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Former state roads in Jacksonville, Florida (2 P) Pages in category "State roads in Jacksonville, Florida" The following 41 pages are in this category, out of 41 total.
The Interstate Highway System provided for in the Federal Aid Highway Act was a federally funded, non-toll system. According to Simon Hakim and Edwin Blackstone, "by 1989, [private] roads comprised just 4,657 miles (7,495 km) of the 3.8 million miles (6.1 million km) of streets and roads in the United States and only 2,695 miles (4,337 km) out of the 44,759 miles (72,033 km) of the interstate ...
On June 29, 2006, in what may serve as a "test case" for the privatization of other major highways in the United States, the state of Indiana received $3.8 billion from a foreign consortium made up of the Spanish construction firm Cintra and the Australian Macquarie Infrastructure Group, and in exchange the state ceded operation of the 157-mile ...
State Road 9B (SR 9B) is a 5.5-mile-long (8.9 km) state highway on the south side of Jacksonville, Florida. It is a freeway for its entire length. Its southern terminus is at County Road 2209 (CR 2209) in St. Johns County. Its northern terminus is at the southeast-most point on Interstate 295 (I-295).
Fruit Cove Road SR 13: SR 13 and Race Track Road former SR 13B [1] CR 16A: SR 13: SR 16: former SR 16 (current SR 16 was SR 16A) [1] CR 16A: Lewis Speedway SR 16: US 1: former SR 16A [1] inventoried by FDOT as CR 1333, but signed as CR 16A CR 203: SR A1A: St. Johns–Duval county line former SR 203 [1] CR 204: CR 13 and Old Brick Road US 1 near ...
The Orchard Pond Parkway, also known as County Road 0344 (CR 0344), is a controlled-access toll road, covering a distance of 5.2 miles (8.4 km) in the northern part of Leon County, Florida, acting as a partial bypass of Tallahassee and providing the only connection north of Interstate 10 between the northeastern and northwestern parts of the city.
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The purpose, rather than to standardize state abbreviations per se, was to make room in a line of no more than 23 characters for the city, the state, and the ZIP code. [4] Since 1963, only one state abbreviation has changed.