Georgia State Route 94

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State Route 94 marker

State Route 94
Route information
Maintained by GDOT
Length: 67.7 mi[1][2] (109.0 km)
Western section
Length: 54.8 mi[1] (88.2 km)
West end:
US 41 Bus. / SR 7 Bus. in Valdosta
Major
junctions:
US 41 / SR 7 / SR 31 southeast of Valdosta
US 129 / SR 11 southwest of Valdosta
US 441 / SR 89 in Fargo
US 441 / SR 89 / SR 177 southeast of Fargo
East end: SR 2 southeast of Fargo
Eastern section
Length: 12.9 mi[2] (20.8 km)
West end: SR 2 southwest of Moniac
East end: SR 2 east of St. George
Location
Counties: Lowndes, Echols, Clinch, Charlton
Highway system
  • Georgia State Routes
SR 93 I‑95

State Route 94 (SR 94) is a 67.7-mile-long (109.0 km) state highway in the southeastern part of the U.S. state of Georgia. It exists in two distinct sections, split by the Florida state line, that runs west–east within portions Lowndes, Echols, Clinch, and Charlton counties.

Route description

Western segment

SR 94 begins at an intersection with US 41/SR 7/SR 31 (Inner Perimeter Road, which serves as a bypass of downtown Valdosta). The route continues to the southeast and enters Echols County. Just before entering Statenville, it intersects SR 135 and crosses over the Alapaha River. In Statenville, it meets US 129/SR 11. The highway passes through rural areas of the county until it enters Clinch County. Immediately, it enters Fargo, where it begins a concurrency with US 441/SR 89. The three routes cross over the Upper Suwannee River. Shortly southeast of Fargo, US 441/SR 89 splits off to the southwest. Immediately afterward is the southern terminus of SR 177. This intersection is unique, in that drivers on SR 177 that want to head south on US 441/SR 89 have to turn east on SR 94 and immediately turn right onto US 441/SR 89. SR 94 continues to the southeast, cuts across the southwestern corner of the Okefenokee National Wildlife Refuge, and reaches the eastern terminus of its western segment, the Florida state line, where the roadway continues as State Road 2.[1]

Western terminus of SR 94
Georgia State Route 94 intersection of SR 135

Eastern segment

The route resumes at the spot where Florida State Route 2 meets the Georgia state line, west of Moniac, on the southeastern edge of the Okefenokee National Wildlife Refuge, at a crossing over the St. Marys River, within Charlton County. In Moniac, it intersects the northern terminus of SR 185. The highway passes through rural areas of the county, until it enters St. George. Here, it intersects SR 23/SR 121 (Florida Avenue), just before it reaches its eastern terminus, a second instance with the Florida State line. Here, just like the eastern terminus of its western section, the roadway continues as State Road 2, over the St. Marys River.[2]

National Highway System

SR 94 is not part of the National Highway System, a system of roadways important to the nation's economy, defense, and mobility.[3]

Major intersections

Western segment
County Location mi[1] km Destinations Notes
Lowndes 2.4 3.9 US 41 / SR 7 / SR 31 (Perimeter Road) to I‑75 south
Echols 15.0 24.1 SR 135 – Howell, Naylor, Lakeland, Jennings, FL
Statenville 17.0 27.4 US 129 / SR 11 – Lakeland, Jasper, FL
Clinch Fargo 45.7 73.5 US 441 north / SR 89 north – Homerville, Pearson Western end of US 441 / SR 89 concurrency
46.5 74.8 US 441 south / SR 89 south / SR 177 north – Lake City, Stephen C. Foster State Park Eastern end of US 441 / SR 89 concurrency
54.8 88.2 SR 2 east – St. George Florida state line
1.000 mi = 1.609 km; 1.000 km = 0.621 mi
Eastern segment

The entire route is in Charlton County.

Location mi[2] km Destinations Notes
0.0 0.0 SR 2 west – Fargo Florida state line (St. Marys River bridge)
Moniac 0.3 0.48 SR 185 south – Macclenny Northern terminus of SR 185
Saint George 11.7 18.8 SR 23 / SR 121 (Florida Avenue) – Folkston, Macclenny
12.9 20.8 SR 2 east – Crawford Florida state line (St. Marys River bridge)
1.000 mi = 1.609 km; 1.000 km = 0.621 mi

See also

References

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External links

<--! * Georgia State Route 94 on State-Ends.com -- bad link>