Until 1999, a truck bypass was signed around downtown Kissimmee. It began where US 17/US 92 formerly turned from John Young Parkway onto West Emmett Street and continued north in a straight line along John Young Parkway to US 192, where it turned east until it returned to US 17/US 92 at North Main Street (OBT). The route existed from sometime during the 1980s until 1999, when US 17/US 92 itself was rerouted to bypass downtown Kissimmee.
U.S. Highway 17 Truck (US 17 Truck) is designated to divert
overheight truck traffic away from a low railroad bridge that carries the
SunRail rail line over
US 17/US 92 in southern
Maitland, Florida. The route follows
SR 423 (Lee Road),
Interstate 4 (I-4), and
SR 414 (Maitland Boulevard) in
Winter Park and Maitland. It formerly used Wymore Road and Lake Avenue (
CR 438A) instead of I-4 and SR 414.
The road is designated as a spur of SR 15[1] and was formerly numbered
SR 15A.[2] It has also been—and may still be—an unsigned U.S. Highway 17 Alternate (US 17 Alt.),[2] which originally continued east on I-10 and north on
I-95 to return to US 17 north of the
Trout River.
US 17 north at the interchange with the Roosevelt Expressway
Roosevelt Expressway is the
bypass built as a spur of I-10, which converted US 17 into a limited-access expressway north of Blanding Boulevard (
SR 21), bypassing the Post Street/College Street route that Roosevelt Boulevard used to travel through the
Riverside and Avondale historic district, passing by McDuff Avenue (SR 129) to I-10 eastbound. The expressway is accessible southbound via I-10 west as a left exit (exit 361).[3]
The current design was preferred over the proposed River Oaks Freeway, which would have decimated the Avondale district. The partial interchanges with Blanding and I-10 reflect the nature of the original need of a bypass system. Intended to stimulate commerce and encourage connectivity to Jacksonville's downtown to and from the suburbs and Orange Park, while streamlining commutes and lessening the impact such travel was to potentially have on Jacksonville's oldest areas in the southwest side of town by removing high volume and chaotic redevelopment from the streets of Avondale and Lakeside Park, the area east of the Roosevelt Expressway is now protected in the form of a zoning overlay largely allowed by the basic design of this alternate route. Roosevelt Expressway has been signed in the last number of years as Roosevelt Boulevard, even though it's still in the
Jacksonville Transportation Authority books as Expressway. It is part of the
Blue Star Memorial Highway and named for President
Franklin D. Roosevelt.
In early 2006, the
Florida Department of Transportation applied to the
American Association of State Highway and Transportation Officials (AASHTO) to reroute US 17 via the Roosevelt Expressway, I-10, I-95, and
US 23. If this is accepted, US 17 Alt. will be eliminated. As of March 2007, it appears that US 17 has been rerouted. US 17 goes north on the Roosevelt Expressway, to east I-10 (SR 8), north on I-95, and east on Union Street (US 23) until Main Street and picking back up on its original course.[4]
U.S. Highway 17 Alternate (US 17 Alt.) was an
alternate route of
US 17 that existed entirely within the
city limits of
Savannah, Georgia. The roadway that would eventually become US 17 Alt. was established between November 1946 and February 1948 as
State Route 25 Spur (SR 25 Spur), from US 17/
SR 25 on the western edge of the city to US 17/
US 80/SR 25/
SR 26 in the main part.[9][10] Between April 1949 and August 1950, it was then indicated to have started at US 17/SR 25 (Ogeechee Road), traveled east-southeast on 52nd Street, turned left on Whatley Avenue and traveled to the northeast, curved to the north-northeast onto Montgomery Street and traveled north-northeast to its northern terminus.[11][5] By the beginning of 1952, US 17 Alt. was established on the path of SR 25 Spur from US 17/SR 25 east-southeast on Mills B. Lane Boulevard, northeast on Whatley Avenue, and north-northeast on Montgomery Street, as previously.[5][6] In 1953, the path of US 17 Alt. on SR 25 Spur was redesignated as the northbound lanes of US 17.[7][8]
U.S. Highway 17 Alternate (US 17 Alt.) was an
alternate route of
US 17 that existed in
Savannah, Georgia, and the southern part of
South Carolina. It was
concurrent with SR 25 Alt. for its entire length in Georgia. Between June 1954 and June 1955, US 17 Alt. and SR 25 Alt. were established from an
intersection with the southbound lanes of US 17/
SR 25 (Ogeechee Road), north-northeast on Stiles Avenue, right onto Gwinnett Street to the east-southeast, and left onto Boundary Street to the north-northeast. The highways reached the South Carolina state line, where SR 25 Alt. reached its northern terminus. US 17 Alt. crossed over the
Savannah River on a
toll bridge. It curved to the northwest and reached its northern terminus, another intersection with
US 17.[12][13] In 1985, US 17 Alt./SR 25 Alt. was rerouted to begin at an
interchange with
I-516/US 17/
US 80/
SR 21/SR 25/
SR 26. It traveled east-southeast on Bay Street, turned right onto West Broad Street, traveled to the south-southwest, turned right onto York Street, traveled to the west-northwest, and turned right onto Boundary Street to continue as before.[16][17] In 1991, the path of US 17 Alt./SR 25 Alt. was redesignated as
SR 25 Connector (SR 25 Conn.).[14][15]
Major intersections
This table shows the 1985–1991 intersections.
U.S. Highway 17 Alternate (US 17 Alt.) is an
alternate route of
US 17 in
South Carolina that runs between
Pocotaligo and
Georgetown. It is 123.4 miles (198.6 km) long and has been four-laned in various segments since 1970.
Yemassee alternate route
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U.S. Highway 17 Business (US 17 Bus.), also known as Kings Highway, was established by 1967 when mainline US 17 was bypassed west of
Murrells Inlet, South Carolina.[citation needed] In 1981, it was extended north to near
Briarcliffe Acres, after mainline US 17 was placed on a new highway bypass route.[citation needed] The 22.940-mile (36.918 km)
business route connects: Murrells Inlet,
Garden City,
Surfside Beach, and
Myrtle Beach. The highway is also a major route during the Bi-Lo Marathon weekend; miles 2 to 6 and also 19 to 21 run through this highway during the marathon.[29]
Myrtle Beach bypass route
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U.S. Highway 17 Business (US 17 Bus.) was established in 1991 after the completion of the Shallotte Bypass around
Shallotte, North Carolina. The business loop is 3.8 miles (6.1 km) in length and has the street name Main Street for its entire length. The middle segment is also concurrent with
North Carolina Highway 130 (NC 130), which splits from US 17 Bus. in the north to travel to
Whiteville and splits in the south to travel to
Holden Beach.[31]
U.S. Highway 17 Business (US 17 Bus.) was established in 1992 after the completion of the Bolivia Bypass around
Bolivia, North Carolina. The business route follows the old alignment of US 17 through Bolivia, the small
county seat of
Brunswick County. This 7.5-mile (12.1 km) route is also called the Old Ocean Highway and passes through the center of Bolivia near its northern terminus.[33]
U.S. Route 17-1 (US 17-1) was an original U.S. highway, established in 1926; in North Carolina, it was overlapped completely on
NC 40. It starts, in Wilmington, on 5th Street at Market Street (
US 17/
NC 20), where it goes north to Nixon Street, then east to McRae Street and proceeds north on Castle Haynes Road. At
Wallace, it follows today's
NC 11 to
Kenansville, then west, via today
NC 24 Bus./
NC 50, to
Warsaw. Continuing north, it goes through
Faison,
Mount Olive, and through
Goldsboro on George Street. Continuing north through
Wilson, via Goldsboro Street and Herring Avenue, it connects
Elm City,
Rocky Mount,
Battleboro,
Halifax, and finally
Weldon, via Washington and Sycamore avenues. Entering Virginia, it connects through
Emporia before reaching Petersburg, via Sycamore Street, ending at Washington Street (
US 1).
In 1932, the entire route was renumbered, with most of the Wilmington–Wilson route to
US 117 and all of Wilson–Petersburg route to
US 301. Today, the entire route is paralleled with
I-40 and
I-95.
U.S. Highway 17 Business (US 17 Bus.) is an 8.1-mile (13.0 km)
business route of
US 17 through
Wilmington, North Carolina. While physically running in a primarily east–west pattern, US 17 Bus. is signed as north–south, coherent with its parent route. Its southern terminus is located at an at-grade intersection between Third Street, Dawson Street, and the eastbound ramp of the
Cape Fear Memorial Bridge which carries US 17,
US 76, and
US 421. From its terminus, US 17 Bus. continues north along Third Street for 450 feet (140 m), intersecting Wooster Street and the westbound ramp of the Cape Fear Memorial Bridge. US 17 Bus. continues north along Third Street through a residential area of downtown Wilmington. At Market Street, US 17 Bus. turns to the east, following the street out of downtown Wilmington. Leaving downtown Wilmington along Market Street, US 17 Bus. passes several historical sites including the
Bellamy Mansion and
First Baptist Church. Two pieces of artwork exist within the median of Market Street, including a
monument to
Cornelius Harnett at Fourth Street and a fountain located within the intersection with Fifth Street. The
George Davis Monument formerly stood in the median of Market Street at the Third Street intersection but was dismantled in 2020. The median along Market Street ends at 16th Street and US 17 Bus. passes through
Market Street Mansion District which is listed on the
National Register of Historic Places. US 17 Bus. continues to travel through residential areas of Wilmington until intersecting Covil Avenue, where some commercial business are located adjacent to the highway. By Kerr Avenue, the adjacent properties are primarily commercial and retail businesses. US 17 Bus. meets
US 117 and
NC 132 at an
partial cloverleaf interchange with College Road. The highway continues for 0.4 miles (0.64 km) east-northeast until reaching
US 74 at Martin Luther King Jr. Parkway and Eastwood Road. US 17 Bus. continues along Market Street for 2.6 miles (4.2 km) through a primarily commercial area of Wilmington until reaching its northern terminus at US 17.[36]
US 17 Bus. was established in 1971, two years after US 17 was realigned onto new routing; it traversed 1.8 miles (2.9 km) along 3rd and Market streets, between Dawson/Wooster and 16th/17th streets. Market Street was part of the original alignment but goes south instead of north along 3rd Street to meetup with US 17.[37][38] In 1979,
AASHTO officially recognized US 17 Bus.[39] In 2005, AASHTO approved the US 17 Bus. extension upon completion of and realignment of US 17 along the Wilmington Bypass (
I-140). On June 30, 2006, when the Wilmington bypass opened, US 17 Bus. replaced segments of US 17: north along Market Street, between 16th/17th streets and near Futch Creek Road, and south crossing the Cape Fear Memorial Bridge to
Eagle Island.[40][41] In May 2015, AASHTO approved a request to reroute US 17 back through Wilmington, following US 76 along Oleander Drive and Military Cutoff Road; the new alignment reduces the length of existing US 17 Bus. to along 3rd and Market streets.[42] In May 2017, US 17 Bus. was officially reduced as approved by AASHTO.[43]
U.S. Highway 17 Truck (US 17 Truck) in
Wilmington, North Carolina, used the
one-way pairs of Dawson and Wooster streets (from 16th and 17th streets to Oleander Drive). Continuing east, it then used Oleander Drive and north along Military Cutoff Road before rejoining then mainline US 17 at Market Street. Mainline US 17 at the time used the Cape Fear Memorial Bridge, then split with Dawson and Wooster Streets until reaching 16th and 17th streets. Mainline US 17 then used 16th and 17th streets back to Market Street. Once Mainline US 17 was moved to I-140 in 2005, the truck route through Wilmington was deleted.
U.S. Highway 17 Business (US 17 Bus.) was established in 2006 after the completion of the Jacksonville Bypass, which rerouted
US 17/
NC 24 south and east around
Jacksonville, North Carolina. The old alignment along Wilmington Highway and Marine Boulevard became US 17 Bus, with a short 1.4-mile (2.3 km) overlap with
NC 24 Bus.[45]
U.S. Highway 17 Business (US 17 Bus.) was established in 2000 as a renumbering of mainline US 17 through downtown
New Bern, North Carolina, via Martin Luther King Jr. Boulevard, Neuse Boulevard, Broad Street, and Front Street. In 2011, the business loop was extended south as mainline US 17 was placed on new freeway west of New Bern.[47][48]
U.S. Highway 17 Business (US 17 Bus.) was established in 1961 when
US 17 was rerouted, on a bypass route, east of
Vanceboro, North Carolina. US 17 Bus. travels along Main Street, sharing 2.1 miles (3.4 km) of it with
NC 43, since 1987.[50]
U.S. Highway 17 Business (US 17 Bus.) was established in 2010 when
US 17 was rerouted, onto the new
freeway, bypassing east of
Chocowinity and west of
Washington, North Carolina. US 17 Bus. follows the former section of US 17 through Chocowinity and along Bridge Street/Carolina Avenue in Washington.[52]
U.S. Highway 17 Business (US 17 Bus.) was established in 1960 as a renumbering of
US 17A, which traversed through downtown
Williamston, North Carolina, via Washington and Main streets. Between 1969 and 1977, US 17 Bus. is split in the downtown area, northbound on Haughton Street and southbound on Elm Street. In 2003, US 17 Bus. was extended 1.61 miles (2.59 km) that was formally US 17 when the new Williamston bypass was established.[54]
U.S. Highway 17 Bypass (US 17 Byp.) was established in 2009 and is 8.7 miles (14.0 km) long. Beginning at the
US 13/
US 17 split, located southeast of
Windsor, North Carolina, US 17 Byp. follows the preexisting
expressway grade of US 13. At exit 215, US 13 splits and continues north, while US 17 Byp. continues on
freeway-grade highway till it remerges with US 17, near milemarker 221.[56]
Major intersections
The entire route is in
Bertie County.
U.S. Highway 17 Business (US 17 Bus.) was established in 1977 as a renumbering of mainline US 17 through
Edenton, North Carolina, via Queen and Broad streets. In 1996, it was rerouted along Virginia Road to Broad Street and removed routing through the downtown area and along Queen Street, becoming SR 1204. However, in 2012, the
North Carolina Department of Transportation reversed course and reverted the business loop back to its original routing; thanks in part of not completing the formal route change package and distributing it (i.e., updating the TEAAS and road signs in the area).
NC 32 shares a concurrency along Broad Street in the downtown area.[58][59][60]
Major intersections
The entire route is in
Chowan County.
U.S. Highway 17 Business (US 17 Bus.) was established in 1966 as a renumbering of mainline US 17 through
Hertford (via Edenton Road, Dobbs, and Church streets) and
Winfall (via Creek Drive), North Carolina.
NC 37 shares a 0.9-mile (1.4 km) concurrency from Winfall Boulevard to the business loop's northern terminus.
U.S. Highway 17 Business (US 17 Bus.) was established in 1960 as a renumbering of
US 17A through downtown
Elizabeth City, North Carolina, via Ehringhaus and Road streets. The business loop has remained unchanged since its establishment.
US 17 Bus. Truck shield at northern terminus,
Elizabeth City
U.S. Highway 17 Business Truck (US 17 Bus. Truck) is a unique truck route specifically for US 17 Bus. in
Elizabeth City, North Carolina. It follows
US 158 west from the Camden Causeway and north along (mainline) US 17 to the junction with US 17 Bus. The bypassed segment of US 17 Bus. not only has a weight limit precluding most trucks over two axles but also passes through historic residential areas.
U.S. Highway 17 Bypass (US 17 Byp.) was established in 2004 and is a 9.3-mile (15.0 km)
controlled-access highway bypass west of
Elizabeth City, North Carolina. Unlike typical bypasses, a separate mainline US 17 continues along original 1953 bypass route (Hughes Boulevard), while a business route goes through downtown Elizabeth City.[64]
U.S. Highway 17 Business (US 17 Bus.) was established in September 1984 as a renumbering of mainline US 17 through
South Mills, North Carolina, via Main Street. It is the northernmost US 17 Bus. in North Carolina. West of South Mills, it joins with
NC 343 and continues north, rejoining with US 17.[66]
Major intersections
The entire route is in
Camden County.
View south along US 17 Bus. at
SR 165 in Chesapeake
U.S. Route 17 Business (US 17 Bus.) is an old alignment of US 17 along the
Dismal Swamp Canal in
Chesapeake, Virginia, that carries the US 17 Bus. designation north from the Dominion Boulevard intersection to
Deep Creek, where US 17 Bus. crosses the canal on a small drawbridge, before proceeding north to rejoin US 17 at
I-64 (exit 296).
Portsmouth business route
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View south along US 17 Bus. at SR 3 and SR 14 in Gloucester Courthouse
U.S. Route 17 Business (US 17 Bus.) through
Gloucester Courthouse, Virginia, consists of a 2.5-mile (4.0 km) loop, Main Street, that travels through the historic courthouse district, intersecting
State Route 3 (SR 3) and
SR 14. SR 14 multiplexes with US 17 Bus. on the northern leg back to US 17. Main Street is likely a former alignment of US 17, due to several US 17 shields on it that lack a business banner.
View south at the north end of US 17 Bus. at US 17 in Saluda
U.S. Route 17 Business (US 17 Bus.) in
Saluda, Virginia, branches off of mainline US 17 (
Tidewater Trail) to the northeast at Gloucester Road along with a concurrency with
SR 33. One block after the wye,
SR 618 joins the two routes from the intersection of Lovers Retreat Lane. At the intersection of General Puller Highway, SR 33 turns right as SR 618 continues north onto Oakes Landing Road and US 17 Bus. turns left. This segment also contains the name "School Street" and runs west until reaching mainline US 17 once again.
View north along US 17 Bus. and SR 2 north of SR 3 in Fredericksburg
U.S. Route 17 Business (US 17 Bus.) through the vicinity of
Fredericksburg, Virginia, begins at the intersection of US 17 and
SR 2 southeast of Fredericksburg, where they both become Tidewater Trail. From there, the road passes by Fredericksburg Country Club,
Shannon Airport, and the Fredericksburg Agricultural Fairgrounds. Within the city limits, Tidewater Trail becomes Dixon Street and crosses under the
Blue and Gray Parkway interchange, then curves right before splitting onto southbound Princess Anne Street and northbound Caroline Street. Both streets cross under
Fredericksburg station, where
US 1 Bus. joins US 17 Bus. along the same parallel one-way streets, until they reach Herndon Street and become a two-way street again at Princess Anne Street. US 1 Bus./US 17 Bus. continues to run northwest until it reaches
US 1 where US 1 Bus. terminates, but US 17 Bus. joins and cross the
Rappahannock River, and enters
Falmouth. US 17 Bus. leaves US 1 at the west end of
SR 218 where it runs northwest onto Warrenton Road before finally terminating at the north end of the
I-95/
US 17 multiplex at exit 133B.
Fredericksburg bypass route
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View south along US 17 Bus., just north of US 211 and US 29 Bus. in Warrenton
U.S. Route 17 Business (US 17 Bus.) in
Warrenton, Virginia, is also multiplexed with
US 15 Bus. and
US 29 Bus., at least at the southern end. After James Madison Highway becomes Shirley Avenue, US 15 Bus. leaves this concurrency at Falmouth Street.
US 211 joins the two business routes as
US 211 Bus. runs east along Waterloo Street, and US 211/US 17 Bus./US 29 Bus. becomes Broadview Avenue. As the triplex curves right, and intersects Roebling Street, it becomes Lee Highway, and US 17 Bus. makes a left turn onto Broadview Avenue, a name it will keep until the intersection of Foxcroft Road and becomes the James Madison Highway before terminating at the interchange with mainline US 17.
U.S. Route 17 Business (US 17 Bus.) through the vicinity of
Marshall, Virginia, runs northeast from exit 27 on
I-66, partially along
SR 55 (Free State Road and West Main Street), then turns southeast onto Winchester Road as it reunites with US 17 at exit 28 on I-66.
^
abcState Highway Department of Georgia (1950).
System of State Roads(PDF) (Map). Scale not given. Atlanta: State Highway Department of Georgia.
OCLC5673161. Retrieved June 26, 2017. (Corrected to August 1, 1950.)
^
abState Highway Department of Georgia (1952).
System of State Roads(PDF) (Map). Scale not given. Atlanta: State Highway Department of Georgia.
OCLC5673161. Retrieved June 26, 2017. (Corrected to January 1, 1952.)
^
abState Highway Department of Georgia (January 1, 1953).
System of State Roads(PDF) (Map). Scale not given. Atlanta: State Highway Department of Georgia. Retrieved June 26, 2017. (Corrected to January 1, 1953.)
^State Highway Department of Georgia (1946).
System of State Roads(PDF) (Map). Scale not given. Atlanta: State Highway Department of Georgia.
OCLC5673161. Retrieved June 26, 2017. (Corrected to November 7, 1946.)
^State Highway Department of Georgia (1948).
System of State Roads(PDF) (Map). Scale not given. Atlanta: State Highway Department of Georgia.
OCLC5673161. Retrieved June 26, 2017. (Corrected to February 28, 1948.)
^State Highway Department of Georgia (1949).
System of State Roads(PDF) (Map). Scale not given. Atlanta: State Highway Department of Georgia.
OCLC5673161. Retrieved June 26, 2017. (Corrected to April 1, 1949.)
^
abGeorgia Department of Transportation (1991).
Official Highway and Transportation Map(PDF) (Map) (1991–1992 ed.). Scale not given. Atlanta: Georgia Department of Transportation. Retrieved June 28, 2017.
^
abGeorgia Department of Transportation (1992).
Official Highway and Transportation Map(PDF) (Map) (1992–1993 ed.). Scale not given. Atlanta: Georgia Department of Transportation. Retrieved June 28, 2017.
^Georgia Department of Transportation (1984).
Official Highway and Transportation Map(PDF) (Map) (1984–1985 ed.). Scale not given. Atlanta: Georgia Department of Transportation. Retrieved June 27, 2017.
^Georgia Department of Transportation (1986).
Official Highway and Transportation Map(PDF) (Map) (1986–1987 ed.). Scale not given. Atlanta: Georgia Department of Transportation. Retrieved June 27, 2017.
^Special Committee on U.S. Route Numbering (May 6, 2005).
"Report of the Special Committee on U.S. Route Numbering"(PDF) (Report). Washington, DC: American Association of State Highway and Transportation Officials. p. 3. Archived from
the original(PDF) on October 16, 2017. Retrieved February 17, 2015.
^"Route Changes (2006-07-14)"(PDF). North Carolina Department of Transportation. July 14, 2006. Retrieved February 17, 2015.