A walkthrough on International Drive showing many of the great places to visit in Central Florida!
Filmed on February 9th 2019.
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From Wikipedia:
International Drive, commonly known as I-Drive, is a major 11.1-mile (17.9 km) thoroughfare in Orlando, Florida, United States, and is the city's main tourist strip. I-Drive is located several miles southwest of proper Downtown Orlando in the southernmost limits of the city. The International Drive area serves a similar purpose to that of the Las Vegas Strip in Las Vegas as the core of the tourism area.
International Drive stretches approximately 11.1 miles, with the northern part extending into the southernmost city limits of Orlando and the remainder of the central and southern portion located in unincorporated Orange County. An additional extension which does not directly intersect with the main section of International Drive is known as International Drive South, partly located in the northern portion of Osceola County. Surrounding cross-roads include Sand Lake Road, Kirkman Road, SR 536, and Universal Boulevard, which runs parallel to the midsection of International Drive.
I-Drive has four lanes, two in each direction, from its north end at Oak Ridge Road to Pointe Plaza Dr. (former Universal Blvd. south end; see below), and again between the northern and southern intersections with Westwood Blvd. It has six lanes, three in each direction, from Pointe Plaza Dr. to the Beachline Expressway (the eastbound ramps to the Beachline tie into the northern intersection with Westwood Blvd.), and again from the southern intersection with Westwood Blvd. to its end at SR 536. The entirety of International Drive South, from SR 535 to US 192, is entirely six lanes. The section of I-Drive from Universal Blvd. to Sand Lake Road has no median or center turn lane, and frequently has heavy traffic and gridlock in the evenings in the tourism corridor, affecting Carrier Dr. and Sand Lake Road.
The International Drive area is home to the wax museum Madame Tussauds, the Orange County Convention Center complex, the Pointe Orlando entertainment complex, major hotels, SeaWorld Orlando, Aquatica (SeaWorld's water park), Fun Spot America amusement park, the ICON Orlando Ferris wheel, the world's tallest StarFlyer (opened June 1, 2018), the world's tallest Slingshot, the world's largest entertainment McDonald's, CoCo Key Hotel & Water Resort, the I-Drive 360 entertainment complex, museums, themed restaurants, bars, outlet malls, mini golf courses like Pirate's Cove Adventure Golf and other tourism-related commercial properties and tourist attractions such as Air Florida Helicopter Inc, Wonder Works and The Magical Midway. The major theme park resort Universal Orlando is also located in the area. Wet n' Wild was a water park opened on March 13, 1977, formerly located on International Drive, considered to be America's first water park until it closed on December 31, 2016 to make way for a new water park built by Universal called Volcano Bay that opened up on May 25, 2017.
Timestamps
1:00 - iFly Indoor Skydiving
9:44 - Pirate's Cove Adventure Mini Golf
12:56 - Icon Orlando 360
14:41 - Orlando Starflyer
The links below may contain affiliate links, which means that if you click on one of the product links, I'll receive a small commission from your purchases.
Filmed Using
GoPro Hero 7 Black - https://amzn.to/2FKVZfr
GoPro Karma Grip - https://amzn.to/2DnEMHb
Places shown in this video
Wonderworks Orlando
iFly Orlando
Millers Ale House Orlando I-Drive
At Siam Thai Cuisine Thai Restaurant
TGI Fridays
Bahama Breeze
Howl At The Moon Orlando
Cattleman's Steakhouse
Hooters I-Drive
Boston Lobster Feast
Vito's Chop House
Cafe Tu Tu Tango
Pirate's Cove Adventure Golf
Uncle Julio's Mexican From Scratch
Yard House
Buffalo Wild Wings
Shake Shack
Icon Orlando 360
Orlando Eye
Orlando Starflyer
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