Georgia State Route 88

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State Route 88

SR 88 highlighted in red
Route information
Maintained by GDOT
Length53.2 mi[1] (85.6 km)
Major junctions
West end SR 24 / SR 540 east of Sandersville
Major intersections
East end US 25 / SR 121 in Hephzibah
Location
CountryUnited States
StateGeorgia
CountiesWashington, Jefferson, Burke, Richmond
Highway system
  • Georgia State Highway System
SR 87 SR 89

State Route 88 (SR 88) is a 53.2-mile-long (85.6 km) state highway that travels southwest-to-northeast through portions of Washington, Jefferson, Burke, and Richmond counties in the east-central part of the U.S. state of Georgia. The highway connects the Sandersville area with Hephzibah, via Wrens, with a brief portion in Augusta.

From its western terminus east of Sandersville to Wrens, SR 88 is part of the Fall Line Freeway, a highway that connects Columbus and Augusta, partially as a truck route, and is signed as SR 540.[2] It may also be incorporated into the proposed eastern extension of Interstate 14 (I-14), an Interstate Highway that is currently entirely within Central Texas and may be extended to Augusta.

Route description

SR 88 begins at an intersection with SR 24/SR 540 (SR 24 is known as Ridge Road south of this intersection; SR 24 and SR 540 is part of the Fall Line Freeway west of here), just east of Sandersville, in the central part of Washington County. At this intersection, it begins a concurrency with SR 540 (and the Fall Line Freeway). The two highways head northeast to an intersection with the northern terminus of SR 231 and the southern terminus of Tree Nursery Road, north-northwest of Davisboro. This is just before the highways cross over the Ogeechee River on the Fenns Bridge into Jefferson County. Not too far into the county is an intersection with SR 171 (Grange Road). South of Stapleton is SR 296. SR 88 and SR 540 continue to the northwest, until they meet US 1/US 221/SR 4/SR 17 (Jefferson Davis Memorial Highway) in the extreme southwestern part of Wrens. The six highways travel concurrently to the north-northeast into the main part of the city. At an intersection with the western terminus of Howard Street and the southern terminus of Thomson Highway, SR 17 departs to the north-northwest onto Thomson Highway. A few blocks later, they intersect SR 80. At this intersection, SR 80/SR 88 head to the east. At Waynesboro Road, SR 80 departs to the south-southeast, while SR 88 continues its east-northeastern routing. Then, it gradually curves to a near-due-eastern direction, before heading southeast at Matthews. After that, it heads east-northeast, and then northeast, until it enters Burke County, just before it meets SR 305. Here, it heads north-northeast, and straddles the county line for a short distance, into Keysville. The highway briefly heads north-northwest before it turns to the northeast and enters Richmond County and the city limits of Augusta. After a brief portion in the city, it enters the city of Blythe. Here, the path of SR 88 and that of US 1/SR 4/SR 540 come very close together, forming the shape of the letter "K", but with a very short horizontal line connecting its upright parts. The two highway paths do not actually intersect, as there is a very brief connecting road between them. SR 88 curves to the east-northeast and re-enters Augusta. It curves to the east-southeast and enters Hephzibah. On the northeastern edge of the city, on the Hephzibah–Augusta line, it meets its eastern terminus, an intersection with US 25/SR 121 (Peach Orchard Road).[1]

The only portion of SR 88 that is part of the National Highway System, a system of routes determined to be the most important for the nation's economy, mobility, and defense, is the entire SR 540 concurrency, from east of Sandersville to Wrens.[3][4]

History

Reassurance shields for SR 88 were removed on the Fall Line Freeway in June 2020.

Future

The route of SR 88 is being absorbed into the Fall Line Freeway, which is planned to extend from the Alabama state line in Columbus to an interchange with I-20 and I-520 in Augusta.[2] It could also become part of the future I-14.

Major intersections

CountyLocationmi[1]kmDestinationsNotes
Washington0.00.0
SR 24 (Fall Line Freeway west / Ridge Road south) / SR 540 west (Fall Line Freeway west) – Milledgeville, Davisboro, Louisville
Western end of SR 540 concurrency; western terminus
9.114.6
SR 231 south / Tree Nursery Road north – Davisboro, Wrightsville, Washington State Prison
Northern terminus of SR 231; southern terminus of Tree Nursery Road
Ogeechee River10.5
10.6
16.9
17.1
Fenns Bridge
JeffersonGrange13.621.9 SR 171 (Grange Road) – Edge Hill, Gibson, Warrenton, Louisville
23.137.2 SR 296 – Louisville, Stapleton
Wrens27.143.6



US 1 south / US 221 south / SR 4 south / SR 17 south (Jefferson Davis Memorial Highway) – Louisville
Western end of US 1/US 221/SR 4 and SR 17 concurrencies
28.345.5
SR 17 north (Thomson Highway) / Howard Street east – Thomson
Eastern end of SR 17 concurrency; western terminus of Howard Street
28.646.0



US 1 north / US 221 north / SR 4 north (Main Street) / SR 540 east (Fall Line Freeway) – Augusta, Aiken SC, Harlem, Appling



SR 80 west (Broad Street) to SR 17 / SR 102 – Warrenton, Stapleton, Gibson, Avera, Thomson
Eastern end of US 1/US 221/SR 4 and SR 540 concurrencies; western end of SR 80 concurrency; US 1/US 221/SR 4/SR 540 provide access to Wrens Municipal Airport.
29.146.8
SR 80 east (Waynesboro Road) – Waynesboro
Eastern end of SR 80 concurrency
Burke38.361.6
SR 305 south – Midville
Northern terminus of SR 305
RichmondBlythe44.972.3
To US 1 (SR 4 / SR 540) – Wrens, Augusta
HephzibahAugusta line53.285.6 US 25 / SR 121 (Peach Orchard Road) – Waynesboro, AugustaEastern terminus
1.000 mi = 1.609 km; 1.000 km = 0.621 mi

References

  1. ^ a b c Google (December 6, 2019). "Overview map of SR 88 (western terminus to Wrens)" (Map). Google Maps. Google. Retrieved December 6, 2019.
    Google (December 6, 2019). "Overview map of SR 88 (Wrens to eastern terminus)" (Map). Google Maps. Google. Retrieved December 6, 2019.
  2. ^ a b "Fall Line Freeway" (PDF) (Press release). Georgia Department of Transportation. July 2019. Retrieved December 6, 2019.
  3. ^ National Highway System: Georgia (PDF) (Map). Federal Highway Administration. May 8, 2019. Retrieved December 5, 2019.
  4. ^ National Highway System: Augusta-Richmond County, GA--SC (PDF) (Map). Federal Highway Administration. May 9, 2019. Retrieved December 5, 2019.

External links