Washington State Route 109


State Route 109 is a Washington state highway in Grays Harbor County. Beginning at its terminus at in Hoquiam, the highway travels west to intersect north of Ocean Shores and then turns north to temporarily end at Quinault Street in Taholah, located in the Quinault Indian Reservation. The Washington State Legislature extended the roadway north to end at US 101 south of Queets through tribal lands, although this segment has yet to be built. SR 109 was first established as in 1937, which was on a more northern alignment until 1947, when it was switched to a Hoquiam to Quinault Indian Reservation route. In 1964, SSH 9C was renumbered to SR 109 and in 1983, a spur route of SR 109 that bypasses Hoquiam was added; the route was extended to US 101 near Queets in 1985.

Route description

State Route 109 begins at an intersection with in downtown Hoquiam. After intersecting the couplet, a daily average of 9,600 motorists in 2007, making it the busiest segment of SR 109; From the intersection with US 101, the highway is named Emerson Avenue and travels west past its couplet, paralleling the Hoquiam–Elma route of the Puget Sound and Pacific Railroad. After leaving Downtown Hoquiam and passing the John Gable Community Park, the roadway intersects and then becomes unnamed. After leaving Hoquiam city limits, the railroad ends and the road turns northwest to north of Ocean Shores. At the junction, SR 109 curves north along the Pacific Ocean and passes Ocean City, Copalis Beach, Griffiths-Priday State Park, Pacific Beach and Moclips before entering the Quinault Indian Reservation and Taholah to end at Quinault Street, located on the bank of the Quinault River.

History

The primary and secondary highways were created in 1937 and one of the secondary highways, , would later become SR 109. SSH 9C was also established in 1937, but extended from , co-signed as , north of Hoquiam and then traveled west to Pacific Beach, south to Copalis Beach and east to end at itself. In 1947, the highway was moved to a route that ran from PSH 9 / US 101 in Hoquiam, west to Ocean City and north to the southern border of Quinault Indian Reservation north of Moclips. Between Hoquiam and Moclips, a Great Northern Railway route named the Moclips spur, ran parallel to the roadway, first appearing on maps in 1951. The road was renumbered to SR 109 during the 1964 highway renumbering; the last time the railroad was shown on maps was in 1968. A bypass of Downtown Hoquiam was built and signed as a spur route of SR 109 in 1983. SR 109 was extended by the Washington State Legislature to US 101 south of Queets in 1985, but as of 2009, the highway ends at Quinault Street in Taholah. The roadway will be maintained by the Washington State Department of Transportation and will be partially a limited-access road. The remaining right-of-way would be acquired by WSDOT and the highway could be partially funded by federal funds. The Moclips River Bridge, located in Moclips, is being replaced because of sediment accumulation. Construction was set to start in 2010, but the work was suspended due to budgetary reasons.

Special routes

Spur route

State Route 109 Spur is a spur route of SR 109 located in Hoquiam and in length. The highway, named Bi Pass Road, bypasses Downtown Hoquiam and runs from SR 109 to . The spur route was added in 1983 by the Washington State Legislature. The busiest segment of SR 109 Spur in 2007 was the US 101 intersection with a daily average of 410 motorists.

Couplet

Within Hoquiam, SR 109 is split into two streets, Emerson Street is signed as SR 109 northbound and Simpson Avenue is signed as the SR 109 Couplet and runs from SR 109 to a US 101 couplet, which continues south as Simpson Avenue. The daily average of the couplet in 2007 was 4,500 motorists.

Major intersections

Spur intersections

Couplet intersections