Florida State Road 922
Highway in Florida, US
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
1983 (as SR 922)–present
| Shepard Broad Causeway [1] | ||||
SR 922 highlighted in red | ||||
| Route information | ||||
| Maintained by FDOT (Toll and bridge by Bay Harbor Islands) | ||||
| Length | 5.548 mi[2] (8.929 km) | |||
| Existed | 1951 (Causeway) 1983 (as SR 922)–present | |||
| Major junctions | ||||
| West end | ||||
| East end | ||||
| Location | ||||
| Country | United States | |||
| State | Florida | |||
| Counties | Miami-Dade | |||
| Highway system | ||||
| ||||
Florida State Road 922 (SR 922) is a 5.548 miles (8.929 km) east–west road built in 1951, passing through the cities of North Miami, Bay Harbor Islands, Surfside and Bal Harbour. Locally, the street is also known as Northwest 125th Street, North 125th Street, North Miami Boulevard, Northeast 123rd Street, Shepard Broad Causeway[1], 96th Street, and Kane Concourse. Its western terminus is an intersection with Northwest Seventh Avenue (US 441/SR 7), one block west of Interstate 95, its eastern terminus is an intersection with SR A1A. The street is an important commercial artery in northeastern Miami-Dade County, with stores lining much of the route, including the Bal Harbour Shops mall near its eastern terminus.
Route description

State Road 922 begins at the intersection between 125th Street and US 441/SR 7, with SR 922 heading east, intersecting with I-95 just one block east of the western terminus. East of I-95, SR 922 continues through mostly residential areas of North Miami, becoming commercial as it reaches the intersection with SR 909/SR 915. East of the intersection, SR 922 continues as a commercial thoroughfare until a railroad crossing jags SR 922 slightly south to become 123rd Street. It then meets with US 1/SR 5, and runs towards Biscayne Bay. Less than a mile east of US 1, State Road 922 crosses Biscayne Bay on the Shepard Broad Causeway[1], a toll causeway (with a drawbridge) maintained and operated by the Town of Bay Harbor Islands.
The SunPass toll rate for SR922 is $2.00 (US) for a two-axle vehicle and $3.25 via Toll-by-Plate. Additional axles at the SunPass rate are $7.00 per each additional axle and $8.50 for Toll-by-Plate. [3]
East of the Causeway, SR 922 runs through Bay Harbor Islands' Kane Concourse and reaches the final barrier island holding Bal Harbour to the north & Surfside to the south. SR 922 via 96th Street terminates at SR A1A.
History
The Broad Causeway opened in 1951, named after Shepard Broad.
Before a 1983 reassignment of Florida Department of Transportation designations, the route had signs indicating that it was State Road 968, its former number was transferred to another east–west street nine miles (14 km) to the south (Flagler Street).
In 2017, it was renamed to Shepard Broad Causeway by the Florida State Legislature.[1]
Major intersections
The entire route is in Miami-Dade County.
| Location | mi[2] | km | Destinations | Notes | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| North Miami | 0.000 | 0.000 | Western terminus; road continues westward | ||
| 0.10 | 0.16 | Exit 10A on I-95 | |||
| 1.498 | 2.411 | ||||
| 1.520 | 2.446 | ||||
| 2.961 | 4.765 | ||||
| 3.741 | 6.021 | Western end of state maintenance | |||
| Biscayne Bay | 4.2[4]– 4.5 | 6.8– 7.2 | Broad Causeway (SunPass, E-Pass, E-ZPass, Peach Pass, LeeWay, NC Quick Pass, PikePass, KTag, TollTag, or pay-by-plate) | ||
| Bay Harbor Islands | 4.546 | 7.316 | Eastern end of state maintenance | ||
| Surfside–Bal Harbour line | 5.489 | 8.834 | |||
| 5.548 | 8.929 | ||||
| 1.000 mi = 1.609 km; 1.000 km = 0.621 mi | |||||
