Indiana State Road 356
Indiana State Road 356 is made up of two separate parts in southern Indiana. The western segment is about 10 miles long, and the eastern segment is about 15 miles long, for a total of roughly 25 miles.
Western segment
- Starts at SR 57 in downtown Petersburg and heads east.
- Passes through the east side of Petersburg, then through rural Pike County (including Alford and Algiers).
- Crosses I-69 and ends at SR 257 northwest of Otwell.
Eastern segment
- Starts at US 31 west of Vienna and travels east.
- Crosses the Louisville and Indiana Railroad, then goes through Vienna.
- Goes through farmland in Scott County, reaches a four-way intersection with SR 3, and continues into Lexington.
- In Lexington, it briefly overlaps with SR 203.
- Then curves northeast into Jefferson County and ends at SR 62 just south of Hanover, near the SR 56 intersection.
Counties: Pike, Scott, and Jefferson.
History
- SR 356 was first designated in 1932 for the stretch between Lexington and SR 62.
- Between 1939 and 1941, it was extended west to US 31 in Vienna, and the western segment from SR 57 to SR 257 was added.
- Both segments were paved around 1966.
This page was last edited on 3 February 2026, at 13:41 (CET).