Florida State Road 293

State Road 293 (SR 293) is a 15.4 miles (24.8 km) limited-access tollway, extending from U.S. Route 98 in Destin, north across the Mid-Bay Bridge, a toll bridge, around Niceville to State Road 85. Initially ending at Florida State Road 20 west of where they intersect today, SR 293 has served as a very important bypass to the Niceville community, and as a hurricane evacuation route. From the Mid-Bay Bridge and to points north, the roadway is known as the Walter Francis Spence Parkway.

State Road 293
SR 293 highlighted in red
Route information
Maintained by FDOT
Length15.4 mi[1] (24.8 km)
ExistedJune 1993–present
Major junctions
South end US 98 in Destin
  SR 20 near Niceville
North end SR 85 in Niceville
Location
CountiesOkaloosa
Highway system
SR 292 SR 294

Route description

State Road 293 begins at the intersection with Hutchinson Street and US 98 in Destin near many Shopping Centers. SR 293 continues north from here as a 4-laned arterial surface road, named Danny Wuerffel Way, with a Speed Limit of 45 MPH. SR 293 turns slightly east as it passes by Turnberry Harbor and Destin Middle School. It then crosses the 3.6 mile long Mid-Bay Bridge over Choctawhatchee Bay, where at the northern end of the bridge, tolls are collected ($4.00 Cash, $3.00 SunPass[2]). From here, SR 293 continues north, developing the name of the Walter Francis Spence Parkway as it sharply turns northeast at the Lakeshore Drive Interchange. From this point north, the Speed Limit increases to 55 MPH. It extends for another two miles as a 4-lane divided limited access parkway, traveling northward around the Bluewater Bay community and intersects Florida State Road 20 with a Single point urban interchange. SR 293 has an interchange with Range Road, and continues north as a Super Two, while retaining a Speed Limit of 55 MPH. Still heading north, it crosses the Rocky Creek Bridge. It then passes the second tolling point: the electronic toll gantry ($2.00 Toll by plate / $1.50 SunPass). SR 293 then intersects an access road to a master-planned subdivision. It then turns to a direction of West-by-Northwest and intersects with Forest Road and Florida State Road 285, before continuing west, crossing bridges over Swift Creek, Fox Head Branch, and Mill Creek to terminate at Florida State Road 85 at a Trumpet Interchange.[3]

History

The State Road was established in June 1993 when the Mid-Bay Bridge was opened. Originally, the northern terminus of the road was at the toll plaza at the northern end of the bridge. The northern approached was accessed via White Point Road. In 2011, the road was opened to SR 20.

State Road 293 was extended around the Niceville area in 3 stages, starting with an extension north to Range Road, completed in 2011. It was followed by extensions to SR 285, then SR 85 both completed in January 2014.. Proposals have been made to extend SR 293 to Florida State Road 123 and reconnect with US Route 98 and extend west to Florida State Road 87,[4] but proposals for this further extension have been placed on indefinite hold due to environmental concerns.[5]

Summertime traffic concerns

The high demand for the Mid-Bay Bridge has caused many backups on SR 293 in both directions due to the high amount of cash users and the lower speed limit in the SunPass lane. Mostly throughout Florida, the speed limit in the SunPass lanes are 25 MPH, whereas this one is 15 MPH. Motorists attempted to use local roadways as alternative routes to the delay, but the high demand for access created additional congestion. As a remedy to this, the southbound entrance ramp from Lakeshore Drive was closed on select days from 12 PM to 6 PM. Also, Variable-message signs were placed north of Florida State Road 20 in summer 2017 to inform drivers that the exits provide local access only and are not to be used as detours.[6]

Toll-by-plate controversy

When the roadway first opened, the electronic tolling point east of Niceville was not adequately marked, and vacationers without a SunPass were confusing it with an error in the toll payment on the Mid-Bay Bridge. Many were receiving bills in the mail, along with a $2.50 administrative charge. Changes were not made to the signage until 2016.[7]

Major intersections

The entire route is in Okaloosa County.

Locationmi[8]kmDestinationsNotes
Destin0.0000.000 US 98 Panama City, Destin, Okaloosa Island, Henderson Beach State ParkContinues south as Hutchinson Street; US 98 is unsigned SR 30
0.9821.580Legendary Marina DriveNorthern terminus of Wuerffel Way; southern terminus of Spence Parkway
Choctawhatchee Bay0.982–
4.631
1.580–
7.453
Mid-Bay Bridge
4.75[1]7.64Mid-Bay Bridge Toll Plaza
5.438.74Lakeshore Drive – Maxwell Gunter Recreation AreaInterchange; southbound entrance ramp closed during peak tourist season hours
6.2810.11 SR 20 to I-10 Niceville, FreeportSingle point urban interchange
7.53[1]12.12Range RoadInterchange
9.8[1]15.8Spence Parkway Toll Gantry (no cash)
12.9[1]20.8 SR 285 to I-10 east Niceville, Mossy HeadInterchange
Niceville15.4[1]24.8 SR 85 to I-10 Crestview, Fort Walton Beach, Valparaiso, Destin, FWB AirportTrumpet interchange; current northern terminus
SR 123Proposed interchange (unfunded)[4]
Hurlburt Field US 98 (SR 30)Proposed connection (unfunded)[4]
Navarre SR 87Proposed interchange (unfunded)[4]
1.000 mi = 1.609 km; 1.000 km = 0.621 mi
  •       Tolled
  •       Route transition
  •       Unopened

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References

  1. Google Maps distance
  2. Mid Bay Tolls
  3. Google (2010-07-11). "overview map of State Road 293" (Map). Google Maps. Google. Retrieved 2010-07-11.
  4. NFTCA Master Plan Ch4
  5. https://ssrnews.com/endangered-species-help-preclude-eglin-bypass-road/
  6. Victora, Wendy (August 11, 2017). "Motorist alert: Residential road closures planned near Mid-Bay Bridge". Northwest Florida Daily News. Retrieved October 27, 2018.
  7. Finley, Jeremy (November 5, 2015). "More than 51,000 Tennesseans received collection notices after vacationing in FL". Nashville, TN: WSMV-TV. Archived from the original on November 7, 2015. Retrieved October 27, 2018.
  8. FDOT straight line diagrams Archived March 6, 2014, at the Wayback Machine, accessed March 2014

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