Florida State Road 806

State Road 806 marker

State Road 806
Atlantic Avenue
Route information
Maintained by FDOT
Length: 9.180 mi[1] (14.774 km)
Existed: 1945 renumbering (definition) – present
Major junctions
West end: US 441 at West Delray Beach
East end: SR A1A in Delray Beach
Location
Counties: Palm Beach
Highway system
SR 805SR 807

State Road 806 (SR 806), locally known as Atlantic Avenue, is the primary east–west highway of Delray Beach in Palm Beach County, Florida. Not to be confused with parallel Atlantic Boulevard (SR 814) 15 miles to the south, Atlantic Avenue extends from US 441 / SR 7 eastward to Ocean Boulevard (SR A1A) just north of Highland Beach. East of Military Trail (CR 809), SR 806 is in the city of Delray Beach; to the west of Military Trail, the road stretches through unincorporated Palm Beach County in the CDPs of High Point, Kings Point, and the Villages of Oriole.

Along with the north-south Swinton Avenue (one-half mile west of the one-way pair forming US 1 and its hidden designation, SR 5), Atlantic Avenue forms the north-south dividing line for Delray Beach addresses. West of Swinton Avenue, SR 806 technically runs along West Atlantic Avenue, with East Atlantic Avenue forming the short distance (in comparison with West Atlantic) between Swinton Avenue and SR A1A. Although SR 806 is a large commercial and commuter road, several golf courses have access from Atlantic Avenue between Florida's Turnpike (SR 91) and Interstate 95 (SR 9).

Route description

US 441 to Interstate 95

State Road 806 begins at a divided intersection with U.S. Route 441 and State Road 7) in the outskirts of Delray Beach, Florida near the Arthur R. Marshall Loxahatchee National Wildlife Refuge. State Road 806 heads eastward along West Atlantic Avenue, a four-lane divided highway but quickly becomes two lanes and enters a small commercial district. The progression of the highway continues for a distance along West Atlantic Avenue, intersecting with several local streets and passing through some large groves and fields. After the intersection with Starkey Road, State Road 806 divides back into four lanes, as it enters an interchange with Florida's Turnpike (unsigned State Road 91). West Atlantic Avenue first intersects with the entranceway and exit ramp from the turnpike southbound and continues eastward over a stream. After passing under the eight lanes of the Turnpike, State Road 806 intersects with the ramp to the northbound lanes. After leaving the large interchange with the turnpike, the highway continues eastward along the country clubs in Delray Beach, beginning with an intersection to the Lexington Club on the eastbound lanes. After that, State Road 806 continues, passing Eagle Point and soon intersecting with Hagen Ranch Road at a traffic light. The route then passes Kings Point Country Club and to the south of the Villages of Oriole, where the highway continues as six lanes, turning southeastward until intersecting with Jog Road (the northern continuation of State Road 845) in Delray Beach.[2]

Signage for State Road 806 in Delray Beach.

State Road 806 continues eastward from Jog Road along West Atlantic Avenue, crossing through several country clubs as a six-lane highway with a divided median. At El Claire Ranch Road, the highway makes a gradual curve to the northeast, passing through a commercial strip near Lakes of Delray Boulevard. State Road 806 continues northeastward, crossing with Via Flora, where it returns to its eastward progression. Along West Atlantic, the highway crosses through another commercial strip while staying a six lane arterial boulevard. Soon after, the highway intersects with County Road 809 (Military Trail) at a traffic light in the midst of the strip, entering incorporated Delray Beach at the intersection.[2] State Road 806 continues eastward, crossing through more of the country clubs as a four lane boulevard. The highway continues with the divided median and begins to make a short progression to the southeast and soon to the northeast. State Road 806 then crosses another body of water and crosses to an intersection with Congress Avenue, the northern extension of State Road 807 and currently part of County Road 807. After Congress, West Atlantic heads to the northeast, approaching the Seaboard Coast Line. After crossing the tracks at-grade, State Road 806 and West Atlantic interchange with Interstate 95 (unsigned State Road 9). The highway crosses through the partial cloverleaf and crosses under the ten lanes of Interstate 95.[2]

SR 806 (Atlantic Avenue) through downtown Delray Beach.

Downtown Delray Beach

After the interchange with Interstate 95, West Atlantic Avenue continues eastward, entering downtown Delray Beach, where the highway begins intersecting with numbered local streets now as a four-lane boulevard. The surroundings become a mix of residences and commercial industries until Northwest 6th Avenue, when it becomes purely commercial. State Road 806 passes to the south of the Delray Beach Tennis Center and its lanes begin to merge as the highway approaches the intersection with Swinton Avenue. At Swinton Avenue, West Atlantic Avenue changes names to East Atlantic Avenue, and State Road 806 continues eastward along East Atlantic. Also at the intersection with Swinton Avenue, State Road 806 narrows to a two lane undivided avenue. At this point, the state has relinquished control of East Atlantic to the city of Delray Beach, and the segment is not part of State Road 806. At the intersection with North Railroad Avenue, the road crosses the Florida East Coast Railroad and continues through downtown Delray Beach. At the intersection with Northeast 5th Avenue, East Atlantic Avenue intersects with U.S. Route 1 (unsigned State Road 5) southbound, where the state regains control of the road and State Road 806 resumes. A block later, the route intersects the U.S. Route 1 northbound lanes (Northeast 6th Avenue). State Road 806 widens to a four lane undivided avenue for the remainder of East Atlantic. After U.S. Route 1, the highway continues eastward, crossing Veterans Park and then crossing over Intracostal Waterway on a large drawbridge. After the drawbridge, East Atlantic Avenue continues eastward, passing several high-rise residences until terminating at an intersection with State Road A1A (Ocean Boulevard) in Delray Beach, along the Atlantic Ocean.[2]

History

State Road 806 was established in the 1945 renumbering as a road extending from US 441 /SR 7 to US 1 /SR 5 in Delray Beach, and extended to SR A1A at a later point. Prior to the 1945 renumbering, it was State Road 198.[3]

Major intersections

The entire route is in Palm Beach County.

Locationmi[1]kmDestinationsNotes
West Delray Beach0.0000.000 US 441 (SR 7)Western terminus; Road continues west without designation
 1.862.99 Turnpike (SR 91)Exit 81 (Florida's Turnpike)
Villages of Oriole3.5605.729Jog Road - Morikami Museum
Delray Beach5.1658.312Military Trail (CR 809)
6.97411.224Congress Avenue (CR 807)
7.311.7 I95 (SR 9) West Palm Beach, MiamiExit 52 (I-95)
8.27013.309 To US 1 / Swinton Avenue – Beach, downtown bypass / truck routeEast end of state maintenance
8.58213.811 US 1 south (Southeast 5th Avenue / SR 5)West end of state maintenance
8.64713.916 US 1 north (Northeast 6th Avenue / SR 5) to I95 – downtown bypass
8.815–
8.860
14.186–
14.259
Atlantic Avenue Bridge over Atlantic Intracoastal Waterway
9.18014.774 SR A1A (Ocean Boulevard)Eastern terminus
1.000 mi = 1.609 km; 1.000 km = 0.621 mi

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 FDOT straight line diagrams, accessed March 2014
  2. 2.0 2.1 2.2 2.3 Microsoft; Nokia (April 2, 2010). "Overview map of State Road 806 (Atlantic Avenue)" (Map). Bing Maps. Microsoft. Retrieved April 2, 2010.
  3. Routes 800–809 Retrieved April 13, 2010