On Wed, 22 Nov 2000 09:06:35 -0600 Brian Densmore writes: > I was using 35th as a reference. Look at a KC map sometime. You > have > streets like 35th Terrace, it runs for two blocks and stops. It then > picks > up again three blocks later, but it is one or more blocks North or > South of Well, the name itself is a clue to this. Terraces, Places, Plazas, Courts, etc. are streets secondary to Streets and Avenues. As a general rule, you can expect 35th Terr, Pl, Plz, or Ct to fall =between= 35th and 36th Street/Ave, with the specific order of the secondaries varying with municipality, neighborhood developer, and the phase of the moon when the signs went up. There are always some odd critters, like Southwest Boulevard, but the name is again not one, but =two= clues: "Boulevard" tells you that it isn't likely going in a straight line, and "Southwest" gets more specific about where it does go. > where it was. KC is littered with streets like that. One minute > you're on > one street and then ... BAM ... you're on another street and you > haven't > taken any turns or even changed lanes. It's like my old college in This is true, but it happens mostly in the 'burbs, where only the major arteries pretend to follow the cardinal compass points, and the rest curve about, seemingly at random. (Even there, the mile/half-mile section roads are well-defined and don't change names on you.) Downtown, the streets go pretty much straight, and are in order, too, which made the original complaint all the more odd IMO. > back. No, I avoid metro KC whenever possible, even though now I > gotten used > to most of the strange streets. ________________________________________________________________ GET INTERNET ACCESS FROM JUNO! Juno offers FREE or PREMIUM Internet access for less! Join Juno today! For your FREE software, visit: http://dl.www.juno.com/get/tagj.