Highway names | |
---|---|
Interstates | Interstate X (I-X) |
US Highways | U.S. Highway X (US X) |
State | State Road X (SR X) |
County: | County Road X (CR X) |
System links | |
The following is a list of county roads in Hardee County, Florida . All county roads are maintained by the county in which they reside.
Route | Road Name(s) | From | To | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|
CR 35A | Florida Avenue | SR 64 west of Zolfo Springs | US 17 (SR 35) in Coker | Former SR 35A [1] |
CR 35B | Terrell Road, Louisiana Street Metheny Road | CR 64A / Altman Road in Wauchula Polk Road northwest of Wauchula | CR 35A / Louisiana Street in Wauchula CR 35A north of Wauchula | Former SR 35B [1] |
CR 64A | West Main Street | SR 64 / Hightower Lane in Oak Grove | US 17 (SR 35) / SR 636 in Wauchula | Former SR 64A [1] |
CR 634 | Sweetwater Road | US 17 (SR 35) west-northwest of Sweetwater | Sweetwater Road / Crewsville Road in Sweetwater | Former SR 634 [1] |
CR 636 | Steve Roberts Special E. Road | SR 64 east-northeast of Zolfo Springs | CR 671 / Parnell Road north-northwest of Crewsville | Former SR 636; [1] unrelated to current SR 636, which was SR 64A. |
CR 652 | Griffin Road | SR 636 in Wauchula | Griffin Road at a bridge over the Peace River in Wauchula | Former SR 652 [1] |
CR 661 | Lawrence Street Murphy Road Everett Whidden Road | CR 661 / NW Kinsey County Line Road at the DeSoto County line south-southeast of Limestone | SR 64 in Oak Grove | Former SR 661 [1] |
CR 663 | CR 661 in Limestone | Fort Green Road at the Polk County line north-northwest of Fort Green | Former SR 663; [1] FDOT's Hardee County map does not indicate that the portion between SR 64 in Ona and SR 62 in Fort Green Springs to be part of CR 663, but it is signed as part of it. | |
CR 663A | Experiment Station Road Goose Pond Road | IFAS Agricultural and Research Center southwest of Bridges | CR 663 / Bridges Road in Bridges | Former SR 663A [1] |
CR 664 | Main Street Lake Branch Road County Line Road | CR 663 in Fort Green US 17 (SR 35) north of Bowling Green | CR 664A in Bowling Green County Line Road at a bridge over an unnamed stream on the Polk County line east-northeast of Bowling Green | Former SR 664 [1] |
CR 664A | Oak Street Heard Bridge Road Lake Branch Road Hardee Street | US 17 (SR 35) / Oak Street in Wauchula | US 17 (SR 35) / CR 668 in Bowling Green | Former SR 664A [1] |
CR 664B | Boyd Cowart Road Heard Bridge Road | SR 636 / Manley Road east of Wauchula CR 664A / Troy Smith Road east-southeast of Bowling Green | CR 664A northeast of Coker CR 664 at the Polk County line east-northeast of Bowling Green | Former SR 664B [1] |
CR 665 | Fish Branch Road | US 17 (SR 35) in Gardner CR 663 in Limestone | Fish Branch Road at a bridge over Fish Branch east of Gardner SR 64 west of Ona | Former SR 665 [1] |
CR 667 | Maude Road | SR 64 / Rest Haven Road in Lemon Grove | Maude Road north-northeast of Hart Cemetery north-northeast of Lemon Grove | Former SR 667 [1] |
CR 668 | Doc Coil Road Hardee Street | CR 664 west-southwest of Bowling Green | US 17 (SR 35) / CR 664A in Bowling Green | former SR 668 [2] |
CR 671 | Parnell Road | CR 636 / Parnell Road north-northwest of Crewsville | SR 64 / Old Town Creek Road | Former SR 671 [3] |
CR 684 | Moffitt Road | US 17 (SR 35) in Moffit | Moffitt Road / Sasser Road east-northeast of Moffit | Former SR 684 [1] |
Interstate 4 (I-4) is an Interstate Highway located entirely within the U.S. state of Florida, maintained by the Florida Department of Transportation (FDOT). Spanning 132.298 miles (212.913 km) along a generally southwest–northeast axis, I-4 is entirely concurrent with State Road 400 (SR 400). In the west, I-4 begins at an interchange with I-275 in Tampa. I-4 intersects with several major expressways as it traverses Central Florida, including U.S. Route 41 (US 41) in Tampa; US 301 near Riverview; I-75 near Brandon; US 98 in Lakeland; US 192 in Celebration; Florida's Turnpike in Orlando; and US 17 and US 92 in multiple junctions. In the east, I-4 ends at an interchange with I-95 in Daytona Beach, while SR 400 continues for roughly another 4 mi (6.4 km) and ends at an intersection with US 1 on the city line of Daytona Beach and South Daytona.
State Road 429, also known as the Daniel Webster Western Beltway or Western Expressway south of U.S. Highway 441 and the Wekiva Parkway north of U.S. Highway 441 is a limited-access toll road built and maintained by the Central Florida Expressway Authority (CFX), the Florida's Turnpike Enterprise, and the Florida Department of Transportation (FDOT). Its mainline currently extends 43.19 miles (69.51 km) from Interstate 4 in Four Corners north to SR 46 in Sorrento. Control cities are Apopka and Tampa although the control cities for traffic at the entrances at U.S. Highway 441 and north are Orlando, Tampa, and Daytona Beach. SR 429 was originally planned as a western half of State Road 417.
The Dolphin East-West Expressway is a 15-mile-long (24 km), six-lane, divided controlled-access highway, with the westernmost 14 miles (23 km) as an all electronic tollway signed as State Road 836, and the easternmost 1.292 miles (2.079 km) between Interstate 95 (I-95) and SR A1A cosigned as Interstate 395. The road currently extends from just north of the intersection of Southwest 137th Avenue and U.S. Highway 41 (US 41) in Tamiami, eastward past the Homestead Extension of Florida's Turnpike and Miami International Airport, before intersecting I-95, becoming I-395 and ending at SR A1A in Miami at the west end of the MacArthur Causeway. The Dolphin Expressway is maintained and operated by the Miami-Dade Expressway Authority (MDX), while the I-395 section is maintained by the Florida Department of Transportation (FDOT). The Dolphin Expressway from the Palmetto Expressway to I-95 opened in 1969, with the I-395 section opening in 1971, the extension to the HEFT opening in 1974 and a second western extension opening in 2007.
State Road 48 (SR 48) was an east–west state highway that ran from U.S. Highway 41 in Floral City, Florida, to Florida State Road 19 in Howey-in-the-Hills, Florida. In the last years of the route's existence, it was a 2.167 miles (3.487 km) state road in Bushnell, Florida, which ran from Interstate 75 (I-75) at exit 314 to U.S. Highway 301 (US 301). Today, all segments are designated County Road 48 (CR 48) where they are under county maintenance. Segments in Sumter County are part of the Scenic Sumter Heritage Byway.
Beach Boulevard is an east–west road running from Jacksonville, Florida, United States east to Jacksonville Beach. Most of the road is part of U.S. Route 90 and unsigned as State Road 212, and a small portion at the eastern end is unsigned as County Road 212.
State Road 62 is a 37-mile (60 km) state highway in Manatee and Hardee counties in the US state of Florida that passes through scrubland from Parrish to near Bowling Green.
State Road 64 extends from City Road 789 near the Gulf of Mexico in Holmes Beach on Anna Maria Island in Manatee County to US 27/US 98 in Avon Park in Highlands County. State Road 64 travels from west to east through the counties of Manatee, Hardee and Highlands. It is a mostly rural two-lane highway going through only two cities, Bradenton and Zolfo Springs. It crosses the Gulf Intracoastal Waterway as well as the Braden River, Lake Manatee, and the Myakka River. East of Avon Park, a bi-county extension runs northeast into Polk County which runs through Lake Wales Ridge State Forest and terminates at the Avon Park US Air Force Base. It is designated as the Florida Cracker Trail from Bradenton to the Hardee County Line.
State Road 35 is a north–south state highway in the western counties of the U.S. state of Florida.
State Road 636 (SR 636) is a 6.969-mile-long (11.216 km) state highway in Hardee County, Florida, that runs from U.S. Route 17 (US 17) and County Road 64A in Wauchula to SR 64 east of Wauchula.