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Florida State Road 563

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
State Road 563 marker
State Road 563
Map
Route information
Maintained by FDOT
Length4.912 mi[1][2] (7.905 km)
Major junctions
South endHarden Boulevard in Lakeland
Major intersections SR 570 in Lakeland
North end US 92 / Martin Luther King Jr. Avenue in Lakeland
Location
CountryUnited States
StateFlorida
CountiesPolk
Highway system
SR 559 SR 566

State Road 563 (SR 563) is a 4.912-mile-long (7.905 km) state highway in Lakeland, Polk County, Florida, that runs from 0.162 miles (0.261 km) south of Beaker Road to U.S. Route 92 and Martin Luther King Jr. Avenue.


History

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The original version of Florida State Road 563 was a secondary route that ran north of US 92 along Dakota Avenue until Parkview Street, where it ran east to US 98. The segment between Lake Wire and what is today hidden Florida State Road 600 was part of former State Road 35A.

The road was extended southbound along a new arterial in 1975 towards the Lakeland Civic Center, and vicinity. The project included taking over Florida State Road 539 (former SR 35A) south of Lake Wire, underpasses beneath the east leg of the wye for the CSX Carters and Vitis Subdivisions, West Main Street, West Lemon Street (both former US BUS 92/SR 600) and West Orange Street, as well as a southbound off-ramp leading to Lemon and Main Streets and a northbound on-ramp from Orange Street. The route then made a westbound turn at the corner of the Civic Center, leading to Lake Beulah via West Lime Avenue.[3] However that terminus was scrapped for an extended route named Harden Boulevard, which ran along the north and west sides of Lake Hunter through a former strip mine, part of which became the Kings Point Par 3 Golf Course and finally terminating at Florida State Road 572 (Drane Field Road). By 1998 the original southern terminus had been replaced by an interchange with Polk Parkway at Exit 5. Harden Boulevard extends south in a two-lane undivided highway with the right-of-way for two more lanes leading to West Pipkin Road. This was to be part of another extension proposed to terminate the road at Florida State Road 37 south of Fitzgerald Road in 1979.[4]


Dakota Avenue was renamed Martin Luther King Jr. Avenue sometime during the 21st Century. The segment between Ariana Street and Kathleen Road was named Sikes Boulevard. Parkview Street was renamed West 10th Street west of US 92 and Parkview Place east of US 92. The original version was decommissioned and redesignated as an unmarked Polk County Road extension on July 19, 2005.[5] Construction of the western segment of Florida State Road 548 in the late-2000s, brought about a redesign of the intersection with the southern terminus of SR 539.[6][7]

Major intersections

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The entire route is in Lakeland, Polk County.

mi[1][2]kmDestinationsNotes
0.0000.000End of state maintenanceSouthern terminus; continues as Harden Boulevard
0.360–
0.427
0.579–
0.687
SR 570 (Polk Parkway) – Orlando, TampaSR 570 exit 5
West Lemon Street / West Main Street (hidden SR 600)Southbound exit, northbound entrance
4.3306.968

SR 539 north (Kathleen Road) to I-4
Southern terminus of SR 539
4.5497.321 SR 548 (George Jenkins Boulevard / Oak Street West)
4.9127.905 US 92 (West Memorial Boulevard / SR 546) / Martin Luther King Jr. AvenueNorthern terminus; continues as Martin Luther King Jr. Boulevard beyond US 92
1.000 mi = 1.609 km; 1.000 km = 0.621 mi

References

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  1. ^ a b Transportation and Data Analytics Office (April 21, 2017). "Straight Line Diagram of Road Inventory". Florida Department of Transportation. Retrieved April 4, 2020.
  2. ^ a b Transportation and Data Analytics Office (August 22, 2019). "Straight Line Diagram of Road Inventory". Florida Department of Transportation. Retrieved April 4, 2020.
  3. ^ 1987 Topographical map of Lakeland, Florida (Historic Aerials)
  4. ^ Lakeland North-South Road Announcement; Florida Department of Transportation (Lakeland Ledger; September 25, 1979; Page 13)
  5. ^ FDOT Open Data Hub; County Roads TDA
  6. ^ "In-Town Bypass Back, but With Catches; Lakeland project delayed until 2007 and won't get bridge over Kathleen Road," by Bill Rufty (Lakeland Ledger; January 23, 2006; Updated January 24, 2006)
  7. ^ "Years in the Making, Lakeland In-Town Bypass Opens at Last; Officials hope road will make downtown safer for pedestrians," by Shelley Rossetter (Lakeland Ledger; November 6, 2009)
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