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Florida State Road 50; Florida State Road 401; Florida State Road 404; Florida State Road 405; ... Florida State Road 518; Florida State Road 519; Florida State Road 520;
State Road 518 (SR 518), also called Eau Gallie Boulevard, is a short but major east–west highway with a western terminus at Interstate 95 on the Florida mainland, crossing the Indian River via the Eau Gallie Causeway (and intersecting the southern end of SR 513), and having its eastern terminus at SR A1A.
US 1 in Florida City: Florida's Turnpike (SR 91) in Miramar: 47.856 77.017 carries Homestead Extension of Florida's Turnpike: SR 822: US 441 in Hollywood: SR A1A in Hollywood: 5.792 9.321 SR 823: US 27 in Hialeah: I-595 / SR 84 (SR 862) in Davie: 20.210 32.525 SR 824: SR 817 in Miramar / Pembroke Pines: US 1 in Hallandale Beach / Hollywood: 6.547
A new alignment for SR 50 was built east of Brooksville, removing the section on Main Street (which may have become SR 581) and a part east of Main Street. Later, SR 50 was realigned around Brooksville, and the old road through downtown became SR 50A. Near the Withlacoochee River a higher four-lane bridge was built on a short realigned section ...
US 19 & CR 518: southwest of New Port Richey: former SR 595A [1] CR 595A: Hudson Avenue S/N W/E Port Hudson Marina Hudson Beach, Florida: Hudson, Florida: former SR 595A [1] CR 595A: Clark Street S/N W/E Robert J. Strickland Memorial Park Hudson Beach, Florida: US 19: Hudson, Florida: former SR 595A [1]
The road starts at the intersection of the Eau Gallie Causeway (SR 518) and Riverside Drive/South Patrick Drive, with SR 518 starting north on South Patrick Drive, through a mix of commercial and residential areas, staying within a few blocks of the Banana River. The road enters Satellite Beach, and intersects CR 3 (Banana River Drive).
Florida State Road 518 State Road 518 (Florida) SR 518 (FL) ... File:Florida 939B.svg Florida State Road 939B State Road 939B (Florida) SR 939B (FL) ...
In the mid-1970s, the Florida Department of Transportation (formerly the State Road Department) started a sequence of events that eventually resulted in the transferral of hundred of miles of roadway from State of Florida maintenance to county control. The first step was the addition of an "S-" or "C-" prefix onto the original FDOT designation ...