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California State Route 223
Highway in California
Highway in California
| Field | Value | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| state | CA | |||
| type | SR | |||
| route | 223 | |||
| section | 523 | |||
| maint | Caltrans | |||
| alternate_name | Bear Mountain Boulevard | |||
| map_notes | SR 223 highlighted in red | |||
| length_mi | 31.92 | |||
| length_round | 2 | |||
| length_ref | ||||
| direction_a | West | |||
| terminus_a | near Taft | |||
| junction | {{plainlist | |||
| *{{Jct | state | CA | SR | 99}} near Greenfield |
| *{{jct | state | CA | SR | 184}} near Weedpatch |
| direction_b | East | |||
| terminus_b | near Bealville | |||
| counties | Kern | |||
| previous_type | SR | |||
| previous_route | 222 | |||
| next_type | SR | |||
| next_route | 224 |
|* near Greenfield
- near Weedpatch
State Route 223 (SR 223), locally known as Bear Mountain Boulevard, is a state highway in the U.S. state of California that runs west to east through the agricultural land south of Bakersfield in Kern County. Running from Interstate 5 (I-5) to State Route 58 near the city of Arvin, it also intersects with State Route 99 near Greenfield. SR 223 forms a truck route for transporting goods to the three main corridors in the area, I-5, SR 58 and SR 99, without having to drive through Bakersfield.
Route description
State Route 223 begins at Interstate 5. From there it travels east through relatively flat agricultural land. It crosses SR 99 and Union Avenue (SR 99 Business). It then crosses Weedpatch Highway (SR 184)/Wheeler Ridge Road, which is the local north-south highway serving the region. Continuing east, it crosses through the only city served by the route, the agricultural community of Arvin. It continues through agricultural land, before reaching the eastern end of the San Joaquin Valley. The terrain changes to rolling hills, as the road climbs the Tehachapi Mountains. The highway terminates at SR 58.
A portion of SR 223 near SR 99 is part of the National Highway System, a network of highways that are considered essential to the country's economy, defense, and mobility by the Federal Highway Administration.
History
Bear Mountain Boulevard was constructed in 1915, as the bypass to White Wolf Road to the south; the road still exists, but is on private property. It is not known when White Wolf Road was constructed. The road was a part of the Midway Route, which was the most direct route between the San Joaquin Valley and Los Angeles via Tehachapi Pass and the Mojave Desert. After the Ridge Route was constructed in 1915, the Midway Route was still important as the primary bypass to the newly constructed highway. Bear Mountain Boulevard served as part of the Midway Route until 1933, when Bena Road was constructed to provide a more direct connection to Bakersfield. Today, the Midway Route is served by SR 58 and SR 14.
In 1933, Bear Mountain Boulevard was adopted as an unsigned state highway. It was a part of Legislative Route 140, which ran from Taft to US 99 (locally known as Taft Highway), and from US 99 to US 466. The Taft Highway portion was signed as US 399, but the Bear Mountain Boulevard section was unsigned. It was dropped from the route in 1959, and became Legislative Route 264. In 1964, with the renumbering of California’s state routes, Bear Mountain Boulevard became a signed route as SR 223, and was extended west to I-5.
Major intersections
References
References
- "State Route 223".
- {{FHWA NHS map
- {{FHWA NHS
- McAllister, Melvin. [http://www.tehachapinews.com/home/ViewPost/48387 The 'old roads' to Bakersfield]. Tehachapi News. Accessed: 11-05-2009.
- [http://www.cahighways.org/137-144.html Route 137-144]. CAHighway.org. Accessed: 11-05-2009.
- [http://www.cahighways.org/257-264.html Route 257-264]. CAHighway.org. Accessed: 11-05-2009.
- [http://www.cahighways.org/217-224.html Route 217-224]. CAHighway.org. Accessed: 11-05-2009.
- (July 2007)
- [[California Department of Transportation]], [http://traffic-counts.dot.ca.gov/ All Traffic Volumes on CSHS], 2007
This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.
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