K-34 (Kansas highway)
K-34 highlighted in red | |||||||
| Route information | |||||||
| Maintained by KDOT | |||||||
| Length | 29.260 mi (47.089 km) | ||||||
| Existed | July 1, 1937–present | ||||||
| Major junctions | |||||||
| South end | US-160 / US-183 east of Ashland | ||||||
| US-54 in Bucklin | |||||||
| North end | US-400 north of Bucklin | ||||||
| Location | |||||||
| Country | United States | ||||||
| State | Kansas | ||||||
| Counties | Clark, Ford | ||||||
| Highway system | |||||||
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K-34 is a 29.26-mile-long (47.09 km) state highway in southwestern Kansas that runs from U.S. Route 160 (US-160) and US-183 near Ashland to US-400 near Bucklin. It is one of the lesser-traveled highways in the state and is not part of the National Highway System. It is a two-lane road for its entire length.
K-34 was originally designated in southeastern Kansas, running through Neodesha. The designation was moved to southwestern Kansas in 1937, replacing the old K-41 designation. The highway formerly ran to the Oklahoma border via a concurrency with US-183. The designation was shortened in 1993 to its current routing.