Florida State Road 15 Explained

State:FL
Type:SR
Route:15
Maint:FDOT
Length Mi:340.594
Length Round:3
Length Ref:[1]
Established:1945[2]
Direction A:South
Terminus A: in Belle Glade
Junction: in Orlando
Direction B:North
Terminus B: US 1 / US 23 / US 301 / SR 4 / SR 15 at Georgia state line, northwest of Hilliard
Counties:Palm Beach, Martin, Okeechobee, Osceola, Orange, Seminole, Volusia, Putnam, Clay, Duval, Nassau
Previous Type:FL
Previous Route:14
Next Type:FL
Next Route:15A

State Road 15 (SR 15) is part of the Florida State Road System. This route is part of a multi two-state route 15 that begins at Florida and ends at Georgia at the North Carolina state line.

Route description

SR 15 runs from SR 80/SR 880 at Belle Glade north along the east shore of Lake Okeechobee to Okeechobee. Then it runs north to SR 500 (US 192) at Holopaw, and northwest along SR 500 to Ashton (east of St. Cloud), where it ends.

County Road 15 in Osceola County and Orange County connects to the beginning of the next section, at SR 528 (the Bee Line Expressway) east of Orlando International Airport. From there, SR 15 travels north on Narcoossee Road, west on Hoffner Road, north on Conway Road through Conway, west on Lake Underhill Road, and west on South Street (northbound) and Anderson Street (southbound) on both sides of SR 408 to downtown Orlando. It then travels north on Mills Avenue and follows US 17 all the way to downtown Jacksonville. From there it follows Interstate 95 to the Martin Luther King Jr. Parkway, and then northwest into Georgia, as Georgia State Route 15.

SR 15 is practically unsigned, except in three places:

The rest is signed as various U.S. Highways:

History

Prior to the 1945 renumbering, the route that became SR 15 had the following numbers:

SR 15 was defined in the 1945 renumbering as:

Neither proposed route was built. The alternate route in Seminole County was going to be a bypass of Sanford, but construction of SR 400 (Interstate 4) relegated it to a minor road, and it became CR 15 in the 1980s.

The main route has stayed mostly the same. Here are the places where the route now differs:

Notes and References

  1. http://www.dot.state.fl.us/planning/statistics/gis/road.shtm FDOT GIS data
  2. News: New Numbers on State Roads . December 19, 2019 . Miami Daily News . September 29, 1946 . 8. Newspapers.com.