Florida State Road 579

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State Road 579

Route information
Maintained by FDOT
Length0.5 mi (800 m)
Major junctions
Major intersections I-275 in Tampa
Location
CountryUnited States
StateFlorida
Highway system
SR 575 SR 580

The current State Road 579 is a 0.5-mile (0.80 km) stretch of Fletcher Avenue between Florida Avenue and Nebraska Avenue in Tampa, Florida. Similar to SR 678 to the north, it exists to connect US 41 (SR 45), Interstate 275 (SR 93), and Business US 41 (SR 685). Despite its odd-numbered Florida Department of Transportation designation, SR 579 is signed east-west.[1]

The current SR 579 is a remnant of a much longer one[2], extending from the current western terminus to an intersection with SR 54 near Zephyrhills, following Fletcher Avenue to an interchange with Interstate 75 (SR 93A), then turning northeastward and following Morris Bridge Road through Branchton and toward SR 54. Fletcher Road between Nebraska Avenue and I-75 was later redesignated State Road 582A (and a spur, 50th Street between Fletcher Road and Fowler Road adjacent to University of South Florida, became State Road 582B) while Morris Bridge Road was transitioned to Hillsborough County Road 579 and Pasco County Road 579. Eventually SR 582A and SR 582B were transferred to county control.

Historic State Road 579

In the 1950s and 1960s a different SR 579 was in existence, not in Hillsborough County but Dade (now Miami-Dade) County. Locally known as Biscayne Drive and Southwest 288th Street, the historic State Road 579 was a 3.2-mile (5.1 km) east-west street connecting South Dixie Highway (U.S. Route 1/SR 5) in Homestead to the west (primary) gate of Homestead Air Force Base.[3] [4][5]

While Homestead AFB was downgraded to a smaller Homestead Air Reserve Base after its destruction by hurricane Andrew in 1993, Coral Castle, a tourist attraction at the western end of historic SR 579, has remained essentially unchanged since the FDOT signs were removed from Biscayne Drive in the late 1960s. The predominantly rural nature of the area on both sides of the street in the 1950s and 1960s has been gradually giving way to urbanization since the 1980s and the trend appears to be accelerating throughout the former Homestead AFB property and further south in Miami-Dade County, particularly along the nearby Homestead Extension of Florida's Turnpike.

References

  1. ^ American Map, Florida State Road Atlas, 2003 ISBN 0-87530-450-8
  2. ^ Trakker Maps, Florida State Road Atlas 1994 ISBN 187765101X
  3. ^ Dolph Maps, Map of South Dade County, Florida, 1954
  4. ^ Official Map of Dade County, Florida, 1961
  5. ^ Official Map of Dade County, Florida, 1962

See also

List of state highways in the United States shorter than one mile