State Road 115 | ||||
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Route information | ||||
Maintained by FDOT | ||||
Length | 37.199 mi[1] (59.866 km) | |||
Existed | 1945–present | |||
Major junctions | ||||
South end | US 1 in Jacksonville | |||
I-95 in Jacksonville I-295 in Jacksonville | ||||
North end | US 1 / US 23 in Callahan | |||
Location | ||||
Country | United States | |||
State | Florida | |||
Highway system | ||||
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State Road 115 (SR 115) is a state highway in the U.S. state of Florida.
History
SR 115 was built in separately named segments by the Jacksonville Expressway Authority. The land for the southern section, south of Beach Boulevard, was donated by Jacksonville's Skinner family. Three siblings – Bryant, Dottie and Richard Jr. – inherited thousands of acres in southeast Duval County and needed roads through the area to access their property and facilitate development. The construction of Southside Boulevard was key to the growth of the south side of Jacksonville.[2][3]
Route description
Southern segment
SR 115 runs north as Southside Blvd from its terminus at US 1, providing access to The Avenues. Right afterwards, the road goes through the largely residential and commercial south side of Jacksonville with crossings at Baymeadows Road (SR 152), Butler Boulevard (SR 202), Beach Boulevard (US 90), and Atlantic Boulevard (SR 10). At the Southside Connector (SR 113), SR 115 turns sharply to become the Arlington Expressway, heading west into downtown via the Mathews Bridge, where it turns north, becoming the Martin Luther King Jr. Parkway (former Haines Street Expressway), and again turning to the west along with the MLK Parkway (now the former 20th Street Expressway), before reaching I-95. The portion of the MLK Parkway is signed only as US 1 Alt. and US 1, not SR 115.
The southern segment serves primarily as a conduit between the residential neighborhoods of Southside and the commercialized areas farther north and downtown. Heavy traffic is commonplace along most of the road. To improve traffic flow, especially during rush-hours, the FDOT is planning a major redesign of the intersections just north and south of the interchange with SR 202 (Butler Boulevard) to be carried out by the mid-2020s.[4][5]
Northern segment
Approximately two miles of SR 115 run unsigned along I-95. The second section of signed road runs from the junction of I-95 and Norwood Avenue (SR 117) through northwest Jacksonville, passing through the Lake Forest section of the city before crossing a bridge over the Ribault River, where it enters Riverview and then crosses another bridge over the Trout River into the eastern edge of the College Park neighborhood, before entering the Garden City neighborhood at the intersection with Florida State Road 104. FL 115 continues through Garden City, until the interchange with I-295 and runs between the Forest Trails and the territory near the Jacksonville International Airport before crossing a bridge over the Thomas Creek where it crosses the Duval-Nassau County Line, and ending at New Kings Rd (US 1/US 23) in Callahan.
The northern segment has the same function as the southern, except that it is built to lower standards and carries traffic south from the densely populated areas northwest of downtown into the heart of the city. Northbound, it is also an alternative to US 1/US 23 as a route to Callahan.
Exit list
County | Location | mi[1] | km | Destinations | Notes | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Duval | Jacksonville | 0.000 | 0.000 | US 1 (Philips Highway / SR 5) to I-95 | Southern terminus | ||
1.63 | 2.62 | I-95 south (SR 9) – Daytona Beach | no northbound exit; I-95 exit 340 | ||||
2.759 | 4.440 | SR 152 (Baymeadows Road) to I-95 | |||||
4.92 | 7.92 | SR 202 (Butler Boulevard) – University of North Florida | Interchange | ||||
7.51 | 12.09 | US 90 (Beach Boulevard / SR 212) – Florida State College South Campus, Jax Beaches | Interchange; south end of US 90 Alt. concurrency | ||||
9.572 | 15.405 | US 90 Alt. west / SR 10 (Atlantic Boulevard) | North end of US 90 Alt. concurrency | ||||
9.78 | 15.74 | Frontage Road | Northbound exit only; to CB Square shopping center | ||||
9.971 | 16.047 | To SR 10 (Atlantic Boulevard) – Beaches (SR 10A east) | South end of SR 10A concurrency; south end of freeway | ||||
10.01 | 16.11 | SR 113 north (Southside Connector) to I-295 | Interchange; southern terminus of SR 113 | ||||
see Arlington Expressway (mile 5.94-1.24) | |||||||
14.72[6] | 23.69 | To I-95 – Downtown Jacksonville, Sports Complex (SR 10A west / SR 115A south / SR 139 north) | North end of SR 10A concurrency | ||||
see MLK Parkway (mile 0.11-3.96) | |||||||
18.51[6] | 29.79 | I-95 south (SR 9 / SR 15) / US 1 north (M.L. King Jr. Parkway / SR 15) – Daytona Beach, Amtrak | North end of US 1 concurrency; south end of I-95/SR 9 concurrency; I-95 exit 354 | ||||
19.02 | 30.61 | Golfair Boulevard (SR 122) | I-95 exit 355 | ||||
20.31[6] | 32.69 | I-95 north (SR 9) / SR 117 south (Norwood Avenue) – International Airport, Savannah | North end of I-95/SR 9 concurrency; north end of freeway; I-95 exit 356 | ||||
21.233 | 34.171 | SR 111 (Edgewood Avenue) to I-95 | |||||
24.949 | 40.152 | SR 104 (Dunn Avenue) | |||||
26.17 | 42.12 | I-295 (SR 9A) – Daytona Beach, Savannah | I-295 exit 32 | ||||
Nassau | Callahan | 37.199 | 59.866 | US 1 / US 23 (SR 15) | |||
1.000 mi = 1.609 km; 1.000 km = 0.621 mi
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SR 115A
State Road 115A | |
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Location | Jacksonville |
Two unsigned sections of State Road 115A (SR 115A) exist in close proximity to each other east of Downtown Jacksonville. One is the approximately 500 feet (150 m) stub of MLK Parkway south of SR 115; the other carries US 1 Alt. for 1.254 miles (2.018 km)[1] between the Hart Bridge (SR 228) and MLK Parkway (SR 115). Some sources (including FDOT's straight line diagrams[1]) indicate a third SR 115A on the ramps connecting SR 115 to I-95 at exit 340.
References
- 1 2 3 4 FDOT straight line diagrams Archived March 6, 2014, at the Wayback Machine, accessed March 2014
- ↑ Patton, Charlie: "Picture this: Deerwood, deserted" Florida Times-Union, February 21, 2003
- ↑ Patton, Charlie: "Piney Woods Miracle" Florida Times-Union, November 23, 2000
- ↑ "Project Details".
- ↑ "Project Details".
- 1 2 3 FDOT GIS data Archived 2008-12-11 at the Wayback Machine, accessed January 2014