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{{short description|Bridge in Florida, United States of America}} {{short description|Bridge in Florida, United States of America}}
{{Unreferenced|date=December 2009}} {{Unreferenced|date=December 2009}}
The '''Timuquana Bridge''' is a bridge crossing over the ], carrying ] (Timiquana Rd/103rd St). The bridge carries 6 lanes. The East end is at ] (Roosevelt Blvd) and the east end is on Ortega Bluff Blvd. The bridge carries Westside to US-17, which ends FL-134. The '''Timuquana Bridge''' was a proposed ] over the ] in ], ] that was never built. The bridge was planned to connect with ] (103rd Street/Timuquana Road) on the west shore of the St. Johns with ] (Butler Boulevard) on the east shore.

Simply explained, the bridge is 2.34 meters long and connects Westside Jacksonville/ Cedar Hills to Orange Park/ Ortega on US-17.
The Timuquana was proposed because there is no other bridge crossing the eight-mile stretch of the St. Johns River between the ] and the ], and residents of Westside wanting to go to the Southside need to travel many miles out of their way to cross the river. However, construction of the Timuquana would require the destruction of a great many houses on both sides of the river, including homes in the Venetia neighborhood which some very exclusive neighborhoods along the west bank of the St. Johns. Accordingly, there was little to no political support for the idea from the start.

Today the name '''Timuquana Bridge''' is used for a four-lane bridge crossing over the ], carrying ] (Timiquana Road) west of the route's eastern terminus at ] (Roosevelt Blvd). Simply explained, the bridge is 2.34 meters long and connects Westside Jacksonville and Cedar Hills to Orange Park/ Ortega on US-17.


==References== ==References==

Revision as of 18:54, 6 February 2024

Bridge in Florida, United States of America
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The Timuquana Bridge was a proposed bridge over the St. Johns River in Jacksonville, Florida that was never built. The bridge was planned to connect with State Road 134 (103rd Street/Timuquana Road) on the west shore of the St. Johns with State Road 202 (Butler Boulevard) on the east shore.

The Timuquana was proposed because there is no other bridge crossing the eight-mile stretch of the St. Johns River between the Buckman Bridge and the Fuller Warren Bridge, and residents of Westside wanting to go to the Southside need to travel many miles out of their way to cross the river. However, construction of the Timuquana would require the destruction of a great many houses on both sides of the river, including homes in the Venetia neighborhood which some very exclusive neighborhoods along the west bank of the St. Johns. Accordingly, there was little to no political support for the idea from the start.

Today the name Timuquana Bridge is used for a four-lane bridge crossing over the Ortega River, carrying FL-134 (Timiquana Road) west of the route's eastern terminus at US-17 (Roosevelt Blvd). Simply explained, the bridge is 2.34 meters long and connects Westside Jacksonville and Cedar Hills to Orange Park/ Ortega on US-17.

References

St. Johns River crossings in the Jacksonville, Florida area
Upriver from Downtown
Downtown Jacksonville
Downriver from Downtown
Italics indicate a bridge was never built.
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