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State highway in Florida, United States From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
State Road 865 (SR 865) and County Road 865 (CR 865) are a series of roads serving Lee County, Florida. Originally a continuous state road extending from Bonita Springs to Tice by way of Fort Myers Beach and Fort Myers, SR 865 now consists of two segments connected by a part of CR 865, which also extends to the north and south of the state segments. Both the state and county controlled segments of the route combined stretch a distance of over 40 miles (64.37 km), making it the longest designation in Lee County.[2]
Route information | ||||
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Maintained by FDOT and Lee County DOT | ||||
Length | 41.697 mi[1] (67.105 km) 5.797 miles (9.329 km) as SR 865 35.9 miles (57.78 km) as CR 865 | |||
Major junctions | ||||
South end | Logan Boulevard in Bonita Springs | |||
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North end | SR 80 in Tice | |||
Location | ||||
Country | United States | |||
State | Florida | |||
County | Lee | |||
Highway system | ||||
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Until the 1980s, State Road 865 signs were posted along a much longer highway. In the mid 1970s, FDOT designated three large sections of then-SR 865 as secondary routes, which started a process in which these designated sections would be converted to county control. This was part of a series of transformations that particularly affected Southwest Florida.
The historic southern terminus of SR 865 is an interchange between Interstate 75 (I-75 or SR 93) and Bonita Beach Road in Bonita Springs, though the current county designation actually begins 2.2 miles (3.54 km) east of the interchange near Logan Boulevard.[3][4] From there CR 865 follows Bonita Beach Road westward through Bonita Springs to Hickory Boulevard on Bonita Beach (Little Hickory Island), near the Gulf of Mexico shore. Motorists traveling north then cross the Bonita Beach Causeway, which passes over Big Hickory Island, Long Key and Black Key, which provides access to the Lovers Key / Carl E. Johnson State Park. Once on Estero Island, CR 865 is known as Estero Boulevard and passes through the island town of Fort Myers Beach before connecting to San Carlos Boulevard on the north end of the island. State maintenance begins the intersection of Estero and San Carlos boulevards just east of Bodwitch Point Park. After crossing the Matanzas Pass Bridge and San Carlos Island onto the mainland, SR 865 forms the western boundary of Estero Bay Preserve State Park adjacent to Hurricane Bay.
San Carlos Boulevard then intersects with Summerlin Road (CR 869), which is a grade-separated single-point urban interchange, with Summerlin Road crossing above on an overpass. This interchange also provides access to Sanibel Island. The southern section of SR 865 continues northward its northern terminus, an intersection with McGregor Boulevard, which is SR 867 to the northeast of the intersection, and CR 867 to the southwest, a more direct route connecting downtown Fort Myers to the popular Sanibel and Captiva islands.
At this point, SR 865 ends and CR 865 resumes, proceeding east along Gladiolus Drive. East of here, CR 865 intersects Summerlin Road (CR 869) again, this time at an at-grade intersection with two left-turning flyover ramps. It passes by Lakes Park before intersecting with U.S. Route 41 (US 41), where the route transitions yet again to SR 865.
Extending only 1.1 miles (1.8 km) in South Fort Myers, the northern section of SR 865 is locally known as the Ben C. Pratt Six Mile Cypress Parkway. It begins at Tamiami Trail (US 41) and terminates at an intersection with Metro and Michael G. Rippe Parkways (SR 739). This portion of the parkway historically served as the first mile of the Seaboard Air Line Railroad's Punta Rassa Branch.[5] Though this section runs in east–west route, it is still signed as a north–south route to be consistent with the adjacent county-controlled segments.
Beyond the northern section's terminus at SR 739, historic SR 865 continues along Six Mile Cypress Parkway and turns north passing the Lee County Sports Complex, which contains Hammond Stadium, the spring training home of the Minnesota Twins major league baseball team. As it turns north, it parallels the Six Mile Cypress Slough. At Colonial Boulevard (SR 884), historic SR 865 becomes Ortiz Avenue and parallels Interstate 75 to its northern terminus, an intersection with Palm Beach Boulevard (SR 80) in Tice. Parts of Ortiz Avenue were originally signed State Road 80B before being connected to the rest of SR 865.[6]
The entire route of SR 865 came into existence incrementally over the span of many decades. San Carlos Boulevard was built in 1927 to serve as a more direct route from McGregor Boulevard (SR 867) to Fort Myers Beach via the original Matanzas Pass Bridge. It replaced an earlier route to the bridge that traversed present-day Bunche Beach.[7]
Gladiolus Drive originally existed as an access road to serve fields for gladiolus flowers in Iona and Biggar in the 1930s and 1940s.[8] Lee County was once known as the gladiolus capital of the world. A notable operator of the gladiolus fields was the A&W Bulb Company, which is today the namesake of A&W Bulb Road (a side street that connects Gladiolus Drive to McGregor Boulevard).[9]
Estero Boulevard, San Carlos Boulevard and Gladiolus Drive were first designated State Road 278 in 1935. State Road 278 would become State Road 865 during the 1945 Florida State Road renumbering.[10][11]
Estero Boulevard reached the southern tip of Fort Myers Beach by 1950.[12] Upon the completion of the Bonita Beach Causeway in 1965, the SR 865 designation was extended south from Fort Myers Beach through Bonita Springs along Hickory Boulevard and Bonita Beach Road to US 41 (at present-day Old 41 Road).[13] Bonita Beach Road was developed in the 1950s as Bonita Springs main east–west thoroughfare.[14][15] The SR 865 designation was extended east along Bonita Beach Road (which was known as Carroll Road east of Bonita Springs at the time) to its historic southern terminus at Interstate 75 when that segment of the freeway opened in 1981.[16]
The construction of Six Mile Cypress Parkway was the final link in the entire route, which opened in 1983.[17][18] With the completion of Six Mile Cypress, Gladiolus Drive was realigned to the north at the intersection with US 41 (Old Gladiolus is the original alignment). The SR 865 designation then continued along Six Mile Cypress, which ran east along a former railroad spur, then turned north along the Six Mile Cypress Slough to connect with Ortiz Avenue (which existed previously as State Road 80B). This brought SR 865 to its historic northern terminus.[19] Six Mile Cypress was widened to four lanes from Daniels Parkway (CR 876) to US 41 in 1991.[20] In 2000, Six Mile Cypress was renamed Ben C. Pratt Six Mile Cypress Parkway in honor of former Lee County public works director Ben Pratt.[21]
The entire route from Bonita Springs to Tice would only be designated SR 865 for a short time before the state relinquished portions to the county.[6]
The northernmost 0.2 miles (0.32 km) of San Carlos Boulevard (in Iona) was annexed to SR 867 when McGregor Boulevard was realigned slightly south in the 1983 (Old McGregor Boulevard is the original alignment).[22] In 1994, Gladiolus Drive was realigned onto a new four-lane road west of Pine Ridge Road to intersect with San Carlos Boulevard at the realigned McGregor Boulevard. The original alignment of Gladiolus Drive is now Paul Schultz Way.[23] Further improvements were made to Gladiolus Drive in 1996, when it was widened to six lanes from US 41 (Tamiami Trail) to Summerlin Road (CR 869), and to four lanes from there to Winkler Road.[24] The rest of Gladiolus Drive was widened to a multi-lane road in 2009.[25]
The entire route is in Lee County.
Location | mi[1][26] [27][28][29] | km | Destinations | Notes | |
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Bonita Springs | 0.0 | 0.0 | Palmira Boulevard / Bonita Beach Road east | Road continues east without designation | |
2.2 | 3.5 | I-75 – Naples, Tampa | Exit 116 on I-75 (unsigned SR 93) | ||
3.0 | 4.8 | Imperial Parkway (CR 881) | |||
4.0 | 6.4 | Old 41 Road (CR 887) | Former US 41 | ||
5.6 | 9.0 | US 41 (Tamiami Trail) | |||
Estero Bay | 10.2– 14.1 | 16.4– 22.7 | Bonita Beach Causeway | ||
Fort Myers Beach | 20.0 0.000 | 32.2 0.000 | Estero Boulevard west – Beaches | Southern terminus of SR 865 | |
Matanzas Pass | 0.138– 0.539 | 0.222– 0.867 | Matanzas Pass Bridge | ||
| 3.122 | 5.024 | CR 869 (Summerlin Road) – Sanibel, Captiva, Fort Myers, Lakes Park | Diamond interchange | |
Iona | 4.641 0.0 | 7.469 0.0 | SR 867 north / CR 867 south (McGregor Boulevard) – Sanibel, Captiva | Northern terminus of SR 865 | |
| 3.3 | 5.3 | CR 869 (Summerlin Road) – Fort Myers Beach, Sanibel, Captiva | Left turn flyover ramps | |
| 4.8 0.0 | 7.7 0.0 | US 41 (Tamiami Trail) | Southern terminus of SR 865 | |
| 1.156 0.0 | 1.860 0.0 | SR 739 (Metro Parkway / Michael G. Rippe Parkway) | Northern terminus of SR 865 | |
| 1.7 | 2.7 | CR 876 (Daniels Parkway) to I-75 – International Airport, JetBlue Park | ||
Fort Myers | 6.7 | 10.8 | SR 884 (Colonial Boulevard) to I-75 / US 41 | ||
8.5 | 13.7 | SR 82 (Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. Boulevard) – Fort Myers, Immokalee | |||
9.7 | 15.6 | Luckett Road (CR 810) to I-75 | |||
Tice | 11.1 | 17.9 | SR 80 (Palm Beach Boulevard) to I-75 | ||
1.000 mi = 1.609 km; 1.000 km = 0.621 mi
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