Florida State Road 414
Apopka Expressway Maitland Boulevard | ||||
Route information | ||||
Maintained by FDOT and CFX | ||||
Length | 15.837 mi[1] (25.487 km) | |||
Existed | 2009–present | |||
Major junctions | ||||
West end | US 441 / SR 429 in Apopka | |||
SR 451 in Apopka US 441 in Lockhart SR 434 in Altamonte Springs I-4 in Maitland | ||||
East end | US 17 / US 92 in Maitland | |||
Location | ||||
Country | United States | |||
State | Florida | |||
Highway system | ||||
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State Road 414 (SR 414) is a state highway in the U.S. state of Florida encompassing the John Land Apopka Expressway and Maitland Boulevard.
Route description
Free section
The free section is built mostly to expressway standards, with few driveway access points, at-grade intersections at minor roads, and interchanges at major roads. The road was once numbered State Road 426A. From east to west, the road begins and travels through Maitland, Florida, intersecting U.S. Route 17 with an interchange. It then intersects County Road 427. the road then widens to 6 lanes briefly at the Interstate 4 Interchange, and enters the business center of Maitland Summit. The road then briefly travels through Seminole County, Florida and the city of Altamonte Springs, with an interchange with State Road 434 before ending at U.S. Highway 441 in Lockhart, Florida in Orange County, Florida. The road previously ended here prior to the opening of the toll road section further west.
Toll road
An extension to the west has been built around the south side of Apopka and back to U.S. Highway 441 (SR 500) via State Road 429. During planning and construction, it was called the Apopka Bypass or the Maitland Boulevard Extension. It was named after Apopka mayor John Land in December 2005.[2] The tollway is owned and operated by the Central Florida Expressway Authority (CFX).
Phase 1 of the toll road section runs from U.S. Highway 441 at an interchange, widens to 6 lanes west and continues west. Passing by exits with Hiawassese Road and limited access Keene Road, A Sunpass/Epass supported toll area, and an interchange with State Road 451 and State Road 429 (Western Beltway) south of Apopka. Ground broke on the project on January 19, 2007 at the southeast corner of SR 414 and US 441. Construction ran way ahead of schedule and the roadway from Exit 4 to Exit 8 was opened on February 14, 2009 for vehicles with SunPass and E-Pass transponders. Exit 6 was not included in the early opening. The entire road opened for all vehicles on May 15, 2009. On signage, the eastbound control city is Maitland and the westbound control city is Apopka.
Some of the additions and modifications in Phase 1 include:
- Nearly the entire toll road is elevated.
- The intersection of SR 414 and US 441 was shifted slightly southward and turned into a grade-separated half-folded diamond interchange. SR 414 passes over US 441. The 7-11 at the southeast corner of the interchange was demolished to accomplish this.
- The Florida Central Railroad bridge over US 441 just to the north of the intersection with State Road 414 was demolished during June 2007. Railroad tracks that had continued east to Forest City, Florida were removed. This location is the site of westbound exit and entrance ramps with US 441.
- Apopka Blvd. (CR 424) was broken where SR 414 passes through. Before construction, Apopka Blvd. ran parallel to US 441 to its west, but 20 feet (6.1 m) above US 441's grade. The north side was diverted to end at US 441 at SR 414's new westbound off ramps, with a cul-de-sac sticking out briefly to the south. The south side simply ends in a cul-de-sac.
- SR 414 is six lanes, three in each direction over the entire currently constructed distance.
- A SPUI interchange was constructed at Hiawassee Road, with SR 414 passing to the south of the recently opened Wekiva High School (Orange County Public Schools).
- A westbound off-ramp to, and an eastbound on-ramp from Keene Road has been built.
- Coral Hills Road, a side-street to the west of Clarcona Road (CR 435), was closed where SR 414 passes through and ends in cul-de-sacs on both sides. This is the location of the only mainline toll plaza in Phase 1 of SR 414.
- The mainline toll is $1.25 cash, less for those with a transponder.
- Continuing west, State Road 414 originally ended at the interchange at SR 429. When the toll road first opened, there was a direct ramp to northbound State Road 429 but traffic desiring to go southbound on State Road 429 had to exit onto County Road 437A (Ocoee-Apopka Road) and travel one-quarter-mile to the State Road 429 southbound on-ramp. Southbound traffic on State Road 429 desiring to travel eastbound on State Road 414 had a direct ramp however northbound traffic on State Road 429 desiring to travel eastbound on State Road 414 also had to exit onto CR 437A. On May 14, 2012, new SR 429 Exit 31 opened which fully connected the two toll roads and eliminated the need to leave the expressway system. On January 19, 2013, Phase 2 of SR 414 then opened.
Phase 2
Construction on Phase 2 began with earth movement during June, 2010 at the former western terminus of SR 414 and opened on January 19, 2013. The new section is signed concurrently as both SR 414 and SR 429 and continues west and then north to an intersection a quarter-mile north of Plymouth-Sorrento Road at U.S. Route 441 where the SR 414 designation ends. A surface road has been built at that location connecting to US 441 and Plymouth-Sorrento Road. SR 414 terminates here although the road continues signed only as SR 429.
There are no exit or entrance ramps on the Phase 2 section. There are no toll facilities on the Phase 2 section however it is impossible to travel on Phase 2 without paying a toll elsewhere. Half-mile Markers correspond with SR 429 only. What was previously SR 429 north of the current SR 414 junction has been resigned as State Road 451. However, there are no direct connections from SR 451 southbound to SR 429 northbound nor from SR 429 southbound to SR 451 northbound. The road is entirely concurrent until the SR 414 designation ends at an access road for US 441. SR 429 extends further north, and will eventually reach Interstate 4 and SR 417.
Plans for further extension, eventually to meet Interstate 4 in Sanford, are part of a corridor known as the Wekiva Parkway, part of SR 429.
Future
As part of an I-4 improvement project to build express lanes in the median of the interstate highway, preliminary plans call for SR 414 to be reconstructed between the interchange and Maitland Summit Boulevard.[3] The project is scheduled to be completed in 2021.[4]
CFX is also looking at extending the tolled section of SR 414 to SR 434 as a freeway, while maintaining the existing local-access lanes.[5][6]
Major intersections
County | Location | mi[1] | km | Exit | Destinations | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Orange | Apopka | 0.000 | 0.000 | – | SR 429 north | Continues north as SR 429 (Daniel Webster Western Beltway); opened July 2017 |
34 | To US 441 (Orange Blossom Trail) / CR 437 (Plymouth-Sorrento Road) | Single-point urban interchange; access via connector road; exit number follows SR 429's exit numbering; US 441 is unsigned SR 500 | ||||
3.4 | 5.5 | 4A | SR 429 south – Orlando, Tampa, Ocoee, Winter Garden | Directional T interchange; eastern terminus of SR 429 overlap; signed as exit 30 eastbound | ||
4.2 | 6.8 | 4B | SR 451 north – Apopka | Half-Y interchange; westbound exit and eastbound entrance; southern terminus of SR 451 | ||
4.5 | 7.2 | 5 | Marden Road | Half dumbbell interchange; westbound exit and eastbound entrance | ||
5.81 | 9.35 | Coral Hills Mainline Plaza | ||||
6.49 | 10.44 | 6 | Keene Road | Half-Y interchange; tolled westbound exit and eastbound entrance; to CR 435 (Clarcona Road) | ||
Hiawassee | 7.93 | 12.76 | 8 | Hiawassee Road | Single-point urban interchange; tolled westbound exit and eastbound entrance | |
Lockhart | 9.38 | 15.10 | 9 | US 441 (Orange Blossom Trail) | Trumpet/partial cloverleaf interchange; road is unsigned SR 500 | |
Eastern terminus of Apopka Expressway; western terminus of Maitland Boulevard | ||||||
Seminole | Altamonte Springs | 11.80 | 18.99 | SR 434 (Forest City Road) – Seminole State College | Single point urban interchange | |
12 | 19 | Gateway Drive | Interchange; westbound exit only | |||
Orange | Maitland | 12.670 | 20.390 | Maitland Summit Boulevard | Diamond interchange; westbound interchange only; eastbound interchange under construction[3] | |
13.010 | 20.938 | Keller Road to Lake Destiny Road | Half diamond interchange; interchange under reconstruction[3] | |||
13.75 | 22.13 | I-4 – Tampa, Daytona Beach | Cloverstack interchange; exit 90 on I-4 (SR 400); interchange under reconstruction[3] | |||
13.87 | 22.32 | Sandspur Road / Hope Road | Interchange with right-in/right-out connections; subject to reconstruction[3] | |||
15.157 | 24.393 | CR 427 (Maitland Avenue) | ||||
15.837 | 25.487 | US 17 / US 92 | Trumpet interchange with Orlando Avenue (also unsigned SR 15 / SR 600) | |||
1.000 mi = 1.609 km; 1.000 km = 0.621 mi
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See also
References
- ^ a b FDOT straight line diagrams Archived March 6, 2014, at the Wayback Machine, accessed December 2013
- ^ New expressway to be named after Apopka Mayor John Land, December 8, 2005
- ^ a b c d e "Redesigned I-4/Maitland Boulevard (S.R. 414) Interchange" (PDF). Florida Department of Transportation. October 19, 2016. Retrieved June 14, 2019.
- ^ "FAQs". Florida Department of Transportation. Retrieved June 14, 2019.
- ^ "SR 429 will be widened; SR 414 being studied". The Apopka Chief. May 28, 2021. p. 1A. Archived from the original on June 15, 2021. Retrieved March 3, 2022.
- ^ "Project Development & Environment (PD&E) Study: SR 414 Expressway Extension". Central Florida Expressway Authority. 2021. Archived from the original on November 28, 2021. Retrieved March 2, 2022.