Capacity and safety improvements continue along critical Southport-Supply corridor
By BC News Staff Writer
Brunswick County, NC — As of June 2026, the ongoing widening of NC 211, a vital transportation artery for Brunswick County continues to reshape the landscape between Supply and Southport. Designated by the North Carolina Department of Transportation (NCDOT) as R-5021, the project has moved past its midpoint, with current estimates now pointing toward a completion date in 2027.
The R-5021 project encompasses a 7.2-mile stretch of NC 211, transforming the existing two-lane facility into a four-lane divided highway. The expansion spans from NC 906 (Midway Road) to NC 87 (River Road) in Southport.
Beyond increasing capacity to accommodate projected growth – estimated at 44,000 vehicles per day by 2039 – this corridor serves as a critical hurricane evacuation route for residents of St. James, Southport, and Oak Island. The design includes significant safety enhancements, such as raised medians, signalized intersections, and two major interchanges at NC 211/Midway Road and NC 211/Long Beach Road.
Construction, contracted to Barnhill Contracting Company, officially began in January 2022. As of June 2026, the project is reported to be over 50% complete. Residents and daily commuters will continue to drive through active construction zones, including curb and drainage improvements.
Motorists should anticipate ongoing lane shifts and temporary configurations as crews transition through various phases of the project. The focus for 2026 remains the peak of construction, transitioning from initial site work and utility relocation into the structural paving of the new lanes.
While the project timeline has been adjusted to a 2027 target to ensure the work meets modern safety and infrastructure standards, NCDOT continues to manage the corridor to balance construction needs with daily traffic flow.
Residents are encouraged to monitor official channels for specific lane closures or traffic adjustments. Project information, including maps and status reports, is available through the NCDOT website and the Brunswick County government portal dedicated to transportation projects. The NCDOT resident engineer is Alex Stewart.
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