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State Route 303 marker
State Route 303
Bob Stump Memorial Parkway
Route information
Maintained by ADOT
Length35.25 mi[1] (56.73 km)
Existed1985–present
Major junctions
CCW end I-10 in Goodyear
Major intersections US 60 in Surprise
CW end I-17 north of Phoenix
Location
CountryUnited States
StateArizona
Highway system
  • Arizona State Highway System
SR 289 SR 347

Arizona State Route 303, also known as Loop 303 (spoken as three-oh-three) or Bob Stump Memorial Parkway formerly called Estrella Freeway, is a state highway that was maintained by Maricopa County[2] in central Arizona serving the far western suburbs of the Phoenix metropolitan area until 2004 when the Arizona Department of Transportation again took the control of upgrading the interim road to a freeway. As of 2004 it was renamed "Bob Stump Memorial Parkway" to honor former Arizona congressman Bob Stump.[3]

Its current route is from just north of the Cotton Lane exit of Interstate 10 in Goodyear to Interstate 17 south of Carefree Highway. Unlike Loop 101 and Loop 202, most of Loop 303 is currently not a controlled-access highway ("freeway") from Interstate 10, although there are portions currently under construction between I-10 and US 60 to make it a freeway by the end of 2014. The section of highway between Happy Valley Parkway/Vistancia Boulevard to Interstate 17 is currently a controlled-access freeway. Although it has not been fully constructed, portions of Loop 303 from Lake Pleasant Parkway to Interstate 17 officially opened to traffic on May 13, 2011.

File:Old Arizona 303.svg
Old colored Arizona Loop 303 shield that is being phased out

Route description

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Loop 303 begins at an interchange with I-10 in Goodyear. It heads north and intersects McDowell Road and Indian School Road. The road heads through a farmland terrain and passes the Wildlife World Zoo near Northern Avenue. It intersects the BNSF Railway near Olive Avenue.[4] Past an intersection with Greenway Road, Route 303 enters a residential community and turns northeast. The route meets another BNSF railroad line near an intersection with US 60, Grand Avenue.[4] The route turns eastward and becomes a controlled-access highway at El Mirage Road. It turns north near the Happy Valley Parkway interchange and then east again south of Lake Pleasant, coming to an end at an interchange with I-17 near Skunk Creek.[5]

History

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Loop 303 was originally a part of the 1985 Maricopa County Regional Transportation Plan to be funded by a sales tax approved by Maricopa County voters. The freeway, designed to service the Northwest Valley, would have been completed sometime by 2014. However, funding shortfalls and increasing construction costs forced cutbacks in the plan, and in 1995 the freeway was dropped from the regional plans.

Maricopa County took charge of what was then called the Estrella Freeway project when it was dropped from the regional freeway plans, maintaining it as an interim 2-lane highway along the original corridor while keeping the state route designation. The county has made significant improvements to the roadway, extending it several miles north and east of US 60. While the highway is still largely a 2-lane rural road, the extension north of US 60 along with the southern terminus just north of Interstate 10 have been upgraded to a 4-lane divided parkway, and the segment between US 60 and Bell Road in Surprise has been partially upgraded to controlled-highway standards with overpasses and right-of-way for on-ramps.[6]

With the extension of the sales tax approved in 2004, the highway has once again been added to the Regional Transportation Plan. As Maricopa County has completed much of the required study and preparation work, construction on the freeway is already underway with a planned completion date of the I-10 to I-17 segment by 2015. In mid-2011 the segment between Happy Valley Parkway and I-17 was completed as a four-lane highway with an interchange at Lone Mountain Parkway completed but closed to the public. Currently, motorists must pass through a signaled interchange until a freeway to freeway interchange is built between Loop 303 and I-17. According to a recent agreement between the state legislature and the state department of transportation, STAN (Statewide Transportation Acceleration Needs) funds were used to build a partial interchange at Bell Road in summer 2010, several years before previously intended.[7]

Future

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Long-term plans call for the extension of Loop 303 south of the interchange with I-10 in Avondale to the planned I-10 'Reliever Route' Freeway, SR 30, and continuing south through Goodyear to connect with the planned alignment of future Interstate 11. Loop 303 would run concurrent with I-11 for several miles, before splitting off southward towards its ultimate terminus at Interstate 8 west of Casa Grande.[8] If completed, Loop 303 will serve as a Phoenix bypass route for the southwestern suburbs of Goodyear, Avondale, and Buckeye as well as an alternate Phoenix bypass route for I-10 traffic headed westbound to the Greater Los Angeles Area and northbound via I-17 to Flagstaff.

In response to a projected budget shortfall of $6.6 billion brought on by the recession, the Maricopa Association of Governments voted to suspend funding to numerous projects during a meeting on October 28, 2009. Some modifications to Route 303, such as a scaled-back design of its interchanges with I-10 and US Highway 60, were made to cope with the budget shortfall. Funding for the extension south of I-10 to the planned alignment of SR 30 was removed, effectively postponing the extension until after 2025.[9]

Exit list

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The entire route is in Maricopa County.

Locationmi[1]kmExitDestinationsNotes
Goodyear3.806.12Cotton Lane / Van Buren StreetFormer southern terminus
3.936.32104  I-10 – Phoenix, Los Angeles, CAStack interchange to be completed Fall 2014
4.146.66McDowell RoadNo interchange planned
5.198.35105Thomas Road / Cotton LaneTemporary southern terminus of Loop 303
At-grade intersection, future interchange to be completed Fall 2014
6.199.96106Indian School RoadInterchange opened Winter 2013
GoodyearGlendale line7.1911.57107Camelback RoadInterchange opened Winter 2013
Glendalea8.1913.18108Bethany Home RoadAt-grade intersection, future interchange to be completed Fall 2014
9.1914.79109Glendale AvenueAt-grade intersection, future interchange to be completed Fall 2014
10.1916.40110Northern AvenueHalf-interchange opened Winter 2013
111Northern ParkwayInterchange opened Winter 2013
11.1918.01Olive AvenueAt-grade intersection, no future interchange planned
GlendaleSurprise line12.2019.63112Peoria AvenueInterchange opened Fall 2013[10]
Surprise13.2021.24113Cactus RoadInterchange opened Fall 2013
14.2022.85114Waddell RoadInterchange opened Fall 2013
15.2024.46115Greenway RoadInterchange opened Fall 2013
16.2026.07116Bell RoadInterchange opened Fall 2013
SurpriseSun City West line19.3331.11119 
 
To US 60 (Grand Avenue)
Access via temporary connector road, interchange construction to begin in 2014
Sun City West21.2034.12121El Mirage RoadAt-grade intersection, interchange construction to begin in 2014
Peoria24.8139.93125Happy Valley Road / Vistancia Boulevard
Peoria2540124Jomax RoadInterchange planned
Peoria26.3142.34127Lone Mountain Parkway
Peoria2743128Westland RoadInterchange planned
27.8144.76131Lake Pleasant Parkway
Phoenix30.9549.81133Pyramid Peak Parkway (67th Avenue)Planned interchange
32.2351.87135Stetson Valley Parkway (51st Avenue)Planned interchange
35.2356.70  I-17 – Flagstaff, PhoenixNorthern terminus at an at-grade intersection; site of future stack interchange (2016-2025)
1.000 mi = 1.609 km; 1.000 km = 0.621 mi

^a The City of Glendale has strip annexed land surrounding these exits, though they currently are not within the city's corporate boundaries.

See also

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References

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  1. ^ a b Arizona Department of Transportation. "2008 ADOT Highway Log" (PDF). Retrieved April 8, 2008.
  2. ^ "MCDOT Rightroads Program".
  3. ^ "Maricopa County Board of Supervisors minute book" (PDF).
  4. ^ a b Arizona Railroads (PDF) (Map). Cartography by Multimodal Planning Division. Arizona Department of Transportation. September 2011. Retrieved April 9, 2012.
  5. ^ "SR 303" (Map). Google Maps. Retrieved April 9, 2012.
  6. ^ "Loop 303 (North of I-10)". ADOT. Archived from the original on 8 February 2008. Retrieved 2008-02-02.
  7. ^ "L303 Overview". ADOT. Archived from the original on 8 February 2008. Retrieved 2008-02-02.
  8. ^ "Interstate11.org". Retrieved 2012-08-17.
  9. ^ Holstege, Sean (2009-10-29). "Valley freeway projects shelved". The Arizona Republic. Retrieved 2009-11-04.
  10. ^ http://www.azdot.gov/projects/phoenix-metro-area/loop-303-north-of-i-10/map
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303 303 Category:Beltways in the United States