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CORRIDORS - MOUNT PLEASANT |
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Mount Pleasant | Downtown
Charleston | West Ashley | North
Area | Daniel Island | James
Island

Highway
17 North (Johnnie Dodds Blvd). Highway 17 is the
most important commercial corridor in Mount Pleasant, extending
from the foot of the Cooper River Bridge to the town’s northernmost
boundary. Numerous hotels, neighborhood shopping centers, and a
growing number of corporate office buildings are congregated within
its first half-mile stretch as you enter Mount Pleasant from Charleston.
Near its intersection with the Mark Clark Expressway (I-526), this
corridor is home to growing number of medical offices and related
facilities that have been developed in and around the East Cooper
Regional Medical Center. As you travel north to its intersection
with the Isle of Palms connector, Highway 17 serves as Mount Pleasant’s
retail hub, highlighted by recently developed Towne Centre, home
to numerous national retailers, several restaurants, and a modern
movie theatre complex. As you follow this corridor to Mount Pleasant’s
northern boundary, several new mixed-use developments are located
at the entrances to major residential subdivisions, including the
entrances to The Brickyard, Park West and Charleston National. In
addition, several new commercial projects are planned for the northern
stretch of this corridor, including Oakland Plantation and the master-planned
Carolina Park project, which was annexed into the Town of Mount
Pleasant in 2004 and which is anticipated to include the construction
of 1700 homes over the next 20 to 30 years.
Coleman
Boulevard. Coleman Boulevard is the principal commercial
corridor providing access to the oldest sections of Mount Pleasant,
including Mount Pleasant’s “Old Village” and the
residential communities in and around Shem Creek. It is the only
corridor besides Johnnie Dodds Boulevard that is directly accessed
from the Cooper River Bridge. Near the foot of the bridge, Coleman
Boulevard provides access to Patriot’s Point, a unique mixed-use
development on the Charleston Harbor, which includes the Charleston
Harbor Hilton Hotel resort, the Naval and Maritime Museum (home
to the USS Yorktown), the Renaissance on Charleston Harbor condominium
buildings, the law offices of Motley Rice, LLC (the nation’s
largest plaintiff’s law firm), and a 35 acre sports complex.
Coleman Boulevard is perhaps best known for Shem Creek, which historically
has served as the home to Charleston shrimp boat fleet, but which
has evolved into a professional and tourist center, with a hotel,
many waterfront restaurants, a growing number of professional offices,
and boutique shopping opportunities. After its intersection with
the Mark Clark Expressway (I-526), the corridor name changes to
“Ben Sawyer Boulevard” and connects to Sullivan’s
Island, an exclusive and historic barrier beach community. Several
new retail centers have been developed at the intersection of Ben
Sawyer Boulevard and Rifle Range Road, a secondary corridor that
is home to numerous residential subdivisions.
Long
Point Road. Long Point Road is the first exit off
of the Mark Clark Expressway (I-526) as you enter Mount Pleasant
from North Charleston and Daniel Island. On the west side of I-526,
Long Point Road provides industrial vehicles with access to the
South Carolina Ports Authority’s Wando Terminal, located on
the Wando River. However, the west side of I-526 has also seen significant
non-industrial development, including the Long Point Center and
Wando Park office developments and the Roper-St. Francis Urgent
Care and medical office complex. On the east side of I-526, the
Long Point Road corridor takes on a stronger retail and office character,
anchored by the Belle Hall mixed-use development. The east side
of I-526 is also the home of numerous residential subdivisions.
The most eastern segment of Long Point Road is noted by minimal
commercial activity as it winds through historic Boone Hall Plantation
and connects with Highway 17.
Isle
of Palms Connector. Constructed in part as an alternative
evacuation route in the wake of the disastrous Hurricane Hugo, this
two-mile long connector road joins the Isle of Palms to the Mount
Pleasant “mainland”. The Connector terminates at its
intersection with Highway 17, just north of the Towne Centre development.
The IOP Connector also intersects with Hungryneck Boulevard, which
was recently constructed as extension of the I-526 exit ramp so
as to provide some relief to the intense traffic congestion associated
with the intersection of Highway 17 and I-526. Aside from Town Centre,
the most notable commercial development served by the IOP Connector
is Seaside Farms, a 500 acre mixed-use development that is home
to many boutique retailers and also the recently constructed Target.
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