Traffic

Streets in downtown Myrtle Beach, SC to close for over a year. What roads will shut down

Streets in downtown Myrtle Beach will close in September 2024 for construction of the South Carolina Department of Transportation’s U.S. 501 realignment project.
Streets in downtown Myrtle Beach will close in September 2024 for construction of the South Carolina Department of Transportation’s U.S. 501 realignment project. City of Myrtle Beach

Starting in September, another downtown Myrtle Beach road will be closed for up to two years as the state works to better connect U.S. 501 to Kings Highway.

Closures of 7th Avenue from Kings Highway to Oak Street will happen this fall, said Myrtle Beach Infrastructure Project Manager Chris Miller. The city shut down Oak Street from Main Street to 6th Avenue at the beginning of July to install infrastructure for the South Carolina Department of Transportation 501 Realignment Project.

Miller is not sure exactly when construction will start but expects sometime in mid-September. This fall, water and sewer lines will be replaced along 7th Avenue North and Kings Highway, storm drainage will be added along Broadway Street and Kings Highway and boundaries for the new road will be created, according to a Myrtle Beach press release.

Plan for future realignment of U.S. Highway 501 in downtown Myrtle Beach. The project with connect 501 to 7th Ave. N., reducing the number of intersections from three to one. Sept. 20, 2023.
Plan for future realignment of U.S. Highway 501 in downtown Myrtle Beach. The project with connect 501 to 7th Ave. N., reducing the number of intersections from three to one. Sept. 20, 2023. Horry County Government Ride III Eleanor Nash

The U.S. 501 realignment will directly connect the popular highway to U.S. 17 by extending it along 7th Avenue North. Several buildings will be torn down in the process.

Completion is expected fall 2026.

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Emalyn Muzzy
The Sun News
Emalyn Muzzy is the retail and leisure reporter for The Sun News. She started as a breaking news reporter in Myrtle Beach before switching to the business beat. She graduated from the University of Minnesota is 2022 with a degree in journalism and Spanish.
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