Drive 4th Street north through downtown St. Louis from Gratiot Street to Convention Plaza and Broadway past stadium, hotel, office, and convention district blocks.

City streets might not stretch for hundreds of miles or carry cross-country traffic, but they tell the story of a place better than any freeway can. These are the neighborhood arteries, the bustling boulevards, and the historic downtown corridors that shape the daily lives of those who live and work along them. Whether it's a short one-way street through a business district or a multi-lane avenue lined with stoplights and strip malls, city streets offer a unique look at the personality and pace of urban America.
At RealRoads.tv, we capture these routes in full detail—often from the same windshield-level view you’d experience while driving them. Our videos showcase a variety of urban environments: grid-planned streets in the Midwest, meandering colonial-era paths on the East Coast, wide sunlit avenues in the West, and everything in between. These drives include lesser-known but highly traveled connectors, scenic parkways, and even residential roads with historical or logistical importance.
City street drives are often packed with stoplights, signage, changing speed limits, and local character. From small towns with charming main streets to major metros with miles of commercial sprawl, we highlight the evolution and variety of city infrastructure across the U.S. Whether you're planning a visit, reminiscing about your hometown, or just curious how other cities manage their traffic flow, this category brings the local perspective into focus—one street at a time.

Drive 4th Street north through downtown St. Louis from Gratiot Street to Convention Plaza and Broadway past stadium, hotel, office, and convention district blocks.

Explore Beaverfork Road in Conway, Arkansas, a short suburban connector linking AR-25 with US-65 while skirting Beaverfork Lake, residential neighborhoods, and Conway’s rapidly growing west side.

Explore Old Highway 25 in Conway, Arkansas—a 1.8-mile historic alignment that reflects the evolution of AR-25 from a regional corridor to a local connector.

Take a short drive down Branson’s Yellow Route along James F. Epps Road. From Shepherd of the Hills Expressway to Roark Valley Road, this 1.2-mile connector passes schools, shopping, Stockstill Park, and Roark Creek—capturing both the community and scenic side of the Ozarks.

Explore Branson’s 3.5-mile Blue Route, a quick bypass from Roark Valley Road to Gretna Road that blends Ozark scenery with easy access to theaters, shops, and attractions—all without the congestion of 76 Country Boulevard.

Explore Branson’s Yellow Route — a three-mile drive from Green Mountain Road to Fall Creek Road. This connector bypasses the Strip, passing hotels, mini-golf, condos, neighborhoods, and wooded Ozark hills.

Drive 4 miles south along Beach Street in Fort Worth, Texas, as we explore this key arterial road connecting IH-820 to SH-121 through the city’s northeast neighborhoods and a brief stretch of Haltom City.

Take a quick drive along Barber Motorsports Parkway near Birmingham, Alabama—a scenic 2-mile route leading to the world-renowned Barber Motorsports Park and Museum. Discover what lies just off U.S. Route 78 in Leeds.

Take a 2-mile drive along Riverfront Drive in North Little Rock, Arkansas, following the Arkansas River past the 30Crossing project and into the heart of the city’s vibrant riverfront district.
![[Revisited] Historic Route 66: Springfield, Missouri](https://interstate411.us/wp-content/uploads/2025/06/h5nes8tj4j4maxresdefault.jpg)
Explore 7 miles of Historic Route 66 through Springfield, Missouri, from Glenstone Avenue to the I-44 interchange. Cruise past vintage neon, historic downtown, and classic Americana along the route where the “Mother Road” got its name.

Take a quick, scenic drive through the charming streets of Signal Mountain, Tennessee, as we travel just over a mile from U.S. Highway 127 to Signal Point Park — a gateway to breathtaking views of the Tennessee River Gorge and the Cumberland Plateau.

Take a short drive from Interstate 22 in Tupelo, Mississippi, along Veterans Memorial Boulevard to Elvis Presley’s Birthplace. This easy two-mile route passes through Veterans Park and a quiet neighborhood, ending at the King’s original home and museum complex. A quick, memorable detour for music lovers and travelers exploring Tupelo’s local heritage.