Puerto Rico Highway 115

(Redirected from PR-115)

Puerto Rico Highway 115 (PR-115) is a highway which follows the west coastline of Puerto Rico from south Añasco at PR-2 to near downtown Aguadilla, where it becomes Puerto Rico Highway 111 after intersecting PR-2 again,[3] and is the primary route to the town of Rincón, Puerto Rico,[4] a tourist and frequent destination of surfers.

Highway 115 marker Highway 115 marker
Highway 115
Ruta 115
Avenida Profesor Tomás Bonilla Feliciano[1]
Route information
Maintained by Puerto Rico DTPW
Length27.8 km[2] (17.3 mi)
Major junctions
South end PR-2 / PR-109 in Añasco Abajo
Major intersections
North end PR-1107 in Victoria
Location
CountryUnited States
TerritoryPuerto Rico
MunicipalitiesAñasco, Rincón, Aguada, Aguadilla
Highway system
PR-114 PR-116
PR-111RPR-115R PR-116R

Route description

edit

As it enters Rincón, PR-115 becomes a divided highway with one lane per direction, with the median filled with trees, similar to some of the medians found in freeways in the United States. But PR-115 is not a freeway; it is a rural highway mostly one lane per direction. It enters toward downtown Rincón. The highway is subject to severe flooding when it rains.[5]

Major intersections

edit
MunicipalityLocationkm[2]miDestinationsNotes
AñascoAñasco Abajo0.00.0  
 
PR-2 (Expreso Rafael Hernández, "El Jibarito") / PR-109 east – Añasco, Mayagüez, Aguadilla
Southern terminus of PR-115
Hatillo3.32.1  PR-401 – Playa
4.32.7  PR-402 – Hatillo
Caguabo6.94.3  PR-429 – Barrero
RincónCalvache8.75.4  PR-411 – Calvache
10.36.4  PR-429 – Córcega
Rincón barrio-pueblo13.28.2  PR-412 (Calle Comercio) – PuebloOne-way street
13.3–
13.4
8.3–
8.3
  PR-414 (Calle Sol) – Cruces
13.68.5  PR-413 (Camino Carretas) – Puntas
Río Grande15.49.6  PR-413 (Camino Carretas) – Puntas
17.210.7  PR-400 – Cruces
AguadaGuayabo20.412.7  PR-414 – Cruces
GuaniquillaGuayabo line21.813.5PR-Avenida Nativo Alers – Aguada
22.6–
22.7
14.0–
14.1
   PR-411 / PR-441 – Piedras Blancas, GuaniquillaPR-441 access via Calle Jiménez
Aguada barrio-pueblo23.2–
23.3
14.4–
14.5
 
 
PR-417 east (Calle Guamá) – Mal Paso
One-way street
Asomante24.615.3  PR-4415 – Mal PasoFormer PR-115R
25.916.1  PR-439 – Asomante
Carrizal26.816.7  PR-439 – Carrizal
Río Culebrinas26.8–
26.9
16.7–
16.7
Puente Conde de Caspe[6]
Espinar27.116.8   PR-442 / PR-4439 – Espinar
AguadillaVictoria27.817.3  PR-1107 (Avenida Victoria) – Aguadilla, MocaNorthern terminus of PR-115
1.000 mi = 1.609 km; 1.000 km = 0.621 mi
edit
Highway 115 Spur
LocationAguada
Length1.2 km[7] (0.75 mi)
Existedy

Highway 115 Spur (Spanish: Carretera Ramal 115, abbreviated Ramal PR-115 or PR-115R) is a road that branches off from PR-115 to PR-417 near downtown Aguada.[8] Currently the entire road was renumbered to PR-4415.[9] The entire route is located in Aguada

Locationkm[7]miDestinationsNotes
Piedras BlancasAsomante line1.20.75  PR-417 – AguadaSouthern terminus of PR-115R
Asomante0.00.0  PR-115 – AguadillaNorthern terminus of PR-115R
1.000 mi = 1.609 km; 1.000 km = 0.621 mi

See also

edit

References

edit
  1. ^ "Para designar la Carretera Estatal PR-115 como "Avenida Profesor Tomás Bonilla Feliciano"". LexJuris (Leyes y Jurisprudencia) de Puerto Rico (in Spanish). 2018. Retrieved 1 June 2019.
  2. ^ a b "PR-115" (Map). Google Maps. Retrieved 11 March 2020.
  3. ^ National Geographic Maps (2011). Puerto Rico (Map). 1:125,000. Adventure Map (Book 3107). Evergreen, Colorado: National Geographic Maps. ISBN 978-1566955188. OCLC 756511572.
  4. ^ "Tránsito Promedio Diario (AADT)". Transit Data (in Spanish). DTOP PR. p. 65. Archived from the original on 1 April 2019.
  5. ^ "Reabren tramo en la PR-115 tras desbordamiento de Río Culebrinas". La Isla Oeste (in Spanish). 28 May 2019. Retrieved 17 December 2021.
  6. ^ Luis F. Pumarada O’Neill (1991). "Los Puentes Históricos de Puerto Rico" (PDF) (in Spanish). p. 114. Retrieved 11 March 2020.
  7. ^ a b "PR-115R" (Map). Google Maps. Retrieved 6 April 2023.
  8. ^ "PR-115R, Aguada, Puerto Rico". pr.geoview.info. Retrieved 6 April 2023.
  9. ^ "Mapa Vial de Aguada" (PDF). Junta de Planificación (in Spanish). Retrieved 6 April 2023.
edit