California State Route 111
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State Route 111 |
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Defined by S&HC § 411, maintained by Caltrans | |||||||||||||||||
Length: | 129 mi[1] (208 km) | ||||||||||||||||
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South end: | Mexican border in Calexico | ||||||||||||||||
Major junctions: |
I-8 near El Centro SR 78 in Brawley SR 195 at Mecca SR 74 in Palm Desert |
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North end: | I-10 near White Water | ||||||||||||||||
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State Route 111 is the main north/south state highway and retail corridor through the Coachella Valley, a part of the Colorado Desert in the southeastern corner of the state and famous as a resort destination. It runs from Calexico to Palm Springs.
First proposed in the early 1930s due to the area's growth bought on by the Southern Pacific Railroad, Highway 111 links virtually every desert resort city in the valley. It begins at a junction with Interstate 10 near the foot of San Jacinto Peak east of the San Gorgonio Pass. Continuing south, the highway first enters Palm Springs, becoming a surface street. This junction was so busy in the 1950s before the construction of the freeway that visitors returning home to Los Angeles might have waited as long as two hours to make the left turn on the two-lane road that was once multiplexed as US Highways 60, 70 and 99. 111 then continues through Cathedral City, Rancho Mirage, Palm Desert, La Quinta, Indio and finally Coachella where it is co-signed with State Route 86 before exiting the southeast corner of the valley as a two-lane highway. A 1993 rerouting of the highway takes drivers away from the historic center of Palm Springs, but meets with its original alignment as Business Route 111 a few miles further south.
A nearly 40 mile (64 km) length of the highway dotted with date and citrus groves follows both the old Southern Pacific "Sunset Route" (now the main Union Pacific line between Los Angeles and New Orleans) and the eastern shore of the Salton Sea. Though some small settlements and a California state park line the shore, the area is eerily empty due to the sea's rapidly declining water quality. The small town of North Shore is all but abandoned.
As Route 111 continues southward into Imperial County, it passes through the agricultural communities of Niland, Calipatria, Brawley and Holtville before entering El Centro. It rejoins 86 in Heber and terminates in Calexico at the international border where it meets with Mexico 5 in Mexicali.
As the Coachella Valley's main retail corridor and link to its many resorts, a trip along Route 111 during the height of the tourist season from September to June can be a trying one due to out-of-town traffic, or as the locals fondly refer to them, "snowbirds".
After a two-year delay, signs on Verbenia Avenue at the highway's northern terminus and along Interstate 10 were changed in November 2005 to reflect the street's name change to "Haugen-Lehmann Way", honoring two Riverside County sheriff's deputies gunned down by a sniper on that street in 1997.
In a similar move in December 2005, the stretch of SR111 through La Quinta was named the "Deputy Bruce Lee Memorial Highway". Lee was a Riverside County deputy sheriff in the city for many years and was killed in 2003 during an altercation with a mentally disturbed suspect. The suspect was able to take Lee's baton during the altercation and used it to bludgeon the officer.
This route is part of the California Freeway and Expressway System[2] and is eligible for the State Scenic Highway System[3].
Contents |
[edit] History
Please help improve this article or section by expanding it. Further information might be found on the talk page or at requests for expansion. (December 2007) |
In 1995, Caltrans was allowed to relinquish any portion of Route 111 through a city for that city to maintain. The legislature opted to make the act an "urgency statute", effective immediately, so that the local governments could improve traffic bottlenecks along the route as soon as possible.[4] The legislative definition of the route was amended in 1996 to exclude the portions in Rancho Mirage and Cathedral City, which had both been relinquished.[5] Cathedral City completed a pedestrian-friendly redesign in 1998.[6]
A 2003 law did not change the route, but clarified that the former highway through those cities could not be taken back by the state, and repealed the section added in 1995 allowing relinquisment to any city.[7] Subsequently, in 2005, the legislature allowed relinquishment within Indian Wells, Indio, and Palm Desert, subject to the same conditions, and to the condition that the cities must maintain signs for the route.[8] La Quinta was added to the list of eligible cities in 2007.[9] As of late 2007, none of these four cities have taken over maintenance of Route 111.[citation needed]
[edit] Major intersections
- Note: Except where prefixed with a letter, postmiles were measured in 1964, based on the alignment as it existed at that time, and do not necessarily reflect current mileage. The numbers reset at county lines; the start and end postmiles in each county are given in the county column.
County | Location | Postmile [10][11][12][13] |
Destinations | Notes |
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Imperial IMP R0.00-65.40 |
Calexico | R0.00 | Mexican border | |
R0.20 | 2nd Street - Downtown Calexico | |||
R1.18 | SR 98 (Birch Street) – San Diego, Yuma | |||
R4.74 | SR 86 (Heber Road) – Heber | |||
R7.71 | I-8 - Yuma, El Centro, San Diego | |||
9.59 | CR S80 (Evan Hewes Highway) – El Centro, Holtville | |||
13.08 | CR S28 (Worthington Road) – Imperial | |||
17.59 | CR S27 (Keystone Road) | |||
22.14 78 14.5 |
SR 78 east | South end of SR 78 overlap | ||
Brawley | 78 15.04 | Best Road, Old Highway 111 | Old SR 111 south | |
78 13.80 22.14 |
SR 78 west (Main Street) / CR S31 (8th Street) – Los Angeles | North end of SR 78 overlap | ||
26.67 | CR S26 (Rutherford Road) – Wiest Lake | |||
30.09 | Albright Road | |||
Calipatria | 32.51 | SR 115 / CR S30 (Main Street) – Holtville | ||
Riverside RIV 0.00-R63.38 |
Mecca | 18.43 | SR 195 to SR 86S | |
Coachella | 28.53 86 20.52 |
SR 86 south – Brawley, El Centro | South end of SR 86 overlap | |
86 21.5 | I-10 Bus. east (Avenue 48) to I-10 – Blythe, Phoenix | South end of Bus. 10 overlap | ||
Indio | ||||
86 G22.85 28.53 |
I-10 Bus. west | North end of SR 86/Bus. 10 overlap; former SR 86 north | ||
28.74 | To I-10 | Spur of SR 111, postmiles L28.74 to L27.80 at I-10 | ||
Palm Desert | 39.57 | SR 74 | ||
Palm Springs | 47.80 T47.80 |
SR 111 Bus. north |
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T53.94 53.82 |
SR 111 Bus. south |
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Tipton Road - Whitewater | ||||
R63.38 | I-10 west |
[edit] References
- ^ January 1, 2006 California Log of Bridges on State Highways
- ^ CA Codes (shc:250-257)
- ^ CA Codes (shc:260-284)
- ^ "An act to add Sections 100 and 411.5 to the Streets and Highways Code, relating to highways, and declaring the urgency thereof, to take effect immediately.", 1995 chapter 20
- ^ "An act...relating to transportation...", 1996 chapter 1154
- ^ Pedestrian and Bicycle Information Center, Pedestrian-Friendly Redesign: Cathedral City, CA, accessed December 2007
- ^ "An act...relating to transportation.", 2003 chapter 525
- ^ "An act to amend Sections 374 and 411 of the Streets and Highways Code, relating to highways.", 2005 chapter 594
- ^ "An act to amend Sections 379 and 411 of the Streets and Highways Code, relating to highways.", 2007 chapter 718
- ^ California Department of Transportation, State Truck Route List (XLS file), accessed December 2007
- ^ California Department of Transportation, Log of Bridges on State Highways, July 2007
- ^ California Department of Transportation, All Traffic Volumes on CSHS, 2006
- ^ California Department of Transportation, All Traffic Volumes on CSHS, 1999 (the last year before it was updated to remove the relinquished parts)