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U.S. Route 278 in South Carolina

U.S. highway in South Carolina

U.S. Route 278 in South Carolina

Summary

U.S. highway in South Carolina

FieldValue
stateSC
typeUS
route278
map
map_customyes
map_notesRoute of US 278 in South Carolina highlighted in red
maintSCDOT
length_mi146.130
length_ref
tourist[[File:South Carolina Scenic Byway.svg20pxalt=link=]] Hilton Head Scenic Byway
established1965
direction_aWest
terminus_aat the Georgia state line near North Augusta
junction{{plainlist
*{{JctstateSCUS25SC121}} in North Augusta
*{{JctstateSCI520}} in North Augusta
*{{JctstateSCUS1US78SC125SC421}} near Clearwater
*{{JctstateSCUS301SC125}} in Allendale
*{{JctstateSCUS321}} in Fairfax
*{{JctstateSCUS601SC363}} in Hampton
*{{JctstateSCUS17SC336}} in Ridgeland
*{{JctstateSCI95}} near Hardeeville
direction_bEast
terminus_bin Hilton Head Island
countiesAiken, Barnwell, Allendale, Hampton, Jasper, Beaufort
spur_of78
spur_typeUS
previous_typeSC
previous_route277
next_typeSC
next_route281
  • in North Augusta
  • in North Augusta
  • near Clearwater
  • in Allendale
  • in Fairfax
  • in Hampton
  • in Ridgeland
  • near Hardeeville U.S. Route 278 (US 278) is a 146.130 mi east–west United States highway that traverses through the South Carolina Lowcountry, from North Augusta to Hilton Head Island.

Route description

After crossing the Savannah River from Georgia, US 278 bypasses downtown North Augusta, South Carolina to the south en route to Beech Island and Johnson Crossroads. It then forms a de facto northern boundary of the Savannah River Site, crossing into the property on a few occasions. The route then continues eastward and then southward through the communities of Barnwell, Kline, Allendale, Fairfax, Hampton, Varnville, Ridgeland, and Hardeeville where it meets I-95. US 278 shares the route between Ridgeland and Hardeeville with US 17.

From Allendale to Almeda, US 278 runs along the CSX Augusta Subdivision.

Upon reaching Hardeeville, the route heads eastward toward the Atlantic with large residential and commercial developments lining the spine of the road from Hardeeville through Okatie and Bluffton. The route crosses over Calibogue Sound onto Hilton Head Island. After a five-mile stretch in which the route is tolled, US 278 ends at US 278 Business on the southern portion of Hilton Head Island, just outside Sea Pines Plantation.

Cross Island Parkway

On Hilton Head Island, US 278 was previously routed along what is now US 278 Business until a new toll road, named the Cross Island Parkway, opened on January 16, 1998. The 6.8 mi section of roadway

The controlled access toll road has only one interchange along its route at Marshland Drive. It was the first toll road built in South Carolina in modern history.

The completion of the Cross Island Parkway (a direct expressway connection from the north side to the south side of the island) has caused a great amount of commercial and residential development along the road. Before the toll road opened, it could take one hour to travel the 12 mi route of what was then signed as US 278 (William Hilton Parkway) during peak tourism season. The Cross Island Parkway greatly relieved congestion on that road when it opened.

History

US 278 was established, in South Carolina, in 1965, traveling from Augusta, Georgia to Hilton Head Island. Crossing the Savannah River, in concurrency with US 1/US 25/US 78/SC 121, it then overlapped with SC 125 on Atomic Road, to Beech Island. Replacing SC 28 from Beech Island to Almeda, where it then replaced SC 128, going through Ridgeland, to Old House. Replacing part of SC 462, it went south into Bluffton and then east into Hilton Head Island, replacing part of SC 46.

Throughout the 1980s, US 278 was widen to four-lane, in phases, east of SC 170, in Bluffton. In 1996-1997, US 278 was rerouted south of Ridgeland to Hardeeville, then east on new primary routing to SC 170, in Bluffton. Its former routing was replaced by SC 336 to Old House and SC 462 to SC 170. In 1998, US 278 was rerouted onto new routing along the west side of Hilton Head Island; known as the Cross Island Parkway, the toll road provides quicker access to the far south end of the island. The old alignment, in Hilton Head Island, became US 278 Business.

Tolls

Cross Island Parkway Toll Plaza

Toll rates, for 2-axle vehicles, along Cross Island Parkway were $1.25 at the toll plaza and $1.00 at the Marshland Road/Spanish Wells Road interchange. Each additional axle was $1.00 (plaza and ramps). The toll plaza had both electronic toll collection (ETC) and cash lanes, which were staffed 24 hours a day; Marshland Road/Spanish Wells Road interchange accept only ETC or exact change only. Those that did not have exact change or do not pay the toll had five days to contact the Cross Island Parkway Customer Service Center to make a payment; after that time, a violation notice was mailed. Travelers that made a mistake of taking the toll road may request a "Turn Around Pass", which gives them ten minutes to continue along the highway, turn around at the roundabout and return the pass at the toll plaza on the return trip.

On July 1, 2021, the tolls were removed because the final bond payment was paid on the $81 million road that was opened in 1998.

Major intersections

References

References

  1. "Highway Logmile Report". [[South Carolina Department of Transportation]].
  2. "Highway Logmile Report". South Carolina Department of Transportation.
  3. "Highway Logmile Report". South Carolina Department of Transportation.
  4. "Highway Logmile Report". South Carolina Department of Transportation.
  5. "Highway Logmile Report". South Carolina Department of Transportation.
  6. "Highway Logmile Report". South Carolina Department of Transportation.
  7. "Overview map of US 278 in South Carolina".
  8. (January 16, 1998). "Hilton Head toll road to open". [[Morris Communications]].
  9. "27-in-7 Peak Performance". [[South Carolina Department of Transportation]].
  10. (1956). "General Highway Map, Aiken County, South Carolina". South Carolina Department of Transportation.
  11. (1967). "General Highway Map, Aiken County, South Carolina". South Carolina Department of Transportation.
  12. (1962). "General Highway Map, Barnwell County, South Carolina". South Carolina Department of Transportation.
  13. (1967). "General Highway Map, Barnwell County, South Carolina". South Carolina Department of Transportation.
  14. (1962). "General Highway Map, Allendale County, South Carolina". South Carolina Department of Transportation.
  15. (1967). "General Highway Map, Allendale County, South Carolina". South Carolina Department of Transportation.
  16. (1963). "General Highway Map, Hampton County, South Carolina". South Carolina Department of Transportation.
  17. (1967). "General Highway Map, Hampton County, South Carolina". South Carolina Department of Transportation.
  18. (1959). "General Highway Map, Jasper County, South Carolina". South Carolina Department of Transportation.
  19. (1966). "General Highway Map, Jasper County, South Carolina". South Carolina Department of Transportation.
  20. (1963). "General Highway Map, Beaufort County, South Carolina". South Carolina Department of Transportation.
  21. (1966). "General Highway Map, Beaufort County, South Carolina". South Carolina Department of Transportation.
  22. (June 2005). "General Highway System, Jasper County". South Carolina Department of Transportation.
  23. (January 2005). "General Highway System, Beaufort County". South Carolina Department of Transportation.
  24. (November 6, 1998). "Report of the Special Committee on U.S. Route Numbering to the Standing Committee on Highways". AASHTO.
  25. (December 2011). "Hilton Head Island Urban Area, Beaufort County". South Carolina Department of Transportation.
  26. "Cross Island Parkway FAQ's". South Carolina Department of Transportation.
  27. (August 2019). "Aiken & North Augusta Urban Area". [[South Carolina Department of Transportation]].
Wikipedia Source

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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