Florida State Road 869

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State Road 869 marker State Road 869 toll marker

State Road 869
<mapframe frameless="1" width="290" height="290" align="center">{{Wikipedia:Map data/Wikipedia KML/Florida State Road 869}}</mapframe>
SR 869 highlighted in red
Route information
Maintained by FTE and FDOT
Length: 23.987 mi[2][3] (38.603 km)
21.242 mi (34.186 km) tolled freeway
2.745 mi (4.418 km) at-grade boulevard
1.4 mi (2.3 km) without designation
Existed: July 3, 1986[1] – present
Major junctions
South end: I-75 / I-595 in Sunrise
  US 441 in Coconut Creek
Turnpike on Coconut Creek/Deerfield Beach line
East end: I-95 in Deerfield Beach
US 1 in Deerfield Beach
Location
Counties: Broward
Highway system
SR 867 SR 870

Florida State Road 869 (SR 869) is a 24-mile-long (39 km) state road located in western and northern Broward County, acting as a de facto bypass of Fort Lauderdale as well as the northern coastal and southern parts of the county extending north from a junction of I-75 (SR 93), I-595 (SR 862) in Sunrise to Coral Springs where it heads eastward towards Florida's Turnpike and intersecting I-95 before terminating at Southwest 10th Avenue in Deerfield Beach. The 21.242-mile (34.186 km) section west of the Turnpike is known as the Sawgrass Expressway, a six-lane, limited-access, all-electronic toll road; the 2.745-mile (4.418 km) section east of the Turnpike is a surface street known as Southwest 10th Street. The expressway opened in 1986 and was added to Florida's Turnpike Enterprise in 1990. The at-grade section east of the Turnpike is maintained by FDOT.[2][3][4][5][6]

Route description

The highway begins at the north end of the I-75/I-595 interchange in Sunrise, with the Everglades to the west and newer residential and commercial developments to the east of the expressway for the first 12 miles. After a welcome sign, the expressway passes its lone free interchange to Sunrise Boulevard (SR 838), connecting to the Sawgrass Mills mall and passing through the Sunrise Toll Gantry, the first of two toll gantries on the road before reaching the exit for the BB&T Center, where the Florida Panthers of the National Hockey League play; this interchange has no southbound exit. After intersecting with Oakland Park Boulevard (SR 816), it enters Tamarac by intersecting with Commercial Boulevard (SR 870) and then enters Coral Springs. After interchanges at Atlantic Blvd (SR 814) and Sample Road (SR 834), it curves 90 degrees east by switching to an east and west orientation with housing and other developments surrounding both sides of the highway. Still in Coral Springs, the highway's next interchange and last exit before additional tolls (both directions) is Coral Ridge Drive. Afterwards, it continues eastward, acting as the border between Parkland to the north of the expressway and Coral Springs to the south of it towards the interchange with University Drive (SR 817). Three miles east of this exit, the expressway has an interchange with US 441 / SR7, which forms the borders between Coconut Creek to the east and Parkland and Coral Springs to the west. The expressway then enters Coconut Creek at the interchange with an exit with Lyons Road before entering Deerfield Beach and approaching the Deerfield Toll Gantry just west of Florida's Turnpike.[2][4][7][8][9][10]

After crossing the Turnpike, the tollway reverts to a six lane surface street, Southwest 10th Street, still heading east in Deerfield Beach. It has intersections with two residential streets before reaching Powerline Road (SR 845). East of Powerline Road, SR869 passes by residential and commercial zones, crossing several local streets for the remainder of its length, with SR869 intersecting Military Trail and I-95 about two miles east of Powerline Road and terminating at Southwest 6th Avenue about 0.4-mile (0.64 km) east of I-95.[2][4][7][9][10] There have been plans to extend the expressway east of the Turnpike to I-95 since the early 1990s, but local opposition has prevented it from going forward.[11][12] The latest (c.2018) plan features elevated express lanes 27' above the street similar to I-595 to the south, and construction could begin as early as 2022.[13]

Tolls

The Sawgrass Expressway is an all electronic, cashless toll road, using overhead toll gantries in the place of the former toll plazas. Users pay by either SunPass transponders or by a toll by plate system for a slightly higher fee. The cost to travel the entire expressway costs $2.12 with SunPass, and $2.64 with toll by plate as of July 2015. For travel over only part of the expressway, a graduated toll system is in place.[8]

History

File:Shield of the Sawgrass Expressway (1986-Late 1990s).svg
The original trailblazer for the Sawgrass Expressway, depicting "Cecil B. Sawgrass", the Sawgrass Expressway's now-hard-to-find mascot.
The original Sawgrass Expressway road signs

Originally planned to be the University-Deerfield Expressway when it was first proposed in 1960, it was supposed to be the northernmost part of a chain of expressways from Deerfield Beach to Coral Gables, but the proposed Snake Creek Expressway (in Broward County) became part of the Florida's Turnpike Extension and the LeJeune-Douglas Expressway (in Dade County) failed in the 1970s as the result of a county wide expressway revolt.[14][15][16] On the other hand, the rerouting of Interstate 75 from the Tamiami Trail to Alligator Alley in 1973 increased the necessity of a northern/western bypass of Broward County and in 1983, the newly created Broward County Expressway Authority proposed the Sawgrass-Deerfield Expressway in its current alignment.[17][18] A series of cost-cutting measures for the proposed toll road included removal of all planned rest stops and a shortening of the name of the road to Sawgrass Expressway (A consultant stated in an interview, "Those overhead signs are damn expensive").[19]

The Sawgrass Expressway broke ground on November 2, 1984, and opened to traffic on July 3, 1986, at a cost of $200 million.[20][21] The section between I-75 and Sunrise Boulevard opened on August 4, 1988.[1] Bonds were sold in 1984 to finance construction and again in 1986 to partially refund the 1984 bonds.[22][23] By 1990, however, the Sawgrass Expressway was plagued with a massive debt, light usage and was a subject of local political corruption. The Florida Department of Transportation purchased the Sawgrass Expressway from the Broward County Expressway Authority in December 1990 as part of the expansion program authorized by the Florida Legislature in 1990 Senate Bill 1316.[24][25] The Expressway, along with SW 10th Street west of I-95, was bannered as State Road 869 in 1995.[26]

"Cecil B. Sawgrass", the Sawgrass Expressway's now-hard-to-find mascot

When the highway was first built, it was criticized for being a "road to nowhere", as it passed through undeveloped areas for most of its length.[27] The road's $1.50 toll in its first few years was another criticism by local residents, contributing to the road's light usage.[28] Commercial and residential developments boomed along the toll road in the late '80s and throughout the '90s, making it suitable for commuters.[27] The swampland west of the Expressway is an Everglades Water Conservation Area and unlikely to be developed in the foreseeable future.[7]

The Sawgrass Expressway experienced its first toll hike on March 7, 2004, increasing the toll rate for non SunPass users to $2.00 for travel over the entire expressway, with SunPass users still using the original toll rates.[29][30]

Unlike most roads, the Sawgrass Expressway had a mascot, a swamp frog named Cecil B. Sawgrass, who appeared on signs greeting motorists entering the tollway southbound from State Road 845 (Powerline Road), as well as various road signs on the expressway. Signs featuring Cecil are becoming rare, as newer expressway signage uses only the standard TOLL 869 shield.[25] In October 2005, Hurricane Wilma damaged the expressway's welcome sign, resulting in its removal during cleanup.[31]

Between 2008 and 2009, the expressway was widened from four lanes to its current six lanes, and was converted to open-road tolling at the Sunrise and Deerfield toll plazas, as well as on exit and entrance ramps, eliminating the need for toll plazas for SunPass users on the toll road. Traditional toll booths for cash customers were still accessible on the right side of the plaza areas.[5][32]

On June 24, 2012, toll rates were raised on the Sawgrass Expressway, with rates going up on average about a quarter at each tolling area for both cash and SunPass customers.[33] Rates were risen slightly again for SunPass customers on July 1, 2013, with cash prices staying at their 2012 rates, and are the toll rates as of January 2014.[8][34][35]

The Sawgrass Expressway eliminated cash tolls on April 19, 2014, charging vehicles by SunPass or license plate information. Toll gantries replaced the shuttered toll booths at plazas and exits.[36][37]

Exit list

The entire route is in Broward County.

Location mi
[2][38][39]
km Exit
[8]
Destinations Notes
SunriseWeston
Davie tripoint
0.000 0.000 I-75 (Alligator Alley) – Miami, Naples, Weston Exit 19 on I-75
I-595 east – Fort Lauderdale Western terminus of I-595; to Fort Lauderdale Airport and Port Everglades
Sunrise 1.056 1.699 1 Sunrise Boulevard (CR 838) Incorrectly signed as SR 838
2.000 3.219 Sunrise Toll Gantry
1.909 3.072 1B Pat Salerno Drive Northbound exit and southbound entrance
3.309 5.325 3 Oakland Park Boulevard (CR 816) / Panther Parkway Tolled southbound exit and northbound entrance; incorrectly signed as SR 816
SunriseTamarac line 5.466 8.797 5 Commercial Boulevard (CR 870) Tolled southbound exit and northbound entrance; incorrectly signed as SR 870
Coral Springs 8.213 13.218 8 Atlantic Boulevard (CR 814) Tolled southbound exit and northbound entrance; incorrectly signed as SR 814
10.931 17.592 11 Sample Road (CR 834) Tolled southbound exit and northbound entrance; incorrectly signed as SR 834
Coral SpringsParkland line 13.868 22.318 14 Coral Ridge Drive
15.623 25.143 15 University Drive Tolled northbound exit and southbound entrance; incorrectly signed as SR 817
Coconut Creek 18.588 29.914 18 US 441 (SR 7) Tolled northbound exit and southbound entrance; signed as exits 18A (south) and 18B (north)
20.092 32.335 19 Lyons Road Tolled northbound exit and southbound entrance
20.500 32.992 Deerfield Gantry
20.401 32.832 21 Turnpike – Miami, Orlando Eastbound exit and westbound entrance; signed as exits 21A (south) and 21B (north); unsigned SR 91
Deerfield Beach 21.242 34.186 Waterways Boulevard At-grade intersection; northern terminus of tollway
21.835 35.140 SR 845 (Powerline Road)
23.262 37.437 Military Trail – Tri-Rail Station Former SR 809
23.871 38.417 I-95 / Invalid type: road – Miami, West Palm Beach Exit 41 on I-95; continues east without designation
1.000 mi = 1.609 km; 1.000 km = 0.621 mi

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 "Sawgrass Link to I-75 will be Opened Today Westbound Interstate 595 Also Opening". Miami Herald 4 Aug 1988: 2BR
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  5. 5.0 5.1 "Turnpike, Sawgrass closures planned". South Florida Business Journal 2008-03-07
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  11. "County Will Scale Down Sawgrass/I-95 Connector". Miami Herald 9 Jul 1993: 3BR
  12. Michael Turnbell. "Going from Palmetto to I-95 Complicated" Archived 2011-06-04 at the Wayback Machine. South Florida Sun Sentinel 27 Feb 2009
  13. Anne Geggis. "Express lanes from Sawgrass to I-95: Your sneak peek at what they'll look like". South Florida Sun Sentinel 21 Apr 2018
  14. Marcus, Jon. "Thompson Hits Big Bump on Political Highway". Sun-Sentinel 16 Aug 1987: 1B
  15. "Taking a Journey Down the Roads Left Undone". Miami Herald 11 Dec 1995: 1B
  16. "Road 'spaghetti' distaste cuts plans". The Miami News 16 Sep 1971: 5A
  17. "It Will Be 7 Years Before Highway Network Is A Reality". Sarasota Herald-Tribune 2 Apr 1973: 9A
  18. "Lawmakers to get highway plan". Miami Herald 18 Feb 1983: 4BR
  19. "Expressway's New Name is Shorter and Cheaper". Miami Herald 12 Jan 1984: 2BR
  20. "Sawgrass Project May Be State's Swiftest". Miami Herald 28 Oct 1984: 1 BR
  21. Lasalandra, Michael. "Sawgrass Scheduled to Open Today". Sun-Sentinel 3 July 1986: 3B
  22. "Expressway Bond Sale Approved". Miami Herald 25 Jul 1984: 4BR
  23. Lasalandra, Michael. "Refinancing of Sawgrass Bonds to Mean Windfall of $11 million". Sun-Sentinel 8 Jan 1987: 8B
  24. "Sawgrass Expressway To Be Bought By State Toll Road To Become Part of Turnpike". Miami Herald 1 Dec 1990: 15BR
  25. 25.0 25.1 Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  26. Kernicky, Kathleen. "Sawgrass Name Game Runs Its Course". Sun Sentinel 18 Mar 1995: 1B
  27. 27.0 27.1 "Sawgrass Expressway Drives Building Boom". Miami Herald 10 Aug 1986: 1BR
  28. "Readers Say Sawgrass Fare Just Isn't Fair". Miami Herald 24 Nov 1986: 1BR
  29. McGinness, Chuck. "Plan To Hike Toll On Turnpike Rapped". The Palm Beach Post 8 Jan 2004: 7B
  30. Turnbell, Michael. "Drivers Dash To Get SunPass Before Toll Increases Kick In". Sun-Sentinel 6 Mar 2004: 1B
  31. "Downtown Towers Take A Hit". Miami Herald 25 Oct 2005: 4A
  32. Michael Turnbell. "Faster lanes cut toll waits on Sawgrass". South Florida Sun Sentinel 18 Dec 2008
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External links

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