Mfs moved west and decided street names werent useful, I guess. Youll never see a city in the eastern half/third of the US with a “226th Street” but most major cities west of the Mississippi have a ridiculous lack of street names. Just mundane shit instead
I knew it. Utah really, really loves naming their streets like this.
If anyone’s in doubt, you can see it for yourself. Open an online map and zoom in on any city, or even town, in Utah. Just pick one at random - they pretty much all have streets with a name of some number + some direction. It’s honestly kinda of impressive.
Editing before comments inevitably arise:
I’m not saying all streets are named this way, but that streets of this naming scheme exist in almost every city/town. It’s an important distinction, and the existence of other streets makes the regularity of the number + direction schema no less impressive.
How do I parse that address 1909 north 25 east
Mfs moved west and decided street names werent useful, I guess. Youll never see a city in the eastern half/third of the US with a “226th Street” but most major cities west of the Mississippi have a ridiculous lack of street names. Just mundane shit instead
Artillery coordinates?
https://www.zillow.com/homedetails/1909-N-25-E-Layton-UT-84041/68433398_zpid/
I knew it. Utah really, really loves naming their streets like this.
If anyone’s in doubt, you can see it for yourself. Open an online map and zoom in on any city, or even town, in Utah. Just pick one at random - they pretty much all have streets with a name of some number + some direction. It’s honestly kinda of impressive.
Editing before comments inevitably arise:
I’m not saying all streets are named this way, but that streets of this naming scheme exist in almost every city/town. It’s an important distinction, and the existence of other streets makes the regularity of the number + direction schema no less impressive.
You go weast