List of county roads in Brevard County, Florida

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County road shields used in Florida
Highway names
Interstates: Interstate X (I-X)
US Routes: U.S. Highway X (US X)
State: State Road X (SR X)
County: County Road X (CR X)
System links
County roads in Florida
County roads in Brevard County

Brevard County, Florida (located in the East of Central Florida), operates a system of county roads that serve all portions of the county. The Brevard County Public Works Department, Road and Bridge Division, is responsible for maintaining all of the Brevard County roads. Most of the county roads are city streets and rural roads.

The numbers and routes of all Florida highways are assigned by the Florida Department of Transportation (FDOT), while county road numbers are assigned by the counties, with guidance from FDOT.[1] North-south routes are generally assigned odd numbers, while east-west routes are generally assigned even numbers.[2]

CR 3

Tropical Trail and Courtenay Parkway
Location: Indian Harbor BeachCourtenay

20px CR 3 (former SR 3[3]) begins at an intersection with SR 513 in Indian Harbor Beach and ends at an intersection with SR 520 in Merritt Island, Florida.

CR 5A

Stuckway Road
Location: Scottsmoor
Length: 1.0 mi[4] (1.6 km)

CR 5A (former SR 5A[3]) is a 1-mile (1.6 km) long county road located entirely in the Brevard County Game Refuge, in the unincorporated community of Scottsmoor. The highway begins at exit 231 from I-95, a diamond interchange, and travels northeast through woodlands until it terminates at an intersection with US 1.[4] The highway is the northern most county route in Brevard County,[citation needed] located only 1 mi (1.6 km) from the Volusia county line.[5]

CR 401

North Atlantic Avenue
Location: Cape Canaveral

CR 401 links SR A1A to George King Boulevard in Cape Canaveral, and is an old alignment of SR A1A.

CR 402

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A. Max Brewer Memorial Parkway
Location: TitusvilleMerritt Island NWR

CR 402 (former SR 402[3]) links US 1 in Titusville to Kennedy Parkway at the Merritt Island NWR.

CR 405

Old Dixie Highway, Parker Street
Location: TitusvilleMims

CR 405 (former SR 405[3]) links Norwood Avenue in Titusville to Singleton Avenue in Mims.

CR 406

Garden Street
Location: Titusville

CR 406 (former SR 406[3]) links Carpenter Road to I-95 in Titusville.

CR 502

Barnes Boulevard
Location: Rockledge

CR 502 (former SR 502[6]) links I-95 and SR 519 in Rockledge to US 1.

CR 503

Dixon Boulevard
Location: Cocoa

CR 503 (former SR 503[3]) links SR 501 in Cocoa to US 1.

CR 507

Babcock Street
Location: Indian River county line–Palm Bay

CR 507 (former SR 507 north of US 192[3]) is a pair of extensions of State Road 507 north from US 192 in Melbourne to US 1 and south from SR 514 in Palm Bay to Indian River County.

CR 509

Wickham Road, Minton Road
Location: Palm BayViera
Length: 19 mi[citation needed] (31 km)

County Road 509 (former SR 509[3]) is a major north–south throughway in southeastern Brevard County, Florida. The road extends 19 miles (31 km) from Palm Bay to Viera. North of New Haven Avenue (US 192/SR 500) in West Melbourne, CR 509 is known locally as Wickham Road; south of the U.S. Highway, its street name is Minton Road (in the 1980s and 1990s, this 5.6 miles (9.0 km) section of current CR 509 was signed by Florida Department of Transportation as State Road 509).

It carries up to 37,960 vehicles daily.[7]

CR 509 description

The current southern terminus of County Road 509 is an intersection with Malabar Road (CR 514, a westward extension of State Road 514); the northern terminus is an interchange with Interstate 95 (SR 9) in the midst of Pineda, Suntree, and Viera (Pineda and Suntree on the eastern side of I-95, Viera on the western side), although it extends 2 miles (3.2 km) more through southern Viera, with the intersections of Stadium Parkway and Lake Andrew Drive. The "true" northern terminus of Wickham Road is the South Central Regional Wastewater Treatment Plant just after the power lines.

CR 509 history

The northern section of the road was named after the Wickham family, including John Q. Wickham, a Brevard county surveyor and Joe Wickham, a prominent Brevard County politician. Joe Wickham worked with the county to clear the route in 1950s. Since the road led to an undeveloped area, some viewed the project with skepticism. However, the planned road made sense because it ran between two ranges 36 and 37, which effectively divided the county in half.[8] Upon completion, the road led to development of Suntree and Viera in the late 1970s.[8] Development in the area on the northern terminus picked up considerably with the completion of I-95.

In 1929, Malabar Road was extended to the north.[9] Later, this northern section of Malabar was redesignated as Minton Road, named after Alton M. Minton, who owned a drug store at Mintons Corner Shopping Center. By 1957, the locals referred to the area this road traveled through as Minton's Corner.[10]

In 2013, a county commissioner reported that Minton is probably the heaviest traveled route in the county. He added that it was failing for lack of proper maintenance.[11]

CR 511

John Rodes Boulevard, Aurora Road
Location: West MelbourneEau Gallie
Length: 8.1 mi[citation needed] (13.0 km)
File:John B. Rodes Boulevard memorial 01.jpg
John Rodes Boulevard memorial

County Road 511 (former SR 511[3]) consists of a north–south street and an east–west avenue in the Melbourne, Florida, area. The 8.1-mile (13.0 km) road is locally known as John Rodes Boulevard and Aurora Road. The southern terminus of CR 511 is an intersection with New Haven Avenue (US 192-SR 500) in June Park, just outside the city limits of West Melbourne and three blocks from a diamond interchange between New Haven Avenue and Interstate 95 (SR 9); the eastern terminus is an intersection with Harbor City Boulevard (US 1-SR 5) in the Eau Gallie section of Melbourne.

John Rodes Boulevard extends four miles (6 km) north–south between US 192 and Aurora Road, which continues CR 511 as an east–west commercial and residential street. Until the late 1990s, the southernmost 3.0 miles (4.8 km) of CR 511/John Rodes Boulevard (south of Eau Gallie Boulevard/SR 518) was signed by Florida Department of Transportation as State Road 511. The former State Road serves as an access road for I-95. The southernmoust 3.0 miles (4.8 km) of John Rodes Boulevard has several communities along it. One of these is Hammock Trace Preserve, which is about 1-mile (1.6 km) south of Eau Gallie Blvd on John Rodes Blvd.

While Aurora Road has maintained its importance as a commercial and residential avenue, the character of John Rodes Boulevard has changed since the 1980s due to population growth in June Park, Melbourne, West Melbourne, and nearby Palm Bay. Urbanization has replaced much of the woodland on both sides on the former SR 511 as trees gave way to business and industrial parks, trailer parks, and suburban residential developments.

History

John Rodes Boulevard was named after John B. Rodes, a local politician.[12] Aurora Road was initially named 5th Street as town of Eau Gallie was first established.[13] Later, a local resident renamed it Aurora Road after his hometown in Illinois.[14]

Browse numbered routes
SR 510 FL SR 512 x20px

CR 514

Malabar Road
Location: Palm Bay

CR 514 (former SR 514[3]) links the Palm Bay Regional Park to I-95 at the west end of SR 514 in Palm Bay.

CR 515

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Rockledge Drive, Brevard Avenue, Indian River Drive
Location: RockledgeSharpes

CR 515 (former SR 515[3]) links US 1 in Rockledge to US 1 in Sharpes. The highway is widely known by locals as "The Scenic Road" because it runs along the Indian River Lagoon.

CR 516

Palm Bay Road
Location: Palm Bay

County Road 516 (former SR 516[3]), locally known as Palm Bay Road, is a former state highway in Brevard County, located entirely in Palm Bay. Between CR 509 and State Road 507, it forms the southern borders of the cities of West Melbourne and Melbourne. CR 516 is mostly 6 lanes wide, but 2 lanes wide in downtown Palm Bay.

File:Pbsignpatriotic cropped.jpg
Palm Bay entrance sign on the overpass of Palm Bay Road

The western terminus is with an intersection of CR 509 in Palm Bay, just 262 inches south of West Melbourne. Just west of Interstate 95, an access road called Culver Drive spurs off Emerson Drive and provides access to Interstate 95 for residents of Palm Bay enclosed by CR 509, SR 514, Interstate 95, and Palm Bay Road itself. At Interstate 95, Palm Bay Road forms an overpass that has the name "Palm Bay" on both sides of the overpass. It was erected in 2002, and modified ever since. In Downtown Palm Bay, it makes two sharp bends and runs concurrent with Main Street for one block, just before the Florida East Coast Railroad. The eastern terminus is with an intersection with US 1 in Downtown Palm Bay, at the shore of Palm Bay, and near the mouth of Turkey Creek.

Major intersections

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Mile Destinations Notes
CR 509 (Minton Road) Western terminus
I-95 – West Palm Beach, Daytona Beach Exit 176 on I-95
Port Malabar Boulevard
SR 507 (Babcock Street)
Conlan Boulevard
US 1 / SR 5 Eastern terminus
1.000 mi = 1.609 km; 1.000 km = 0.621 mi

CR 5054

Sarno Road
Location: Melbourne

CR 5054 links the east end of SR 5054 at CR 509 to US 1 in Melbourne.

References

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  3. 3.00 3.01 3.02 3.03 3.04 3.05 3.06 3.07 3.08 3.09 3.10 3.11 General Highway Map, Brevard County, March 1966, reprinted April/January 1972: sheet 1 and sheet 2
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  6. General Highway Map, Brevard County, October 1975, reprinted December 1985, sheet 2
  7. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  8. 8.0 8.1 www.ebook-browser.com. "Suntree, Florida: past and present". Retrieved on January 18, 2011.
  9. Eriksen, John M. Brevard County, Florida: A Short History to 1955 (Suntree, Florida: 2008), p. 126.
  10. Shofner, Jerrell H. History of Brevard County, Volume 2 (Stuart, FL, 1996), p. 155.
  11. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  12. John B. Rodes Boulevard memorial.
  13. Raley, Karen and Ann Raley Flotte. Images of America: Melbourne and Eau Gallie (Charleston, SC: Arcadia Publishing, 2002), p. 66.
  14. Melbourne Chamber of Commerce. Melbourne: A Century of Memories (Melbourne, FL: National Printing, Inc., 1980), p. 86.