Route information | ||||
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Maintained by MDOT | ||||
Length | 105.377 mi[1] (169.588 km) | |||
Existed | 1930[2][3]–present | |||
Major junctions | ||||
West end | US 131 near Rockford | |||
East end | M-15 near Otisville | |||
Location | ||||
Country | United States | |||
State | Michigan | |||
Counties | Kent, Montcalm, Gratiot, Saginaw, Genesee | |||
Highway system | ||||
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M-57 is an east–west state trunkline highway in the US state of Michigan. The 105.377-mile (169.588 km) highway connects US Highway 131 (US 131) near Rockford on the west end to M-15 near Otisville in the Lower Peninsula. In between, the mostly rural highway passes through farmland and connects several highways and smaller towns together. Three of these highways are freeways: US 131, US 127 and Interstate 75 (I-75). Along the way, between 3,700 and 22,300 vehicles use the highway daily.
The current highway that bears the M-57 moniker is the second to do so. The first is now M-75 in the Northern Lower Peninsula. This second highway was designated in the 1930s along a different, but parallel, routing. The first major changes shifted that routing southward to the current corridor in stages. Through additional extensions and truncations, the modern routing was formed by the 1970s.