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| Eastward Ho! Editorial Staff |
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An accident or someone just changing a tire on the side of Interstate 75 often turns the 30-mile sprint between Fort Myers and Naples into a marathon, frustrating drivers. Government agencies have ambitious plans to improve the interstate, but drivers can expect things to get worse before they get better. As relentless population growth continues here, residential and business development is pushing east from built-out areas in the west to the interstate corridor. Traffic will only continue to increase on the Southwest Florida stretch of the 1,775-mile-long interstate that runs from Michigan to Miami, experts agree, and practically no one thinks road builders will be able to keep up the pace. “Roadway expansion will come two or three years too late for any of our tastes. There will be that odd wreck that shuts the interstate down for two or three hours, and that will happen more often than any of us would like,” predicts David Stevens, a principal with Grubb & Ellis/IPC, a commercial real estate firm in Naples. “I don’t foresee us being able to do anything about it.” Dozens of projects along the interstate will bring thousands of new residences and hotel rooms, along with millions of square feet of new retail, research, office and warehouse space. Interchanges, real estate executives say, will some day host far more than the gas stations, fast-food outlets and pastures and cows drivers now see, and the road one day may supplant U.S. 41 as the region’s Main Street. “For the majority of my career, the preference was to be on U.S. 41 and west of 41,” says Stevens, who’s worked in commercial real estate here since 1983. “The populace that everybody was trying to serve was on the west side of the Trail.” Population trends and geography make development east of the interstate inevitable, according to Stevens. “It was only a matter of time before the dam burst,” he says. “We’ve been sitting here looking at double-digit growth for 30 years. You think, ‘Where the heck are they going to go?’ When you look at a bigger map, you say, ‘Here’s where they’re going to go—between the Gulf and 951, and they’re going to shoot right up that developable area where it’s not swamp.’” Within a couple of miles on each side of I-75, that is. Thus it’s crucial to keep traffic moving on the interstate, Stevens says, and not just to keep tourists happy. Naples and Fort Myers are already creeping toward each other to form a mini-megalopolis, meeting at a hub formed by TECO Arena, Alico Road, Southwest Florida International Airport and Florida Gulf Coast University. As the two cities meld into one region, each will depend on the other even more for commerce. Because the cost of housing has become so high in much of Naples, and because its growing population consists of so many wealthy retirees who have no interest in working, labor has already started to come from outside the area. The solution: Ensure smooth flow on the interstate to get workers in and out, and locate businesses close to the federal highway so they can be as accessible as possible to employees and customers. Many small firms catering to upper-echelon clients—law firms, accountants and the like—will remain close to U.S. 41 and their high-end customers living by the Gulf, Stevens concedes. But larger companies, and professionals who need to drive a lot—engineers, builders and developers, for instance—will gravitate to the highway. Small office outposts already have sprouted along Naples interchanges, Stevens says, and more are likely. Easy accessibility also attracts health-care operations—witness the Cleveland Clinic Florida’s location at I-75’s Pine Ridge Road exit. Beyond its appeal as a transportation corridor, tremendous residential growth east of the interstate has driven the road’s increasing importance to business, say Randal L. Mercer, managing broker/partner, and Robert D. Greig, associate for retail/business at CB Richard Ellis, a commercial real estate business in Fort Myers. “This is the only remaining corridor where you can buy large tracts of land and develop communities,” says Mercer. “It gets back to rooftops, services and demand.” Burgeoning residential developments close to I-75 in Lee County—like Fiddlesticks, Sun City and Gateway—are driving demand for business goods and services. Currently the emphasis is on retail, as big outfits such as Publix, Albertson’s, Target and Wal-Mart follow population east. They will soon be joined by shippers building freight depots and warehouses, especially near the growing airport-university hub, Mercer and Greig predict. Though Southwest Florida would never make sense as a major distribution point because it’s at a geographical dead end, it would function well as a regional distribution point for the five counties nearest the airport. The Jetport Commerce Center at I-75 and Daniels Parkway, developed a decade ago, and the western portion of Lehigh Acres are two likely growth spots, given their low cost compared to similar property in Collier, Mercer says. What’s more, he adds, nearby FGCU will bring research parks, and students who graduate and become long-term residents. “The big drivers in this market will be the airport and the university,” says Mercer. “All you have to do is look anywhere in Florida, and anywhere you see a state university, you see a tremendous amount of energy and long-term spinoff.” Though the region has a limited industrial base, office buildings on or near the interstate could be a logical next step in Lee, especially for companies hiring hundreds rather than dozens of workers, Mercer notes. “If somebody had to employ 300 or 400 people, it would be very hard to find them without stealing them from somebody else and getting into wage competition,” he says. Better transportation corridors would help increase the labor pool in an area with a perennial workforce shortage. But the shift eastward has boosted land prices. Some parcels along the interstate have doubled in cost in the past five years, according to Mercer, although he says he’s not worried about a bubble. “The big nationals tend to do their market research, and they have a formula they stick to and won’t pay too much,” he says. For many smaller tenants, locating in a shopping center with a Publix or other major retailer represents a slam-dunk opportunity. “Those anchors create a hotbed of activity that local tenants feed off,” he says. “At the Publix anchors, you’ll always see the florist and the drugstore and the pizza place.” Many of those spaces are leased long before the centers open. If it’s a golden vision of the future these real estate pros see, it’s also a crowded one. For those who complain about traffic now, things are likely to get worse. There’s intense competition throughout the state and nation for highway funding. When money does become available, it can take years to complete public hearings and environmental and engineering studies. “Right now we’re seeing an annual average of upwards of 70,000 trips a day, and it can get just crazy with traffic in the afternoons,” says Debbie Tower, spokeswoman for the Florida Department of Transportation regional office in Fort Myers. “By 2030 we might see upwards of 120,000 per day annual average daily traffic.” Although there are no quick fixes, the state and federal governments have sped up plans to widen the interstate, thanks to funds from Gov. Jeb Bush’s Mobility 2000 program. The section of I-75 in Lee and Collier is slated to increase to six lanes by 2009 and 10 lanes by 2030, though some businessmen, backed by the influential Southwest Florida Transportation Initiative, are pushing Rep. Porter Goss, R-Sanibel, to speed up funding and widening. Until then, interim measures will have to suffice, involving relatively quick, inexpensive improvements like tweaking traffic signals or lengthening or widening entrances and exits to the interstate from feeder roads. Such changes will create more “storage,” in traffic engineers’ parlance, theoretically avoiding the frustrating bottlenecks that frequently occur during rush hour at high season. The DOT is focusing on the interchanges at Corkscrew and Alico roads and Daniels Parkway, where tremendous growth in traffic is anticipated, but engineers may also address other interchanges. The DOT also plans to set up a camera system along the interstate called an Intelligent Transportation System that will alert drivers to problems ahead. One, in fact, is being installed in the bridge widening project currently in progress over the Peace River in Charlotte County. But in other places, like Orlando, the system has flopped, given that, as with Southwest Florida, few alternative routes exist even when motorists are alerted that problems lie ahead. Part of the problem, Tower points out, is that the interstate was never intended to be a road for commuters or local business; it was designed as a high-speed, limited-access highway connecting the states. The ambitious federal road system got its start under President Dwight D. Eisenhower in 1956 during the Cold War era for the same reason the first transcontinental railroad received funding during the Civil War: as a defense measure to move troops and weapons. Since the last section of I-75 was completed in Southwest Florida in 1986, funneling visitors, tourists and trade south (and in its early years sparking construction of 35 major projects in Charlotte, Lee and Collier counties that included 56,000 houses, 15 million square feet of office and retail space and more than 9 million square feet of industrial parks), it has become much more than a high-speed land connection between states. Because of a lack of developable land, labor and north-south routes in Collier and Lee, it will have to remain more than a long-haul road here. As bad as traffic may be here now, most agree, it’s far worse in many other places. Doubters need only make the short drive over to Orlando’s I-4 or Miami’s I-95 to get a dose of truly hellish city motoring. But it could get worse. “Can the state DOT and the county keep things in some reasonable sense of control so we don’t create California gridlock?” Stevens muses. “Probably not. My theme for the whole thing is: ‘This is what’s happening. Develop significant patience. Buy better car stereos. Install the car fax. And make sure you get a spare cell phone battery, because you’re going to spend a lot more time in your car.’” Exit Strategies The Florida DOT recently adopted a new exit numbering system that initially may lead a few motorists astray. The system is based on mileage from I-75’s terminus near Miami rather than on the 1-2-3-4 sequential numbering previously used. Drivers can figure the distance between exits by subtracting one number from the other. Although the change may cause some initial confusion, it will bring a number of benefits, state officials promise. Many other states already use the mileage method. For the next two years, the state will post smaller signs with old exit numbers next to big signs with new exit numbers. But motorists will have to pay attention. Not all exit signs will carry the old numbers. Here’s a handy list to avoid confusion: INTERCHANGE style="mso-spacerun: yes"> OLD EXIT NEW EXIT SR 29 style="mso-spacerun: yes"> 14A style="mso-spacerun: yes"> 80 CR 951 style="mso-spacerun: yes"> 15 style="mso-spacerun: yes"> 101 (Collier Blvd.) style="mso-spacerun: yes"> style="mso-spacerun: yes"> CR 896 style="mso-spacerun: yes"> 16 style="mso-spacerun: yes"> 107 (Pine Ridge Road) style="mso-spacerun: yes"> style="mso-spacerun: yes"> CR 846 style="mso-spacerun: yes"> 17 style="mso-spacerun: yes"> 111 (Immokalee Road) style="mso-spacerun: yes"> style="mso-spacerun: yes"> Bonita Beach Road style="mso-spacerun: yes"> 18 style="mso-spacerun: yes"> 116 Corkscrew Road style="mso-spacerun: yes"> 19 style="mso-spacerun: yes"> 123 Alico Road style="mso-spacerun: yes"> 20 style="mso-spacerun: yes"> 128 Daniels Parkway style="mso-spacerun: yes"> 21 style="mso-spacerun: yes"> 131 SR 884 style="mso-spacerun: yes"> 22 style="mso-spacerun: yes"> 136 (Colonial Blvd.) style="mso-spacerun: yes"> style="mso-spacerun: yes"> SR 82 (Dr. Martin style="mso-spacerun: yes"> 23 style="mso-spacerun: yes"> 138 Luther King Jr. Blvd.) style="mso-spacerun: yes"> style="mso-spacerun: yes"> Luckett Road style="mso-spacerun: yes"> 24 style="mso-spacerun: yes"> 139 SR 80 style="mso-spacerun: yes"> 25 style="mso-spacerun: yes"> 141 SR 78 style='mso-tab-count:1'> 26 143 Heavy Traffic Notable recent, current or planned residential and commercial developments near the interstate. Five Publix supermarkets are sprouting, from the Immokalee Road interchange in Naples north to the Colonial Boulevard and Daniels Parkway interchanges in Fort Myers. Archrival Albertson’s is fighting back with interstate-accessible stores at the Immokalee and Bonita Beach interchanges. Miromar Lakes, a residential development with up to 2,200 houses in the works between Alico and Corkscrew roads, has disproved the notion that land and housing get much cheaper the farther you get from the Gulf. Some lots are listed in the $500,000 range, and houses to $2 million. Nearby, a massive addition is planned for Miromar Outlets, including a proposed interior design center that will double retail space with an additional 400,000 square feet. WCI’s Sun City Fort Myers, a residential project east of Colonial, has 250 houses planned for construction and has already opened its first phase. A 220,000-square-foot Wal-Mart Supercenter is in the works near the Colonial interchange. Three interstate commerce parks—the Colonial Expressway Interstate, the Bonita Grande Commerce Park and the Bayshore Interstate Commerce Park—are offering office and industrial space from the Bonita Beach Road interchange north to the Pine Island Road interchange. Fort Myers developer O.J. Buigas and his Alanda Ltd. have launched a research park and shipping and other airport-related facilities on 2,500 acres near the interstate, FGCU and airport. A $386-million expansion of Southwest Florida International Airport will bring a new runway and midfield terminal, adding gates that will open access to new carriers and make it easier for passengers and freight to get here. Southwest Florida Equities Corp. plans an industrial center on 171 acres near the Alico Road interchange, while a land trust called Alico/75 Property plans to develop 31 acres at Alico with up to 310,000 square feet of office and retail space and a hotel with up to 172 rooms. A new regional mall is proposed at or near the interstate. Simon Property Group of Indianapolis’ Suncoast and Cleveland-based Richard E. Jacobs Group’s Gulf Coast Town Center are vying for the nod from government regulators and major tenants. The Omni property at Colonial and I-75, purchased a few years ago by Miami Heat coach Pat Riley, is now in the master-plan phase for mixed hotel and office use. | ||