Georgia State Route 5

"GA 5" redirects here. For the congressional district, see Georgia's 5th congressional district.

State Route 5 marker

State Route 5
Route information
Maintained by GDOT
Length: 155.32 mi[1] (249.97 km)
Major junctions
South end: SR 48 at the Alabama state line in Carroll County
 
North end: SR 60 and SR 68 at the Tennessee state line in McCaysville
Location
Counties: Carroll, Douglas, Cobb, Cherokee, Pickens, Gilmer, Fannin
Highway system
  • Georgia State Routes
SR 4SR 6

State Route 5 (SR 5) is a state highway that runs south–north through portions of Carroll, Douglas, Cobb, Cherokee, Pickens, Gilmer, and Fannin counties in western and northern Georgia. The route runs from its southern terminus at SR 48 at the Georgia-Alabama state line, north of Ephesus, to its northern terminus at SR 60 and SR 68 at the Tennessee state line near McCaysville, bisecting the northwestern portion of Georgia.

Route description

State Route 5 in Douglas County

SR 5 starts at the Georgia-Alabama state line just east of Graham and north of Ephesus, in Carroll County, where the route continues west into Randolph County, Alabama as SR 48. In Carroll County, the route initially runs northeast, but soon turns to the east, and bisects the southern portion of rural Carroll County. SR 5 crosses U.S. Route 27/SR 1 (US 27/SR 1) in Roopville, and continues east until it nears the Chattahoochee River, where it turns northeast to parallel the river, and runs through Whitesburg. SR 5 continues northeast, then cuts north into Douglas County, where it is locally known as Bill Arp Road, crosses Interstate 20 (I-20) in the northern part of Douglas County, and heads through Douglasville.[1][2][3]

Continuing northeast, and having picked up concurrencies with US 78/SR 8, the route heads through Lithia Springs, crosses US 278/SR 6, and passes into Cobb County and Austell. In Austell, SR 5 splits from US 78/SR 8 and heads slightly northeast through the western parts of Smyrna to just west of Dobbins Air Reserve Base. Running concurrently with SR 280, the routes wind to the north around Dobbins as South Cobb Drive, and SR 5 splits off and runs north by itself into Marietta as Atlanta Road. The route then makes a sharp turn to the west and runs concurrently with SR 120 Loop, and both turn north again to just avoid the Marietta Square to its west.[1][2][3]

Curving to the northeast past the square, SR 5 leaves its concurrency with SR 120 Loop behind and heads north yet again, first as Cherokee Street, then Church Street, and curves to the northeast as it crosses US 41/SR 3. Soon thereafter, SR 5 merges with I-75 for a very short distance, and then splits off I-75 north of Marietta, together with its concurrency with I-575, and heads north and northeast into Cherokee County in the direction of Woodstock. From Marietta to Blue Ridge, the route parallels the Marietta and North Georgia Rail Line.[1][2][3]

SR 5 remains concurrent with I-575 for that route's entire distance, as the two roadways bisect Cherokee County, and bypass Holly Springs, Canton (crossing the Etowah River north of Canton), and Ball Ground. North of Ball Ground, near Nelson, I-575, as well as the freeway portion of the route, terminate, and SR 5, now concurrent with SR 515, crosses into Pickens County. The routes curve northwest around Jasper, then turn back to the north near Talking Rock on its way into Gilmer County and Ellijay. In Ellijay, SR 5 picks up a concurrency with US 76/SR 2, and heads northeast into the Chattahoochee National Forest in the direction of Blue Ridge in Fannin County. In Blue Ridge, US 76/SR 2/SR 515 head off to the east, while SR 5 heads northwest to McCaysville and its northern terminus at the Tennessee state line, where the route intersects the northern terminus of SR 60 (Toccoa Avenue) and continues into Tennessee as SR 68 (which also has the Toccoa Avenue name).[1][2][3]

Traffic

The Georgia Department of Transportation (GDOT) average annual daily traffic (AADT) numbers for the year 2011 show a variety of average daily traffic load numbers as the route travels across western and northern Georgia. At the route's western portion in rural Carroll County, daily vehicle load averages hover around 3,000, with a route low seen west of US 27 at just over 1,000 vehicles per day. Averages quickly rise from about 7,500 vehicles north of SR 166 to reach numbers near 22,000 around I-20, then level off between 10,000 and 15,000 between Douglasville and Austell. Vehicle loads climb again north of Austell, reaching numbers between 27,000 and 38,000 between Austell and Marietta.[3]

Once SR 5 becomes concurrent with I-575, averages increase drastically, with a route high of 93,000 vehicles seen south of Woodstock, close to I-75. Numbers generally decrease as the route travels further north, going from the mark seen in Woodstock down to 59,000 in Holly Springs, around 55,000 in Canton, and further down to 26,000 near Ball Ground. Once the freeway portion of the route ends in Pickens County, averages fall further from around 24,000 to around 12,000, but stabilize in that vicinity from Talking Rock in Pickens County all the way through Ellijay in Gilmer County to Blue Ridge in Fannin County. As SR 5 approaches its northern terminus, vehicle load decreases once more to a low of 7,200, and hovers around 9,000 as the Tennessee state line is reached.[3]

"Old Highway 5"

With the construction of I-575 and other projects between Cobb and Gilmer counties, SR 5 saw significant routing changes in the 1980s and 1990 (see History below for additional details). All of the former routing of SR 5, parallel to I-575, and the new routing in Pickens and Gilmer counties, still exists today, and is utilized by local traffic.

From the northbound exit 267A on I-75, the old routing of SR 5 follows what is today locally known as Canton Road Connector (and is signed as SR 5 Spur), which merges into Canton Road. This routing parallels I-575 very closely to its east as the old SR 5 routing heads north through the heart of Woodstock. The local road name changes to Main Street through Woodstock, and to Holly Springs Parkway on its way to Holly Springs, where it crosses under I-575 to its west at exit 14. As the old route passes through Canton, it becomes briefly concurrent with SR 140 (and is signed as SR 5 Business), then crosses under I-575 once more to its east again (at exit 20), and heads northeast as Ball Ground Highway. Rarely more than 0.5 miles (0.80 km) separate the old routing and I-575/SR 5/SR 515, as the old SR 5 passes through the heart of Ball Ground (where it is again signed as SR 5 Business), and it briefly becomes concurrent with SR 372.[1][2][3]

"Old Highway 5" continues north as Canton Road/Canton Highway, now somewhat further removed from the current SR 5, and passes through Nelson, then becomes concurrent with SR 53 Business into Jasper. North of Jasper, the former routing of SR 5 has become a minor roadway and is known as Talking Rock Road to Talking Rock, where it briefly becomes concurrent with SR 136, then heads north as Ellijay Road, having crossed to the west of the current SR 5 together with SR 136. Paralleling SR 5 very closely once more, the former routing passes through downtown Ellijay, crosses the Ellijay River, and merges into the current US 76/SR 5/SR 515 north of East Ellijay.[1][2][3]

History

Original route development: 1920s to 1960s

SR 5 makes its appearance on Georgia state road maps in 1920, when the portion of the route from Marietta, at its intersection with SR 3, to the Tennessee state line is graded and designated as SR 5, with the stretch from the northern parts of Pickens County to Blue Ridge co-signed with SR 2. It should be noted that the original routing of SR 5 ran through, not around, the communities of Holly Springs, Canton, and Ball Ground, and curved through Nelson and Tate to head through Jasper and points north. In addition, the portion of the route where SR 5 is concurrent with US 78 and SR 8, from Douglasville to Austell, was also extant at the time, and signed as SR 8.[4] By the middle of 1936, no other portions of the roadway had been constructed; however, all of the existing routing that was signed as SR 5 (between Marietta and Tennessee) had been finished with hard surface at this time.[5]

Less than a year later, by early 1937, a connection measuring 10.9 miles (17.5 km) between Powder Springs and Marietta had been graded and designated as part of SR 5. This roadway, which today corresponds to Powder Springs Road, and which is partially designated as SR 360, does not cover the same route as the present path of SR 5, but is north of today's route.[6] By late in 1940, another portion of today's routing made its first appearance with the addition of the spur measuring 23.0 miles (37.0 km) between Whitesburg and Douglasville, which also received a designation of SR 5.[7]

By early in 1941, numerous changes had taken place, in particular in the southern and western portion of the route. A connecting roadway measuring 5.8 miles (9.3 km), and designated as part of SR 5 at the time, had been constructed from the Alabama state line to Bowdon; this roadway is designated as part of SR 100 today. In the same area, and also designated as part of SR 5, was a new roadway running from Roopville to Whitesburg, which does correspond to part of today's route. This routing connected west and north to Bowdon via a section of today's SR 5 running west from Roopville, which then curves northwest in the direction of Bowdon, and which is today known as Bowdon-Tyus Road, but appeared to be part of SR 5 at the time.[8]

In 1949, the westernmost portion of SR 5 started to follow its current alignment, where SR 5 starts at the Alabama state line and runs east to the community of Bucktown, instead of northeast to Bowdon. The new routing then continues east to where SR 100 splits off to the northeast, and heads still further east to meet the existing section of SR 5 at its intersection with Bowdon-Tyus Road. At the time, the entire portion from the Alabama state line to Douglasville was still in an unimproved state from a road surface perspective.[9] By 1953, the first indication of the one missing section of the route, between Austell and Marietta, was first mapped as a connecting county route,[10] and it was ten more years before this connection was made part of the state route system, when this section was designated as SR 340. Even then, portions of the route east of the Alabama state line and west of Whitesburg were still not covered in hard surface.[11]

Development of I-575: Late 1970s to present day

By early in 1980, I-575 had been under construction for some time (designated as SR 713 during the construction period), and two other construction projects were underway between Cherokee County and Gilmer County. In Gilmer County, the project designated as SR 719 was aimed at re-routing SR 5 around Ellijay to its east.[12] In 1982, SR 5 was re-routed from the Cherokee-Pickens county line to its present path; this project was also designated as SR 713 while under construction. This meant that SR 5, as before, ran northeast through Ball Ground, but then made a sharp turn to the northwest, utilizing what today is the northernmost stretch of SR 372, to meet the current SR 5 routing just inside Pickens County. This new routing bypasses Nelson and Tate altogether (this section is called Canton Highway today), and also bypasses Jasper to its west (the old routing from Jasper is utilized by SR 53 Business today, and the entire stretch was signed as SR 5 Alternate until 1987[13]), and connects to the existing SR 5 routing in Talking Rock (that portion is presently known as Talking Rock Road). Running north from Talking Rock, the original routing is currently known as Ellijay Road, and closely parallels the present SR 5/SR 515, heads through the heart of Ellijay, and intersects US 76/SR 5/SR 515 northeast of Ellijay.[14]

In 1984, the portion of the road that had been signed as SR 340 between Austell and Marietta had been re-designated as SR 5, and the roadway running northeast from Powder Springs had been dropped from the state route system. In addition, the southern portion of I-575, from north of Marietta to Canton, had been put into operation, but SR 5 in the area was kept in the state route system, running closely parallel to the new interstate. Also, another portion of the newly constructed route around Ellijay (tracked as SR 719 while under construction) was put into operation, and the original routing was re-designated as SR 5 Alternate.[15]

By early in 1986, the portion of SR 5 running parallel to I-575 from Marietta to Canton had been re-designated as SR 754. Around Ellijay, the designation of SR 5 Alternate was dropped, meaning that the original routing in that area was dropped from the state route system at this time.[16] Just another year later saw the re-designation of SR 5 to be concurrent with the new I-575, which had been put into operation for its entire length between I-75 near Marietta and Pickens County. This meant that the entire stretch of original routing of SR 5, from north of Marietta to north of Ellijay, had been removed from the state route system (with the exception of several bannered routes, described below), and had been replaced by 4-lane limited-access new highway construction. At this same time, SR 5 in north Marietta, which had crossed I-75 and continued north by itself, was merged into I-75 for a very short distance, before SR 5, together with I-575, split off to the north on its present path.[13] The designation of SR 515, concurrent with SR 5 from Pickens County to Blue Ridge, did not appear until early in 1990.[17]

Georgia designated roadways

On March 28, 1988, SR 5 was designated as "Chieftains Trail" between Canton and Ellijay.[18]

On April 28, 1999, SR 5 was designated as "C. F. 'Coote' Mason Highway" between the end of its concurrency with SR 515 and its northern terminus.[19]

In 2005, the interchange between SR 5 and SR 515 in Blue Ridge was designated as the "A. L. Stepp Interchange".[20]

Major intersections

CountyLocationmi[1]kmDestinationsNotes
Carroll 0.0000.000 SR 48 west WedoweeAlabama state line
 0.4490.723 SR 100 south FranklinWestern terminus of SR 100 concurrency
 0.8911.434 SR 100 north BowdonEastern terminus of SR 100 concurrency
Roopville10.94017.606 US 27 / SR 1 Carrollton, Franklin
Whitesburg24.71339.772
US 27 Alt. / SR 16 (Main Street) Carrollton, Newnan
traffic circle
DouglasMcWhorter35.47557.091 SR 166 (Duncan Memorial Highway)roundabout
Douglasville45.35572.992 I20 (SR 402) Birmingham, AtlantaI-20 exit 34
46.74275.224 US 78 west / SR 8 west (Veterans Memorial Highway) Villa Ricasouth terminus of concurrency with US 78/SR 8
SR 92 south (Fairburn Road) to I20 / to Chapel Hill Roadsouth end of SR 92 overlap
48.54578.126 SR 92 north (Mozley Road) Hiram, Dallasnorth end of SR 92 overlap
Lithia Springs55.82789.845 US 278 west / SR 6 (Thornton Road) to I20 Powder Springs, Dallassouth end of US 278 overlap
CobbAustell58.07993.469 US 78 east / SR 8 east (Veterans Memorial Highway) / Maxham Road MabletonEastern terminus of US 78 / US 278 / SR 8 concurrency; interchange
Fair Oaks66.442106.928 SR 280 south (South Cobb Drive) to I20 / Austell Road MariettaSouthern terminus of SR 280 concurrency
67.690108.936 SR 280 north (South Cobb Drive) to I75 Dobbins AFBNorthern terminus of SR 280 concurrency
Marietta68.810110.739 SR 120 east (South Marietta Parkway) to I75Southern terminus of SR 120 concurrency
SR 360 west (Powder Springs Street Southeast) Powder Springs, Confederate Cemetery
69.274111.486 SR 120 west (Whitlock Avenue) Dallasnorth end of SR 120 overlap; south end of SR 120 Alt. overlap
69.816112.358Cherokee Street northformer SR 5 north
US 41 south / SR 3 south (Cobb Parkway) / SR 120 Alt. east (North Marietta Parkway) to I75north end of SR 120 Alt. overlap; south end of US 41 / SR 3 overlap
US 41 north / SR 3 north (Cobb Parkway) Kennesaw, Acworthnorth end of US 41 / SR 3 overlap
Church Street - Marietta, Smyrnainterchange; southbound exit and northbound entrance; former SR 5 south
71.831115.601 I75 south (SR 401) / Canton Highway Atlantasouth end of I-75 / SR 401 overlap; SR 5 south follows exit 267B; former SR 5 Spur north
Kennesaw73.148117.720 I75 north (SR 401) Chattanooganorth end of I-75 / SR 401 overlap; south end of I-575 / SR 417 overlap; northbound exit and southbound entrance; SR 5 north follows exit 268
see I-575
Pickens 104.093167.521 SR 5 Bus. south / SR 372 south Nelson, Ball Groundnorth end of I-575 / SR 417 overlap; south end of SR 515 overlap
see SR 515
FanninBlue Ridge145.084233.490 US 76 east / SR 2 east / SR 515 north / West First Street Blairsville, Downtown Blue RidgeNorthern terminus of US 76/SR 2/SR 515 concurrency
McCaysville155.325249.971 SR 60 south (Toccoa Avenue) Mineral Bluff, Blue Ridge
SR 68 north (Toccoa Avenue) Ducktown
Northern terminus at Tennessee state line
1.000 mi = 1.609 km; 1.000 km = 0.621 mi

Bannered routes

Marietta spur route

State Route 5 Spur
Location: Marietta
Length: 1.670 mi[1] (2.688 km)

State Route 5 Spur starts where the SR 5 main line merges into I-75 at exit 267B in Marietta, and runs northeast, locally known as the Canton Road Connector. It terminates where Canton Road and Canton Road Connector merge, and the roadway continues north as Canton Road.[1][2][3]

Kennesaw connector route

Main article: Barrett Parkway

State Route 5 Connector
Location: Kennesaw
Length: 2.092 mi[1] (3.367 km)

State Route 5 Connector starts at the intersection of Barrett Parkway and US 41/SR 3 in Kennesaw, less than 1 mile (1.6 km) northwest of where the SR 5 main line crosses the same two routes. SR 5 Connector heads northeast, locally known as Barrett Parkway on both sides of that intersection, and crosses I-75 just before passing by Town Center Mall. The connector terminates just east of its intersection with I-575/SR 5, where the roadway continues east as Piedmont Road.[1][2][3]

Canton business loop

State Route 5 Business
Location: Canton
Length: 1.750 mi[1] (2.816 km)

State Route 5 Business starts where SR 140 makes a sharp turn from the east to the north, and turns from Marietta Highway to Waleska Road, just west of I-575/SR 5 in Canton. The route runs slightly northeast from this intersection through the northern parts of Canton, is locally known as Riverstone Parkway, and terminates at its intersection with I-575/SR 5 at exit 20.[1][2][3]

Ball Ground business loop

State Route 5 Business
Location: Ball Ground
Length: 1.325 mi[1] (2.132 km)

State Route 5 Business starts at exit 27 of I-575/SR 5 in Ball Ground, where the roadway continues west as Howell Bridge Road. The route heads slightly southeast for a very short distance, then turns sharply northeast to run into the heart of Ball Ground on the former routing of SR 5. The business route terminates at its intersection with SR 372, which carries the roadway north to again merge into the SR 5 main line.[1][2][3]

Gilmer County alternate route

State Route 5 Alternate
Location: Central Gilmer County
Length: 8.3 mi[21] (13.4 km)
Existed: 1983[22][23]–1986[23][24]

State Route 5 Alternate (SR 5 Alternate) was an 8.3-mile-long (13.4 km) alternate route that existed entirely within the central part of Gilmer County. Its entire route was the former alignment of the SR 5 mainline through the area, before SR 5 was shifted to a new route east of this one.

It began south-southwest of Ellijay, where the original route of the SR 5 mainline (SR 515 had not been routed through the area at that time) continued to the south-southwest. This intersection also marked the eastern terminus of SR 382. The two highways headed north-northeast and diverge, with SR 5 Alternate continuing to the north-northeast. After a crossing of the Coosawattee River, it entered Ellijay and intersected US 76/SR 282. In the main part of town, it intersected SR 52. Then, it entered the Chattahoochee-Oconee National Forest and curved to the east-northeast and met its northern terminus, an intersection with US 76/SR 5.[22][23]

See also

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 "County GIS Base map shapefiles/geodatabases (varies by county)". Georgia Department of Transportation. Retrieved January 28, 2013.
  2. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 Google (November 16, 2012). "GA-5" (Map). Google Maps. Google. Retrieved November 16, 2012.
  3. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 Geographic Transportation Reporting Analysis and Query System (GeoTRAQS) (Map). Georgia Department of Transportation. Retrieved January 28, 2013.
  4. State of Georgia System of State Roads (PDF) (Map). State Highway Department of Georgia. 1920. Retrieved January 28, 2013.
  5. State of Georgia System of State Roads (PDF) (Map). State Highway Department of Georgia. July 1936. Retrieved January 28, 2013.
  6. State of Georgia System of State Roads (PDF) (Map). State Highway Department of Georgia. April 1937. Retrieved January 28, 2013.
  7. State of Georgia System of State Roads (PDF) (Map). State Highway Department of Georgia. October 1940. Retrieved January 28, 2013.
  8. State of Georgia System of State Roads (PDF) (Map). State Highway Department of Georgia. January 1, 1941. Retrieved January 28, 2013.
  9. State of Georgia System of State Roads (PDF) (Map). State Highway Department of Georgia. April 1, 1949. Retrieved January 28, 2013.
  10. State of Georgia Highway System and Connections (PDF) (Map). Georgia Department of Transportation. September 1, 1953. Retrieved January 28, 2013.
  11. State of Georgia Highway System and Connections (PDF) (Map). Georgia Department of Transportation. January 1963. Retrieved January 28, 2013.
  12. State of Georgia Highway System and Connections (PDF) (Map) (1980-81 ed.). Georgia Department of Transportation. January 1980. Retrieved January 28, 2013.
  13. 1 2 State of Georgia Highway System and Connections (PDF) (Map) (1987-88 ed.). Georgia Department of Transportation. January 1987. Retrieved January 28, 2013.
  14. State of Georgia Highway System and Connections (PDF) (Map). Georgia Department of Transportation. January 1982. Retrieved January 28, 2013.
  15. State of Georgia Highway System and Connections (PDF) (Map) (1984-85 ed.). Georgia Department of Transportation. January 1984. Retrieved January 28, 2013.
  16. State of Georgia Highway System and Connections (PDF) (Map) (1986-84 ed.). Georgia Department of Transportation. January 1986. Retrieved January 28, 2013.
  17. State of Georgia Highway System and Connections (PDF) (Map) (1990-91 ed.). Georgia Department of Transportation. January 1990. Retrieved January 29, 2013.
  18. General Assembly of the State of Georgia (1988). "Chieftains Trail—Designated" (PDF). Acts and Resolutions of the General Assembly of the State of Georgia. Georgia Department of Transportation. p. 335. Retrieved November 16, 2012.
  19. General Assembly of the State of Georgia (1999). "C. F. 'Coote' Mason Highway—Designated" (PDF). Acts and Resolutions of the General Assembly of the State of Georgia. Georgia Department of Transportation. vol. 1, p. 916. Retrieved November 16, 2012.
  20. General Assembly of the State of Georgia. "A Resolution Designating the A. L. Stepp Interchange; and for other purposes" (PDF). Acts and Resolutions of the General Assembly of the State of Georgia. Georgia Department of Transportation. Retrieved November 16, 2012.
  21. Google (September 15, 2013). "Route of SR 5 Alternte" (Map). Google Maps. Google. Retrieved September 15, 2013.
  22. 1 2 Georgia State Highway System (PDF) (Map). Cartography by GSHD. Georgia State Highway Department. January 1, 1983. Retrieved September 15, 2013.
  23. 1 2 3 Georgia State Highway System (PDF) (Map). Cartography by GSHD. Georgia State Highway Department. January 1, 1984. Retrieved September 15, 2013.
  24. Georgia State Highway System (PDF) (Map). Cartography by GSHD. Georgia State Highway Department. January 1, 1986. Retrieved September 15, 2013.

External links

Route map: Bing / Google

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