Florida State Road 23

State Road 23 (SR 23), also known as the First Coast Expressway, is an outer bypass around the southwest quadrant of Jacksonville. As of 2018, the first phase has been built, linking the Middleburg area to Interstate 10 near Whitehouse.

State Road 23
Branan Field Road
Cecil Commerce Center Parkway
First Coast Expressway
SR 23 highlighted in red
Route information
Maintained by FDOT
Length11.395 mi[1] (18.338 km)
Major junctions
South end SR 21 (Blanding Blvd.) near Middleburg
North end I-10 / US 90 in Jacksonville
Location
CountiesClay, Duval
Highway system
US 23SR 24

The ultimate plan is for a $1.8 billion, 46.5 miles (74.8 km), four-lane toll expressway continuing southeast to Green Cove Springs and east to Interstate 95 near the World Golf Village, to be constructed in two phases. Construction of the section from Middleburg to just north of SR 16 near Green Cove Springs began in 2019 and is expected to wrap up in the middle of the 2020s. Construction of the final section, from near Green Cove Springs and across the St. Johns River then continuing east through St. Johns county to I-95 is expected to begin in 2023 and be completed around the end of the 2020s decade.

Route description

History

Bridge carrying Plantation Oaks Boulevard over the future expressway in OakLeaf Plantation, built 2010

The plans for connecting I-10 to SR 21 (Blanding Blvd) date back to 1979. SR 23 was originally planned as a toll road by Florida's Turnpike Enterprise to meet those plans, but those plans fell through.

The Jacksonville Transportation Authority and Clay County worked together to connect Branan Field Road in Clay County and Chaffee Road in Duval County. By 2003, the Duval County section was open, and connected south to Branan Field Road in Clay County. By late 2004, the Clay County section was added. Currently the entire route stretches from I-10 in Jacksonville to a point on Branan Field Road north of Middleburg.

The project was formerly known as the First Coast Outer Beltway and the Branan Field-Chaffee Expressway, but its current name is the First Coast Expressway.

Future

The beltway when finished will contain 17 interchanges and a new bridge across the St. Johns River near the current two-lane Shands Bridge.[2]

Funding

Funding for the $1.8 billion project will be competitively bid as a Public Private Partnership (PPP) opportunity for private sector businesses. By using a PPP and innovative contracting solutions, the project will be built years earlier than with traditional contracting methods. The awarded contractor(s) will serve as the concessionaire to design, build, finance, operate and maintain the beltway. The Florida Department of Transportation is currently engaging private contractors in a competitive bidding process. The I-595 Corridor Express PPP with I-595 Express LLC was the first of its kind in Florida, opening years ahead of schedule.[3] The beltway is the largest infrastructure project in Florida History.

In early 2011 the Florida Department of Transportation (FDOT) abandoned the plan to find a private company to build the entire 46.6 mile beltway and just focus on building the 15 mile section between I-10 and SR 21 (Blanding Blvd). This section is partly built and would need flyovers built and widening done for the expressway to be complete. It is expected to cost around $291 million and would be a tollway.[4]

In August 2011, the FDOT announced that the Florida's Turnpike Enterprise will be taking on the $291 million project of turning the 15-mile stretch into a tollway. Construction started on September 10, 2012 and set to be completed in fall 2018.

Construction on the second phase of the expressway, from SR 21 (Blanding Blvd) to Green Cove Springs, is expected to start around January 2019. The third and final phase of the project, which includes expansion of the Shands Bridge, is anticipated to start in 2023.[5]

Tolling

According to the Florida Department of Transportation (FDOT), all tolls will be done electronically and compatible with SunPass used in other parts of the state with no toll booths. There will be two exceptions to the tollroad. The 3-mile (4.8 km) section between I-10 and New World Avenue will not be tolled to help promote growth in the Cecil Commerce Center. Also people living around the Shands Bridge area will be exempt from tolls on the Shands Bridge crossing the St. Johns River.[6]


Major intersections

Tolls are collected between each exit south of Exit 42.[7]

CountyLocationmi[1]kmExitDestinationsNotes
St. Johns I-95 (SR 9) / I-795 Jacksonville, Daytona BeachFuture interchange (to be connected with I-795); future southern terminus; I-95 exit 333
SilverLeaf Plantation CR 2209 (St. Johns Parkway)Future planned interchange
To CR 16A / CR 210 / CR 244 (Longleaf Pine Parkway)Future planned interchange
St. Johns RiverShands Bridge
Clay US 17 (SR 15) Palatka, Green Cove SpringsFuture planned interchange
SR 16 Penney Farms, Green Cove SpringsFuture planned interchange
CR 218Future planned interchange
Lake Asbury CR 739 (Henley Road)Future planned interchange
00.031 SR 21 (Blanding Boulevard) Middleburg, Orange ParkCurrent southern terminus
32 CR 220A (Old Jennings Road)Southbound exit and northbound entrance; southern terminus of frontage roads
OakLeaf Plantation0.1970.31735Oakleaf Plantation Parkway / Discovery DrivePartial diverging diamond interchange; northern terminus of frontage roads
Plantation Oaks BoulevardFormer at-grade intersection
Duval2.7644.44837Argyle Forest Boulevard / Oakleaf Plantation ParkwaySingle point urban interchange
Jacksonville6.38010.26841 SR 134 (103rd Street) Macclenny
6.59910.620Chaffee Road (CR 115C north)Southern terminus of CR 115C
7.79812.55042 SR 228 (Normandy Boulevard) – FSCJ Cecil Center, Cecil Field, Equestrian Center
9.20214.80944New World Avenue – FSCJ Cecil Center, Cecil Field, Equestrian Center
11.39518.33846 I-10 (SR 8) to I-295 / I-95 Jacksonville, Lake CityI-10 exit 350, signed as exits 46A (east) and 46B (west)
US 90 (SR 10) Baldwin, WhitehouseCurrent northern terminus
1.000 mi = 1.609 km; 1.000 km = 0.621 mi

References

  1. FDOT straight line diagrams Archived 2014-03-06 at the Wayback Machine
  2. First Coast Outer Beltway plan sheets
  3. "Crist touts outer beltway in Clay County speech". Clay Today. Archived from the original on July 6, 2011. Retrieved March 31, 2010.
  4. Florida Times-Union http://jacksonville.com/opinion/blog/400669/larry-hannan/2011-08-15/state-make-wednesday-announcement-outer-beltway?cid=hp-topnews. Retrieved August 15, 2011. Missing or empty |title= (help)
  5. Johnson, Scott (2018-04-05). "State funds $763M to replace Shands Bridge, extend beltway". WJXT.
  6. "Outer Beltway around Cecil Commerce Center will not be tolled". Florida Times-Union. Jacksonville, FL. Archived from the original on 2017-11-09. Retrieved April 2, 2010.
  7. "Get ready to pay tolls on First Coast Expressway". 2019-06-11.

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