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Ingleside (Safety Harbor, Florida)

Houses in Pinellas County, FloridaHouses on the National Register of Historic Places in FloridaNational Register of Historic Places in Pinellas County, FloridaPinellas County, Florida geography stubsTampa Bay Area Registered Historic Place stubs
Safety Harbor Ingleside01
Safety Harbor Ingleside01

Ingleside (also known as the William B. F. Leech House) is a historic home in Safety Harbor, Florida. It is located at 333 South Bayshore Boulevard. On April 28, 1992, it was added to the U.S. National Register of Historic Places.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Ingleside (Safety Harbor, Florida) (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

Ingleside (Safety Harbor, Florida)
Scott Street, Palm Harbor Safety Harbor

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Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 27.988333333333 ° E -82.690277777778 °
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Address

Scott Street

Scott Street
34695 Palm Harbor, Safety Harbor
Florida, United States
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Safety Harbor Ingleside01
Safety Harbor Ingleside01
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Bayside Bridge (Pinellas County, Florida)
Bayside Bridge (Pinellas County, Florida)

The Bayside Bridge is a girder bridge in Pinellas County which crosses over the northwesternmost end of Tampa Bay, connecting Clearwater, Florida and Largo, Florida. Construction began in the early 1990s and was completed in the summer of 1993, officially opening for traffic on June 2 of that year. Originally conceived in the 1970s as the 49th Street Bridge, a toll-levied part of the 12-mile (19 km) Pinellas Parkway, the current six-lane twin-span bridge provides direct, unmitigated access from eastern Clearwater to St. Petersburg/Clearwater International Airport by connecting McMullen Booth Road to 49th Street North and also serves as a bypass for heavily congested US 19. The speed limit is 55 mph (or about 88 km/h) until McMullen Booth. Due to cambering differences, cars experience bouncing when traveling in the northbound lanes. This occurs for the first (southern) half of the northbound span.It features a SPUI interchange at State Road 60 and a diamond interchange on the south end of the bridge. Along with the bridge, a $12 million interchange was built at the intersection of 49th Street and Roosevelt Boulevard. The bridge was completed before McMullen Booth Road was widened, dumping up to 36,000 cars a day onto the two-lane road. On streets such as Marlo Road, drivers could wait as long as 15 minutes before being able to make a left turn.In 1991, Pinellas County administrator Fred Marquis argued that the cost of the bridge could be funded by a 10-year extension of gasoline taxes. The plan went through as the "Penny for Pinellas" tax. This eliminated the need for a planned $2.5 million, 16-lane toll booth that would have been built on sensitive marshlands at the south end of the bridge. The cost of construction of the bridge is estimated at $71 million. The plan is for the Bayside Bridge to connect to nearby Interstate 275 via the Gateway Expressway that started construction in August 2017.