms, they would be making all possible combinations of disambiguation titles into redirects. This is not always great fun, but might help. An example is the redirects pointing at Thomas-François Dalibard. There are a total of 21 of them (permutations involving 'ç', the hyphen and an apostrophe), as you can see here: Talk:Thomas-François Dalibard. Carcharoth 12:43, 16 May 2006 (UTC)
Aah, arguments... (looks up)...sigh. Well, I have produced an image that would halt the tensions among the members of this project (for now...sigh again) and direct attention to a simple yet obvious mistake, just made in recent times. It has even gone uncorrected for some time now. Here is "State Route 80": Image:I-80 Chadbourne.jpg. Enjoy. -- Geopgeop 18:31, 7 June 2006 (UTC)
I believe this has been brought up before, in the form of a bad joke: WP:CASH, the shortcut for this WikiProject, is for California State Highways, not for money or making money. Now, to be serious: if anybody is looking for the shortcut to the WikiProject for money and related, Wikipedia:WikiProject Numismatics, the shortcut is WP:NUMIS. This notice might have to be posted on the top of the WikiProject page, if needed. -- Geopgeop 20:47, 19 June 2006 (UTC)
Just in case, I'm creating the exit list for California State Route 1 in my userspace at User:Geopgeop/Exit list of California State Route 1. While I'm not looking to add this to the SR 1 article right now, at least can someone doulbecheck the mileage work from the first concurrency with US 101 and onward? The total mileage and the exit number at Constellation Road are off about a couple of miles and I can't figure out why. -- Geopgeop 14:31, 23 July 2006 (UTC)
I'm new to all this highway project thing, so let me ask a stupid question: why aren't the CA highway articles standardized at all? -- physicq210 00:02, 31 July 2006 (UTC)
Your state is invited to participate in discussions for its highway naming convention. Please feel free to participate in this discussion. If you already have a convention that follows the State Name Type xx designation, it is possible to request an exemption as well. Thanks! -- Rschen7754 ( talk - contribs) 00:29, 4 September 2006 (UTC)
Hi! How about a "route map" of each State Highway? I've seen that in German Autobahn articles (e.g. Bundesautobahn_1) and it looks good. Is there anybody interested in drawing? -- 85.178.25.73 22:03, 12 September 2006 (UTC)
Is there a name for the fast lane to fast lane freeway interchange, such as the one at the intersection of the Long Beach Freeway and Santa Ana Freeway? Blank Verse 09:22, 8 October 2006 (UTC)