Virginia State Route 130 (SR 130) is a primary state highway in the U.S. state of Virginia. The state highway runs 34.69 miles (55.83 km) from U.S. Route 11 (US 11) at Natural Bridge east to SR 669 and SR 670 east of US 29 near Madison Heights. SR 130 runs concurrently with US 501 from Glasgow through the James River gorge through the Blue Ridge Mountains, connecting eastern Rockbridge County with western and southern Amherst County near Lynchburg.

State Route 130 marker
State Route 130
Route information
Maintained by VDOT
Length34.69 mi[1] (55.83 km)
Existed1933–present
Tourist
routes
Virginia Byway
Major junctions
West end US 11 at Natural Bridge
Major intersections US 501 in Glasgow
US 29 near Madison Heights
East end SR 669 / SR 670 near Madison Heights
Location
CountryUnited States
StateVirginia
CountiesRockbridge, Amherst
Highway system
SR 129 SR 131

SR 130 is a Virginia Byway west of US 29 Business near Madison Heights.

Route description

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View west along SR 130 at US 501 near Glasgow

SR 130 begins at US 11 (Lee Highway) in the hamlet of Natural Bridge next to Natural Bridge Hotel. The state highway heads east as two-lane undivided Wert Faulkner Highway, which provides access to the visitor center that serves the underside of the National Historic Landmark. At Natural Bridge Station, SR 130 passes by the southern end of Sallings Mountain and under Norfolk Southern Railway's Roanoke District. The state highway passes through the town of Glasgow, where the highway has an at-grade intersection with a rail connector between the Roanoke District and CSX's James River Subdivision. SR 130 exits Glasgow by crossing the Maury River then meets US 501 (Glasgow Highway) at an intersection east of the river.[1][2]

SR 130 and US 501 follow the Maury River south to its mouth at the James River, then parallel the James River and the James River Subdivision rail line east through the river's gorge through the Blue Ridge Mountains. Shortly before crossing the Rockbridge–Amherst line, the two highways leave the level of the river and have a winding crossing of the mountain. Shortly after the highways return to water level and the CSX rail line crosses to the south side of the river, US 501 crosses the James River into Bedford County to head toward Lynchburg. SR 130 continues east as Elon Road, which veers away from the river and has a connecting ramp interchange with the Blue Ridge Parkway. The state highway crosses the Pedlar River and passes through a gap in Tobacco Row Mountain before reaching the hamlet of Elon.[1][2]

SR 130 continues southeast to the northern fringe of Madison Heights, where the highway crosses over Norfolk Southern's Washington District rail line and intersects US 29 Business (Amherst Highway). The state highway widens to four lanes at the intersection and becomes a divided highway, Amelon Expressway, at SR 669 (Amelon Road). SR 130 has an intersection with SR 677 (Dixie Airport Road) just west of its diamond interchange with US 29. East of the interchange, the state highway becomes a two-lane undivided road to its eastern terminus at the intersection of SR 669 (Glade Road) and SR 670 (Izaak Walton Road).[1][2]

Major intersections

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CountyLocationmi[1]kmDestinationsNotes
RockbridgeNatural Bridge0.000.00  
 
US 11 (South Lee Highway) to I-81 – Lexington, Staunton, Roanoke
Western terminus
6.3010.14 
 
US 501 north (Glasgow Highway) – Buena Vista
West end of concurrency with US 501
Amherst12.6720.39 
 
US 501 south – Big Island, Lynchburg
East end of concurrency with US 501
  Blue Ridge ParkwayInterchange
  
 
SR 635 (Buffalo Springs Turnpike) to US 60 – Pedlar Mills, Pleasant View
Madison Heights32.1651.76 
 
US 29 Bus. (South Amherst Highway) – Amherst, Lynchburg
34.2155.06  US 29 – Amherst, DanvilleDiamond interchange
34.6955.83   SR 669 / SR 670 (Izaak Walton Road / Glade Road)Eastern terminus
1.000 mi = 1.609 km; 1.000 km = 0.621 mi

References

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  1. ^ a b c d e "2010 Traffic Data". Virginia Department of Transportation. 2010. Retrieved 2011-11-02.
  2. ^ a b c "Virginia State Route 130" (Map). Google Maps. Retrieved 2011-11-02.
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KML is from Wikidata
none Spurs of SR 14
1923–1928
SR 142 >
SR 316 District 3 State Routes
1928–1933
SR 318 >
SR 800 District 8 State Routes
1928–1933
SR 802 >