Transportation in Jacksonville, Florida

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The Jacksonville transportation network includes ground, air, and sea options for passenger and freight transit. The Jacksonville Port Authority (Jaxport) operates the Port of Jacksonville, which includes container shipping facilities at Blount Island Marine Terminal, the Talleyrand Marine Terminal and the Dames Point Marine Terminal. Jacksonville Aviation Authority managers Jacksonville International Airport in Northside, as well as several smaller airports. The Jacksonville Transportation Authority (JTA) operates bus, people mover, and park-n-ride services throughout the city and region. A major bus terminal at the intermodal Rosa Parks Transit Station serves as JTA's main transit hub. Various intercity bus companies terminate near Central Station. Amtrak operates passenger rail service to and from major cities throughout North America. The city is bisected by major highways, I-95 and I-10, I-295 creates a full beltway around the city.

Along with bus services, Jacksonville offers fixed routes operated by the Jacksonville Transportation Authority (JTA). The Skyway is a people mover system located in Downtown Jacksonville. Its two lines and eight stations connect the Northbank, Southbank, and Lavilla districts. JTA is in the process of securing funding for an extension into Brooklyn, a neighborhood just south of Lavilla.[1]

Highways and Airports in Jacksonville

Background

Jacksonville is a sprawling city making cohesive walking and bicycling options difficult. Cycling still remains popular in some central urban areas for both recreation and commuting. The city manages to sustain a relatively low amount of traffic congestion for a city of its population, this is mostly related to the vast 767 square miles (1,990 km2)[2] area the city covers, an area much larger than most cities with a population over 800,000. Jacksonville's low population density might also be the reason the city has yet to further develop its mass transit bus system or a heavy or light rail network. Among urbanized areas with a population of 1 million or greater in the United States, Jacksonville ranked tenth in freeway lane miles per 1,000 population and eighth in freeway-equivalent miles per 1,000 population.[3] As the 12th-largest city in the U.S., Jacksonville has repeatedly been ranked below 40th in mass transit availability. As a result, the city is not well known for its walkability.

Jacksonville once had a large streetcar system. On February 24, 1893, Jacksonville began service with its first streetcar line. By the late 1920s, Jacksonville had what was Florida's largest streetcar system, run by multiple different companies. However, by the early 1930s, buses replaced streetcars, and the streetcars slowly perished. The last year of service was 1936.[4]

When compared to other U.S. cities, Jacksonville appears on the high end of car use, even amongst its car dependent peers in other Sunbelt regions.
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  2. The 2005 Urban Mobility Report
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  5. Jacksonville Transportation Woes
  6. Hannan, Larry: "Jacksonville’s scrambled I-10/I-95 intersection transforming traffic until 2011" Florida Times-Union, June 7, 2010
  7. Hannan, Larry: "I-95/I-10 construction is almost done" Florida Times-Union, August 11, 2010
  8. "Profile of Services" Jacksonville Transportation Authority website
  9. "Jacksonville: Taxis & Rental Cars" Trip Advisor
  10. "Monorails of North America" The Monorail Society Website
  11. Gibbons, Timothy J.: Demolition of JIA's Concourse B brings end of an era Florida Times-Union, June 22, 2009
  12. overview. 3.12.07:overview.qxd.qxd
  13. "US Port Ranking by Cargo Volume 2008" American Association of Port Authorities
  14. "Jacksonville Port Authority" JAXPORT website
  15. "Cruise Terminal" Jacksonville Port Authority, Cruise Terminal
  16. "Carnival back with bigger, better ship, the Fascination" Florida Times-Union, September 19, 2008
  17. "Jacksonville Cruises" Jacksonville Cruises
  18. "St. Johns River Ferry Jacksonville" Yahoo Travel guide
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  20. [1] Feasibility Study Final Report
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