Sunset Drive Explained

State:FL
Type:SR
Route:986
Alternate Name:Southwest 72nd Street / Sunset Drive
Maint:FDOT and South Miami
Map Custom:yes
Map Notes:SR 986 highlighted in red
Length Mi:5.883
Length Round:3
Length Notes:Sunset Drive extends 12.5miles total
Direction A:West
Terminus A:Kendale Lakes
Junction: in Glenvar Heights
Direction B:East
Terminus B: in South Miami
Counties:Miami-Dade
Previous Type:SR
Previous Route:985
Next Type:SR
Next Route:989

Sunset Drive, also known as Southwest 72nd Street is a 12.5adj=midNaNadj=mid east–west arterial road traversing the southwestern suburbs of Miami, Florida, from the northwestern portions of the Kendall area to Coral Gables. A central portion of Sunset Drive is maintained by the Florida Department of Transportation as State Road 986 (SR 986), which runs from the Homestead Extension (HEFT) underpass to Southwest 69th Avenue and is signed through South Miami to US 1.

Route description

Western section

Southwest 72nd Street begins as a private dirt road accessing farmland in unincorporated Miami-Dade County, north of The Hammocks and west of Kendall West.[1] The road heads east and, upon reaching 167th Avenue, it becomes a paved four-laned divided road. Sunset Drive then continues east past residential neighborhoods for 1miles, reaching a collection of neighborhood shopping centers and the western edge of the Kendall West community at Southwest 157th Avenue. From here to its eastern terminus, Southwest 72nd Street is given the designation of Marjory Stoneman Douglas Sunset Drive.[2]

After another mile (1.6 km), and after passing by more residential neighborhoods, Sunset Drive crosses Southwest 147th Avenue and enters the unincorporated Kendale Lakes.[3] The road passes one block to the south of the Miccosukee Golf & Country Club, and continues east between the backs of residential neighborhoods for another 2miles, older than those lying to the west, with the only break being Miami Sunset Senior High. After crossing Southwest 127th Avenue, Sunset Drive's character changes as it passes by churches, schools, large-lot houses and market gardens until it reaches the HEFT.

State Road 986 section

The locations of both termini of State Road 986 are unclear, with some commercial mapping and even Florida Department of Transportation (FDOT) material[4] showing the western terminus of SR 986 at Southwest 127th Avenue and the eastern terminus at either the South Dixie Highway (US 1) or Red Road. According to the FDOT road inventory, the western terminus of SR 986 lies where Sunset Drive passes under the HEFT without an interchange, with the section of road west to Southwest 127th Avenue acknowledged as lying off the Florida State Highway System.

East of the HEFT underpass, SR 986 leaves Kendale Lakes and enters the Kendall district proper, cutting across its northwestern corner.[5] Sunset Drive first passes a small shopping district and then goes between two residential neighborhoods. As SR 986 approaches Southwest 107th Avenue (SR 985), 1.1miles east of the HEFT, the road enters another shopping district. Once past SR 985, Sunset Drive almost-immediately crosses the Snapper Creek Canal and enters the eponymous community of Sunset. SR 986 then passes a mixture of houses, strip malls, commercial services and churches for the next 1.7miles, whereupon it crosses a CSX railroad and passes under the Don Shula Expressway (SR 874) without an interchange. After another NaNmiles of strip malls, SR 986 crosses Galloway Road (SR 973) and enters the community of Glenvar Heights. East of Galloway Road, SR 986 gains a leafy residential character, reaching the Palmetto Expressway (SR 826) interchange after 1miles. SR 986 carries on east through more leafy neighborhoods for another 0.7miles. Here, the SR 986 designation stops at Southwest 69th Avenue, the boundary between Glenvar Heights and the incorporated city of South Miami.[6] Like at its western terminus, the FDOT inventory recognises Sunset Drive as far east as Red Road (approximately 1.3miles) as lying off the State Highway System.

Eastern section

Sunset Drive continues east from SR 986's eastern terminus through leafy neighborhoods of western South Miami. The road's character changes once it passes Southwest 63rd Avenue, as Sunset Drive begins to enter South Miami's central business district, passing by low-rise apartment buildings, multi-storeyed office complexes, and the South Miami Hospital. At Southwest 62nd Avenue, eastbound motorists on Sunset Drive wishing to head north along US 1 are encouraged by signage to detour along it, while Sunset Drive continues east for NaNmiles through the civic heart of South Miami, including a section of road paved with red brick near the city hall. The road then passes under the elevated Metrorail tracks, just to the south of South Miami Metrorail station, and immediately meets the South Dixie Highway (US 1) at an oblique intersection.

East of US 1, Sunset Drive scales down to become an undivided two-laned shopping street for the next two blocks, reaching Red Road (Southwest 57th Avenue) after NaNmiles. On the other side, Sunset Drive leaves South Miami and forms the boundary between Coral Gables, to the north, and an unincorporated section of Miami-Dade County to the south.[7] After passing between shops on the northern side of the road and houses on the southern side, Sunset Drive enters an opulent, leafy residential neighborhood, eventually losing its kerbing, and crossing entirely into Coral Gables about 1.2miles later.[8] After about 0.4miles, Sunset Drive terminates at Cartagena Plaza, a traffic circle that also features LeJeune Road's southern terminus and Old Cutler Road's northeastern terminus.

History

In 1996, the Florida State Legislature passed a resolution renaming SR 986 as Marjory Stoneman Douglas Sunset Drive.

Until 1997, its eastern terminus was three blocks further to the east of US 1 at Red Road, to intersect with a since-truncated SR 959 on the South Miami-Coral Gables boundary.

Notes and References

  1. P.L. 94-171 County Block Map (2010 Census): Miami-Dade County, FL . . January 7, 2011 . Geography Division . Sheet 83 . PDF . September 26, 2013.
  2. Web site: Roberta C. Martin . 2012 Listing of Designated Roads in Florida . FDOT - Transportation Statistics Office . September 13, 2012 . 34 . PDF . September 26, 2013 . February 12, 2012 . https://web.archive.org/web/20120212222427/http://www.dot.state.fl.us/planning/statistics/hwydata/desroads.pdf . dead .
  3. P.L. 94-171 County Block Map (2010 Census): Miami-Dade County, FL . U.S. Census Bureau . January 7, 2011 . Geography Division . Sheet 84 . PDF . September 26, 2013.
  4. Florida Department of Transportation . General Highway Map Miami-Dade County, Florida . May 2010 . April 2007 . Surveying and Mapping Office, State of Florida, Department of Transportation . PDF . September 26, 2010 . June 16, 2011 . https://web.archive.org/web/20110616123300/http://www.dot.state.fl.us/surveyingandmapping/geomap/mida_c.pdf . dead .
  5. P.L. 94-171 County Block Map (2010 Census): Miami-Dade County, FL . U.S. Census Bureau . January 7, 2011 . Geography Division . Sheet 85 . PDF . September 26, 2013.
  6. P.L. 94-171 County Block Map (2010 Census): Miami-Dade County, FL . U.S. Census Bureau . January 7, 2011 . Geography Division . Sheet 86 . PDF . September 26, 2013.
  7. P.L. 94-171 County Block Map (2010 Census): Miami-Dade County, FL . U.S. Census Bureau . January 7, 2011 . Geography Division . Sheet 72 . PDF . September 26, 2013.
  8. P.L. 94-171 County Block Map (2010 Census): Miami-Dade County, FL . U.S. Census Bureau . January 7, 2011 . Geography Division . Sheet 73 . PDF . September 26, 2013.