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Wikipedia

Ontario Provincial Highway Network

The Provincial Highway Network consists of all the roads in Ontario maintained by the Ministry of Transportation of Ontario (MTO), including those designated as part of the King's Highway, secondary highways, and tertiary roads. Components of the system—comprising 16,900 kilometres (10,500 mi) of roads and 2,880 bridges[GIS 1] —range in scale from Highway 401, the busiest highway in North America, to unpaved forestry and mining access roads. The longest highway is nearly 2,000 kilometres (1,200 mi) long, while the shortest is less than a kilometre. Some roads are unsigned highways, lacking signage to indicate their maintenance by the MTO; these may be remnants of highways that are still under provincial control whose designations were decommissioned, roadway segments left over from realignment projects, or proposed highway corridors.

Provincial Highway Network
Highway markers for King's Highway 17, King's Highway 401, Secondary Highway 600, and Tertiary Highway 800
System information
Maintained by the MTO
Length16,900 km[2][GIS 1] (10,500 mi)
FormedFebruary 26, 1920 (1920-02-26)[1]
Highway names
Types
  • King's Highway n (2–169)
  • Secondary Highway n (500–673)
  • Tertiary Road n (800–813)
System links

Predecessors to today's modern highways include the foot trails and portages used by indigenous peoples in the time before European settlement. Shortly after the creation of the Province of Upper Canada in 1791, the new government under John Graves Simcoe built overland military roads to supplement water-based transportation, including Yonge Street and Dundas Street. At the time, road construction was under the control of the township and county governments. Local township roads were financed and constructed through a statute labour system that required landowners to make improvements in lieu of taxes. Private companies constructed corduroy and later plank roads and charged tolls in the second half of the 19th century. The rising popularity of the bicycle led to the formation of Ontario Good Roads Association, which advocated for the improvement of roads and recreation as the automobile rose to prominence.

By the early 20th century, the province had taken interest in road improvement and began funding it through counties. The increasing adoption of the automobile resulted in the formation of the Department of Public Highways of Ontario (DPHO) in 1916. The passing of the Canada Highways Act in 1919 resulted in the establishment of a provincial network of highways. The DPHO assigned internal highway numbers to roads in the system, and in 1925, the numbers were signposted along the roads and marked on maps. In 1930, provincial highways were renamed King's Highways and the familiar crown route markers created. The DPHO was also renamed the Department of Highways (DHO).

The 1930s saw several major depression relief projects built by manual labour, including the first inter-city divided highway in North America along the Middle Road, which would become the Queen Elizabeth Way in 1939. In 1937, the DHO merged with the Department of Northern Development, extending the highway network into the Canadian Shield and Northern Ontario. Significant traffic engineering and surveying through the war years, during which construction came to a near standstill, led to the planning and initial construction of controlled-access highways. The 400-series highways were built beginning in the late 1940s and numbered in 1952.

The vast majority of modern road infrastructure in Ontario was built throughout the 1950s, 1960s, and early 1970s. The cancellation of the Spadina Expressway and the introduction of the Environmental Assessment Act in the 1970s resulted in a decline in new highway construction in the decades since. In the late 1990s, nearly 5,000 kilometres (3,100 mi) of provincial highways were transferred, or "downloaded" back to lower levels of government. Few new provincial highways have been built in the early years of the 21st century, although several major infrastructure projects including the Herb Gray Parkway and expansion of Highway 69 have proceeded. Recent construction has included the controversial Bradford Bypass and Highway 413.

Naming, signage and regulations

 
The very first Ontario Road Map published in 1923

In Ontario, all public roads are legally considered highways under the Highway Traffic Act (HTA), which sets forth regulations for traffic, or the rules of the road.[3] The Public Transportation and Highway Improvement Act (PTHIA) sets forth the regulations concerning roads that are under the authority of the Province of Ontario. The act distinguishes and sets out the applicability of the HTA to provincial highways, which are designated as part of The King's Highway (primary), a secondary highway, or a tertiary road. Tertiary roads may also be designated as a resource road, allowing for vehicles otherwise prohibited from public roads. Industrial roads are privately owned routes with which the MTO has entered an agreement to improve or allow public access, and are not considered part of the provincial highway network.[4] The 407 ETR is likewise not considered part of the provincial highway network. While it is still subject to the rules set forth by the HTA, it is otherwise governed independently under the legislation of the Highway 407 Act.[5]

Speed limits on provincial highways are legislated by sections of the road, and vary between 50 km/h (30 mph) and 110 km/h (70 mph). Freeways, including the 400-series highways, are generally signed at 100 km/h (60 mph), although sections exist that are signed lower.[6][GIS 2] Three segments of freeway are part of an ongoing pilot project to test speed limits of 110 km/h in rural areas that are not subject to congestion. A fourth segment, located in Northern Ontario, was set to be announced in 2020, but has been delayed since.[7]

Marker design

 
This marker assembly at an intersection with Highway 6 features junction crowns and trailblazer shields directing traffic to several highways, and illustrates the increasingly common use of shields in junction assemblies; the colours on the QEW arrow plate are inverted

Ontario uses two distinct shapes of signage to mark the King's Highways. Confirmation markers, or reassurance markers, are utilized along the designated road to confirm (near intersections) or reassure (elsewhere) drivers that they are on the correct route. The markers, known as shields, feature the route number within an outline in the shape of a shield, topped by a St Edward's Crown. In other cases, particularly when approaching the junction of another highway, a square crown marker is used, featuring the route number within an outline of the St Edward's Crown, paired with an arrow plate; exit signs on freeways and at major junctions also use this crown symbol. For secondary highways, the route number is within an outline of an isosceles trapezoid, while tertiary roads place the number within an outline of a rectangle. When these markers appear along or at an intersection with the indicated highway, they feature black text on a reflective white background. There are two exceptions to this: The QEW, which features blue text on a yellow background; and the provincially-maintained section of the tolled Highway 407, which feature white text on a blue background, with an orange plate with TOLL below in black. Signs prior to 1993 had the words "The King's Highway" below the crown, but current versions do not have the words.[8]

In addition to regular highway markers, there are trailblazers, which indicate a route towards that highway. These are the same shape as their corresponding highway marker. Trailblazers for the King's Highway, which can be shields or crowns, feature white text on a reflective green background, with the exception of trailblazers for the QEW, which feature yellow text on a reflective blue background. For secondary highways, trailblazers simply add the word "TO" above the route number.[8]

Since August 2004, "Highway of Heroes" shields featuring a diagram of a poppy have been posted along Highway 401 between Toronto and CFB Trenton. These were erected to honour fallen Canadian soldiers, whose bodies were repatriated from Afghanistan in funeral convoys along that stretch of the highway.[9]

 
A King's Highway junction shield
 
A blue-on-yellow QEW reassurance marker
 
A King's Highway toll route shield with toll tab
 
A trailblazer shield
 
Queen Elizabeth Way trailblazer
 
Highway of Heroes shield
 
A 407 Express Toll Route (407 ETR) reassurance marker
 
407 ETR trailblazer


Classification

Ontario has several distinct classes of highways:[GIS 3]

The King's Highway

 
Reassurance markers for the QEW and Highway 403 concurrency

The King's Highway is the primary highway network of Ontario, and constitutes the majority of the principal inter-urban roadways in the province. As a whole, it is referred to in the singular form as opposed to as a group of its parts (i.e. "the King's Highway", not "the King's Highways").[4][6] Individual highways are known as "part of the King's Highway" or "the King's Highway known as n".[6][10] However, in common parlance they are simply referred to as "Highway n".[11] Ontario highways rank second safest in North America for fatality rates, with 0.55 fatalities per 10000 licensed drivers in 2019.[12] The phrase "King's Highway" is used regardless of the gender of the monarch.

The 400-series highways and the QEW form the backbone of the King's Highway, with other routes numbered from 2 to 148.[2] The Ministry of Transportation never designated a Highway 1.[13] Some highway numbers are suffixed with a letter A ("alternate route"),[14]B ("business route"),[15] or N ("new route").[16] In the past, there have also been routes with C and S ("scenic route") suffixes.[17][18] The entire King's Highway network is fully paved.[14] The term "the King's Highway" was first adopted in place of "provincial highway" in 1930, and signs similar to the current design replaced the previous triangular signs at that time.[19][20] Some legislative acts refer to roads that are under the jurisdiction of the province as "provincial highways".[21]

400-series

The 400-series highways are a network of controlled-access highways throughout the southern portion of Ontario, forming a special subset of the provincial highway network. They are analogous to the Interstate Highway System in the United States or the Autoroute system of neighbouring Quebec, and are regulated by the MTO.[22] The 400-series designations were introduced in 1952, although Ontario had been constructing divided highways for two decades prior.[23] Initially, only Highways 400, 401 and 402 were numbered; other designations followed in the subsequent decades.[24]

While older freeways have some lapses in safety features, contemporary 400-series highways have design speeds of 130 km/h (81 mph), speed limits of 100 km/h (62 mph), various collision avoidance and traffic management systems, and several design standards adopted throughout North America.[25] Of note are the Ontario Tall Wall median barrier and the Parclo A-4 interchange design, the latter which became standard in the design for the widening of Highway 401 through Toronto in 1962. The Institute of Traffic Engineers subsequently recommended this design to replace the cloverleaf interchange throughout North America.[26][27]

Secondary

 
A typical secondary highway with route marker

Secondary highways exist solely within the districts of Northern Ontario that lack a county road system, to which they are analogous. The sole exception to this is Highway 537 in Greater Sudbury. They generally serve to connect remote communities to the King's Highway, or to interconnect the King's Highway. A few secondary highways remain gravel-surfaced, although most have been paved.[14] The speed limit on nearly all of these routes is 80 km/h (50 mph), although Highway 655 is posted at 90 km/h (55 mph).[6]

The Secondary Highway system was introduced in 1956 to service regions in Northern and Central Ontario, though it once included a route as far south as Lake Ontario. Many routes that would become secondary highways were already maintained by the province as development roads prior to being designated.[28][29] Since 1998, none have existed south of the districts of Parry Sound and Nipissing.[30] Secondary highways are numbered in the 500s and 600s, with existing highways numbered between 502 and 673.[2][28]

Tertiary

Tertiary roads are remote routes entirely within Northern Ontario that provide access to resources (e.g. mining and forestry). Tertiary roads are numbered in the 800s, with the five existing highways numbered between 802 and 811. Most of these roads are gravel-surfaced and of low-standard. The speed limit on these routes is 80 km/h (50 mph), although design standards generally prevent such.[14][6] Unlike other roads in the Provincial Highway Network, the MTO is not responsible for winter maintenance nor liable for damage incurred as a result of using these routes.[4] The MTO introduced the Tertiary Road system in 1962.[31] With the exception of Highway 802, none end in settlements.

Trans-Canada

 
A Trans-Canada Highway marker mounted under a Highway 400 shield (left), with the TCH departing the 400 to follow Highway 12 (right)

The Trans-Canada Highway (TCH) forms several major routes across Canada. The provincial governments are entirely responsible for signage and maintenance of the routes, except through National Parks. It is signed with distinctive green markers with a white maple leaf on them throughout Canada. While other provinces generally place a highway number within the maple leaf of the TCH marker (with a shared "Highway 1" designation across the western provinces), Ontario places them below or beside provincial shields and either leaves them blank or inserts a name instead; these are the Central Ontario Route, Georgian Bay Route, Lake Superior Route, Northern Ontario Route and Ottawa Valley Route.

Several portions of King's Highways are designated as part of the Trans-Canada Highway system within Ontario, with the TCH having a main route and several branches, often only following sections of any given provincial highway. They are:

Others

In addition to these classes of highways, the MTO maintains other roads, such as resource roads or industrial roads, that are of strategic importance to the provincial government. These roads are designated with 7000-series numbers for internal inventory purposes, though they are not publicly marked as such. They are often, but not always, former highway segments which were decommissioned as a King's Highway, but remain important as connecting routes to communities or other highways in areas without municipal governance.[14] There were formerly several designated Ontario Tourist Routes that were located throughout the entire province.[32] However, beginning in February 1997, Tourism-Oriented Directional Signs (TODS) began to appear on highways.[33] Tourist Routes no longer appeared on maps after 1998.[30]

History

Before 1791: Native footpaths

Prior to the arrival of Europeans in the 17th century, transportation across what became Ontario was generally via the thousands of lakes and rivers. Short trails existed between bodies of water, known as a portage or carrying place, as well as along the shorelines of the larger lakes.[34] In 1615, French explorer Samuel de Champlain was the first European to pass through the lands between the Great Lakes, accompanied by Huron and Iroquois guides. His emissary Étienne Brûlé as well as Franciscan Récollets such as Joseph Le Caron and Joseph de La Roche Daillon were the first to explore various lands of the area, all with the assistance of the local First Nations.[35][36][37] For the next 150 years, France and Britain wrestled for control of the colony of Canada while simultaneously exploiting the land for the fur trade of North America.[34] This culminated in the global Seven Years' War that ended with the signing of the Treaty of Paris in 1763, which ceded Canada to the British.[38]

The colony of Canada was renamed the Province of Quebec until 1791, when it was divided into Upper Canada (modern Southern Ontario) and Lower Canada (modern Southern Quebec) by the Constitutional Act.[39] This was done to provide a British-style governance to the United Empire Loyalists fleeing north following the American Revolution.[40] In addition to the native portages and lake shore trails, routes developed alongside significant rivers such as the St. Lawrence, Ottawa, Humber and Grand Rivers. These meandering trails followed the lay of the land, as opposed to the straight tangents of the surveyed roads yet to come. Some roads in Ontario still closely follow these early Native and European trails,[41][42] including the Kente Portage Trail (Old Portage Road) in Carrying Place, the oldest continuously used road in the province.[43]

1792–1849: Settlement of Upper Canada

 
Lieutenant-Governor Simcoe and surveyor general Augustus Jones supervise the Queen's Rangers as they clear the path of Yonge Street in 1794

The Spit of Land which forms its Entrance is capable of being fortified with a few heavy Guns as to prevent any Vessel from entering the Harbour or from remaining within it. ... I have good Information that a Road is very easy to be made to communicate with those Waters which fall into Lake Huron. ... In regard to Lake Huron, tho' it is not so immediate an object of Attention, yet I consider it ultimately of the most extensive and serious Magnitude.

John Graves Simcoe[44]

John Graves Simcoe, the first Lieutenant Governor of Upper Canada, landed at Niagara on July 26, 1792, after overwintering in Quebec City,[45] from England and set forth to colonize the province in the image of Britain.[46] The ambitious abolitionist statesman, whom served the British during the American Revolutionary War, was appointed to lead the new colony on September 12, 1791.[47] Although Niagara-on-the-Lake (then known as Newark) served as the capital for a year, Simcoe moved it to what is now Toronto after July 30, 1793, at the behest of French merchant Philippe de Rocheblave,[48] following the arrival of news in May of France's declaration of war against Britain.[46]

Having reformed the Queen's Rangers, whom he fought alongside during the American War, Simcoe set out to establish military roads to connect his new capital with the Upper Great Lakes and other strategic points.[49] The first road he ordered built was Dundas Street, from the head of Lake Ontario near present-day Dundas to the forks of the Thames River in present-day London. His Rangers began work on this route on September 10, 1793.[50] Between September 25 and October 14, Simcoe travelled with native guides to Penetanguishene and back. Following the advice of an Ojibwa named Old Sail, the return voyage followed the east branch of the Holland River and thence south to Toronto (known as York from 1793 to 1834); this would become the route of Yonge Street.[51]

Simcoe's Rangers would commence "run[ning] the line of the new road" with Surveyor General Augustus Jones in February 1794.[52] By mid-May, the Rangers had cleared and marked 14 lots from Eglinton Avenue to just north of Sheppard Avenue before being redirected to defend Fort Miami. William Berczy — and the nearly 200 Pennsylvania Dutch settlers whom accompanied him from the US into Upper Canada in July 1794 — would complete the opening of the route to Bond Lake by the end of 1794. The remainder to Holland Landing was opened by the Rangers, under the supervision of Augustus Jones, between December 28, 1795, and February 16, 1796.[53]

 
This image of Kingston Road circa 1830 shows the typical pioneer road in dry conditions

In 1798, Asa Danforth was hired by the government of Upper Canada to build a road to the Trent River, in what in now Trenton, by July 1 of the following year. He began at the Don River, where Queen Street crosses it today, on June 5 of that year, and proceeded east.[54][55] Danforth was paid $90 per mile to cut a road 10 metres (33 ft) wide, of which the middle half was cut to the level of the ground. He was also to build 5.0-metre (16.5 ft)-wide causeways "wherever necessary" and ensure that slopes were gradual enough for a sleigh or carriage to pass. He completed the first 101 kilometres (63 mi) to Port Hope by December.[56] The government ultimately decided that his road was unacceptable, and reportedly paid him less than owed. Portions of Danforth's road were later incorporated into Highway 2, as well as several local roads in Scarborough.[57]

The majority of settlers up to this point were United Empire Loyalists — settlers of the Thirteen Colonies loyal to Britain who fled north to the new colony. These pioneers endured starting anew in untamed wilderness, with little provisions beyond what they could carry.[58] Many were strategically placed along Yonge Street and Dundas Street, and given the duty of clearing half the width of a road along the front of their property lot. Settlers were responsible for the upkeep, and often the building of roads in this period, with each male over 21 years of age required to perform three or more days of statute labour per year, based on the value of their land. The intention was for settlers throughout the length of the roads to work on the portion fronting their lot, which was generally twenty chains, or 400 metres (1,300 ft) long.[59][60] However, many lots were given to absent clergymen and English nobles, resulting in these "roads" being poorly-maintained quagmires of mud.[61]

During the early 1800s, the government of Upper Canada appropriated settlers to various lots which had been surveyed along the lake shores of Lake Erie and Lake Ontario. The townships established along these fronts contained generally fertile land composed of glacial till and clay-rich loam. As these townships filled up, business opportunities presented themselves for investors to purchase native lands and open them to settlement. The Canada Company was the most successful of these ventures and brought settlers to vast areas of land in what would become Southwestern Ontario by building routes such as Huron Road and Toronto–Sydenham Road during the 1830s and 1840s.[62]

1850–1893: Colonization roads and the railway

 
A corduroy road in 1901, winding through a stripped forest in Brudenell Township, is representative of the appearance of colonization roads in central Ontario after logging razed the forests by the early 1900s

As the second township frontage along Lake Ontario also filled, the government came under pressure to open up the unforgiving terrain of the Canadian Shield to settlement and sought to establish a network of east–west and north–south roads between the Ottawa Valley and Georgian Bay. This area was known as the Ottawa–Huron Tract.[63][59] In 1847, an exploration survey was carried out by Robert Bell to lay out the lines that would become the Opeongo, Hastings, and Addington colonization roads. The Public Lands Act, passed in 1853, permitted the granting of land to settlers who were at least 18. Those settlers who cleared at least 12 acres (4.9 ha) within four years, built a house within a year, and resided on the grant for at least five years would receive the title to that land. The government subsequently built over 1,600 kilometres (1,000 mi) of roads over the following 20 years to provide access to these grants, although the roads were often little more than a trail cut through the forest wide enough for a wagon.[64]

Like the lands to the south, statute labour was responsible for the majority of road development and maintenance. However, by 1860, due to the unsuitability of much of the land for any kind of settlement or agriculture, the roads were almost impassable in many places, except when frozen in winter or dry in summer. The large timber drive that was clearing the forests of the Ottawa–Huron Tract in this period contributed somewhat to road construction and maintenance, but the settlers themselves were largely left to their own resolve.[64][59] Statute labour was gradually abolished around the turn of the 20th century. Malden Township was the first to do so in 1890,[65] and a majority of other municipalities followed suit by the 1920s. However, the law remained in place provincially until being officially repealed on January 1, 2022.[66]

Beginning in 1852, the Grand Trunk Railway gradually assembled together many of the various shortline railroads in what was soon to become Ontario to form a single route across the province, connecting Sarnia with Montreal via Toronto, by 1884. Simultaneously, the Canadian Pacific Railway constructed a route across northern Ontario, connecting Thunder Bay with Ottawa by 1880.[67] The government largely subsidized these endeavours, and funding for road construction fell to the wayside, despite the pleas of townships, villages and settlers.[59][68] In 1896, the provincial Instructor in Road Making reported "It is doubtful if there is a mile of true macadam road in Ontario outside of a few towns or cities ... by far the greatest part of the milage of the province is mud, ruts and pitch-holes ..."[69]

1894–1915: The Good Roads Movement

 
Dr. Perry Doolittle, one of the first automobile owners in Canada and the first to cross the country in one, is often credited as the "Father of the Trans-Canada Highway". Doolittle was one of the chief proponents of the Good Roads Movement.[70]

The cries of municipalities went unanswered, but it would not stop their ambition. Coupled with the increasing adoption of the bicycle as a means of transport, and the desire of farmers to get their goods to market quicker, the Ontario Good Roads Association was formed in 1894 by representatives from numerous townships, villages and cities. The Good Roads Movement encouraged education on the building of proper roads, and later equipment to aid in the improvement of roads, as well as lobbying the various levels of government to fund road development and maintenance. Members would travel from town to town and across the countryside, espousing the value of properly built roads to communities.[71][72]

Two of the most influential members in its early days were Archibald William Campbell and Dr. Perry Doolittle.[71][73] "Good Roads" Campbell would become the province's first Instructor in Roadmaking when the position was established on April 15, 1896, under the Department of Agriculture.[74] Doolittle, a Toronto physician, became one of the earliest automobile owners in Canada, and spurred the good roads movement.[73] He became the first person to drive across Canada in 1925, utilizing the railways around Lake Superior where no roads existed, and is known as the "Father of the Trans-Canada Highway".[70]

The arrival of automobiles rapidly changed the approach to roads and roadbuilding in the first years of the 20th century. In 1900, the provincial Instructor in Roadmaking was renamed as the Commissioner of Public Highways in 1900, as well as the Deputy Minister in the new Department of Public Works in 1905.[75] The first legislation on driving was introduced in 1903, and included the first speed limits (15 miles per hour (24 km/h)). The first license plates were created that year, the first highway patrol established in 1907, licences for chauffeurs in 1909 (regular drivers did not require a licence until 1927), and safety requirements such as headlights. These laws culminated in the creation of the Highway Traffic Act in 1923.[76]

Roadbuilding advanced considerably, with the most notable project of the period being the Toronto–Hamilton Highway, the first paved intercity road in Ontario. The highway was chosen to run along the macadamized old Lake Shore Road between the two cities, instead of Dundas Street to the north, because of the numerous hills encountered along Dundas.[77] In November 1914, the proposed highway was approved,[78] and work began quickly to construct the road known today as Lake Shore Boulevard and Lakeshore Road from Toronto to Hamilton. The road was finished in November 1917, 5.5 metres (18 ft) wide and nearly 64 kilometres (40 mi) long, becoming the first concrete road in Ontario.[77] The highway became the favourite drive of many motorists, and it quickly became a tradition for many families to drive it every Sunday.[79]

1916–1933: The first provincial highways

Roads and highways in Ontario were given their first serious consideration by the provincial government when the Department of Public Highways (DPHO), predecessor to the modern Ministry of Transportation of Ontario, was established on January 17, 1916. Until then, the majority of the primary roads through southern Ontario formed part of the county road systems. The Department of Public Works paid up to 60% of the construction and maintenance costs for these roads, while the counties were responsible for the remaining 40%.[80] The Ontario government passed an act in 1917 to permit the newly formed Department of Public Highways (DPHO) to take over (or assume) responsibility and upkeep of a provincial highway system. The initial system, between Windsor and Quebec, was bookended by branches to Niagara and Ottawa.[81] In 1919, the federal government passed the Canada Highways Act, which provided $20,000,000 to provinces under the condition that they establish an official highway network; up to 40% of construction costs would be subsidized. The first network plan was approved on February 26, 1920. At this time, Campbell was now the Federal Commissioner of Highways.[80]

Until the summer of 1925, Ontario highways were named rather than numbered. When route numbering was introduced, the following numbers were allotted:[82][83]

  • Highway 2 (Windsor–Quebec, 876.3 kilometres (544.5 mi))
  • Highway 3 (Windsor–Niagara Falls, 413.9 kilometres (257.2 mi))
  • Highway 4 (St. Thomas–Elginfield, 51.2 kilometres (31.8 mi))
  • Highway 5 (Jarvis–Toronto, 116.8 kilometres (72.6 mi))
  • Highway 6 (Hamilton–Owen Sound, 181.5 kilometres (112.8 mi))
  • Highway 7 (Sarnia–Brampton, 272.9 kilometres (169.6 mi))
  • Highway 8 (Goderich–Niagara Falls, 252.3 kilometres (156.8 mi))
  • Highway 9 (Kincardine–Arthur, 108.6 kilometres (67.5 mi))
  • Highway 10 (Port Credit–Owen Sound, 169.0 kilometres (105.0 mi))
  • Highway 11 (Toronto–Severn River, 154.2 kilometres (95.8 mi))
  • Highway 12 (Whitby–Lindsay, 76.9 kilometres (47.8 mi))
  • Highway 12A (Port Hope–Peterborough, 46.8 kilometres (29.1 mi))
  • Highway 14 (Picton–Foxboro, 46.7 kilometres (29.0 mi))
  • Highway 15 (Kingston–Ottawa, 210.8 kilometres (131.0 mi))
  • Highway 16 (Prescott–Ottawa, 100.3 kilometres (62.3 mi))
  • Highway 17 (Pembroke–Quebec boundary, 289.8 kilometres (180.1 mi))

The number of Provincial Highways—as they were initially known—expanded quickly from there. The provincial highway network did not extend into the Canadian Shield nor Northern Ontario initially, and Trunk Roads in the north were instead under the mandate of the Department of Northern Development. The two primary trunk routes were extensions of Highway 11 and Highway 17, to North Bay and Sault Ste. Marie, respectively.[84] Seeking to open the far north, construction of a road to connect North Bay and Cochrane began in 1925,[85] The new gravel highway was officially opened on July 2, 1927,[86] by Minister of Lands and Forests William Finlayson. He suggested at the opening that the road be named the Ferguson Highway in honour of premier Ferguson. The name was originally suggested by North Bay mayor Dan Barker.[87] Despite the official opening, a section between Swastika and Ramore wasn't opened until August.[88] The Ferguson Highway name was also applied to the Muskoka Road between Severn Bridge and North Bay.[86]

During the 1920s, the DPHO began to examine possible remedies to chronic congestion on along Highway 2, particularly between Toronto and Hamilton (Lakeshore Road), eventually deciding upon widening the roadway midway between Lakeshore Road and Highway 5 (Dundas Street), or the Middle Road. It was to be more than twice the width of Lakeshore Road at 12 m (39 ft) and would carry two lanes of traffic in either direction.[89][90] Construction on what was then known as the Queen Street Extension west of Toronto began in early 1931.[91] Before the highway could be completed, Thomas McQuesten was appointed the new minister of the renamed DHO, with Robert Melville Smith as deputy minister, following the 1934 provincial elections.[24]

1934–1948: Dual highways and the Queen Elizabeth Way

Smith, inspired by the German autobahns—new "dual-lane divided highways"—modified the design for Ontario roads,[92] and McQuesten ordered the Middle Road be converted into this new form of highway.[93][94][95] A 40 m (130 ft) right-of-way was purchased along the Middle Road and construction began to convert the existing sections to a divided highway. Work also began on Canada's first interchange at Highway 10.[96] The Middle Road was ceremoniously renamed the Queen Elizabeth Way during the 1939 royal tour of Canada, taking its name from Queen Elizabeth The Queen Mother, and was completed between Toronto and Niagara Falls on August 26, 1940.[89]

Beginning in 1935, McQuesten applied the concept of a dual-highway to several projects along Highway 2, including along Kingston Road in Scarborough Township.[24][97] When widening in Scarborough reached the Highland Creek ravine in 1936, the Department of Highways began construction on a new bridge over the large valley, bypassing the former alignment around West Hill.[98] From here the highway was constructed on a new alignment to Oshawa, avoiding construction on the congested Highway 2.[99] As grading and bridge construction neared completion on the new highway between West Hill and Oshawa in September 1939, World War II broke out and gradually tax revenues were re-allocated from highway construction to the war effort.[24]

As the war came to a close, planning began in 1945 on the Toronto–Barrie Highway to ease the congestion on the parallel routes of Highway 11 and Highway 27. The highway followed a completely new alignment, and featured interchanges at nearly all crossroads. Construction of an extension around Barrie began in 1950, and the completed freeway was opened on July 1, 1952.[100] The expressway between Highland Creek and Oshawa was also completed in this period, and opened as far as Ritson Road in December 1947, becoming the progenitor to Highway 401.[99]

1950–1971: The freeway age and the Trans-Canada Highway

When Ontario signed the Trans-Canada Highway Agreement on April 25, 1950, it had already chosen a Central Ontario routing via Highway 7, Highway 12, Highway 103 and Highway 69;[101] Highway 17 through the Ottawa Valley was announced as a provincially-funded secondary route of the Trans-Canada the following day.[102] Amongst some of the most difficult terrain encountered in Canada, the 266 kilometres (165 mi) of wilderness known as "the Gap" was a missing link in the Trans-Canada Highway between Nipigon and Sault Ste. Marie.[103] Construction began in 1956,[104] and it was completed and ceremoniously opened to traffic on September 17, 1960, uniting the two segments and completing the route of Highway 17 from the Manitoba border to the Quebec border.

The construction boom following the war resulted in many new freeway construction projects in the province. The Toronto–Barrie Highway (Highway 400), Trans-Provincial Highway (Highway 401),[24] a short expansion of Highway 7 approaching the Blue Water Bridge in Sarnia (Highway 402),[105] and an expansion of Highway 27 (eventually designated as Highway 427 by the mid-1970s) into part of the Toronto Bypass were all underway or completed by the early 1950s.[24] Seeking a way to distinguish the controlled-access freeways from the existing two-lane King's Highways, the Department of Highways created the 400-series designations in 1952. By the end of the year, Highway 400, 401, and 402 were numbered, although they were only short stubs of their current lengths.[106] Highway 401 was assembled across the province in a patchwork fashion,[24] becoming fully navigable between Windsor and the Quebec border on November 10, 1964;[107] Highway 400 was extended north to Coldwater on Christmas Eve 1959;[108] Highway 402 was extended to London between 1972 and 1982.[109][110]

In addition to this network backbone, plans for additional 400-series highways were initiated by the late 1950s, comprising the Chedoke Expressway (Highway 403) through Hamilton;[111] the Don Valley Parkway Extension (Highway 404) northward from the soon-to-be constructed Toronto expressway;[112]Highway 405 to connect with the American border near St. Catharines;[113]Highway 406 south from St. Catharines to Welland;[114] Highway 407 encircling the Greater Toronto Area (GTA), though not built for another 40 years;[115]Highway 409 to connect Highway 401 with Toronto International Airport;[116] and The Queensway (Highway 417) through Ottawa.[117] The first sections of these freeways were opened in 1963,[118] 1977,[119] 1963,[118] 1965,[120] 1997,[121] 1974,[122] and 1960,[123] respectively. In 1963, transportation minister Charles MacNaughton announced the widening of Highway 401 in Toronto from four to a minimum of 12 lanes between Islington Avenue and Markham Road.[99] Construction began immediately; while the plan initially called for construction to end in 1967, it continued for nearly a decade. At least four lanes were always open during the large reconstruction project, which included complex new interchanges at Highway 27, Highway 400, the planned Spadina Expressway and the Don Valley Parkway.[24]

Throughout the mid-to-late 1960s, the provincial government also funded numerous urban expressways, including the Conestoga Parkway in KitchenerWaterloo, the Thunder Bay Expressway in Thunder Bay, Highbury Avenue in London, the Hanlon Expressway into Guelph and most infamously the Spadina Expressway into Downtown Toronto. While the others were built, the Spadina became a heated debate in the late 1960s between Metropolitan Toronto and urban activists including Jane Jacobs. The battle culminated when premier Bill Davis rose in the legislature and declared "If we are building a transportation system to serve the automobile, the Spadina Expressway would be a good place to start. But if we are building a transportation system to serve people, the Spadina Expressway is a good place to stop."[124]

1972–1995: Growth of public transit

The cancellation of the Spadina Expressway led to the demise of other proposed expressways in Toronto and elsewhere in the province, as well as a decline in new road building proposals.[125] It remains, to this day, a controversial decision.[126][127] The Environmental Assessment Act, introduced in 1975, further restricted new highway building,[128] and as a result the 1970s and 1980s saw less new highway construction compared to prior decades.

Despite this, several existing freeways were extended or expanded, including Highway 402 from Sarnia to London between 1972 and 1982,[129][130] Highway 403 through Mississauga between 1978 and late 1982,[131][132] the Don Valley Parkway as Highway 404 north from Toronto to Newmarket between 1976 and 1989,[133][134][135] Highway 406 through St. Catharines between 1977 and 1984,[136][137] Highway 417 from Ottawa to the Quebec boundary between 1970 and late 1975,[138][139] and the expansion of Highway 27 into Highway 427 between 1968 and late 1971,[140][141] as well as its extension from Highway 401 to Highway 7 between 1976 and 1991.[142][143]Highway 410 was also built, initially as a two lane road, between 1975 and late 1978.[144][145][146]

1996–1999: Highway Transfers

As part of a series of budget cuts initiated by premier Mike Harris under his Common Sense Revolution platform in 1995, numerous highways deemed to no longer be of significance to the provincial network were decommissioned and responsibility for the routes transferred to lower levels of government, a process referred to as downloading. Several thousand kilometres of provincially maintained highways were transferred to the various municipalities in which they are located. These transfers were performed under the reasoning that they served a mostly local function, as a cost-saving measure and as part of a broader exchange of responsibilities between the province and its municipalities. On April 1, 1997, 1,767.6 kilometres (1,098.3 mi) of highways were removed from the King's Highway system.[147] This was followed by the removal of 3,211.1 kilometres (1,995.3 mi) on January 1, 1998,[148] for a total of 4,978.7 kilometres (3,093.6 mi); the move was criticized by the media.[149][150]

In the 1980s and 1990s, Highway 416 was constructed through a process known as twinning in which a second carriageway is built parallel to the existing road. In addition, existing intersections were rebuilt as grade-separated interchanges.[151]Highway 16 New was built during the 1960s and 1970s, establishing the right-of-way and alignment of a future freeway as a two-lane highway.[152] Planning for a connection to Highway 417 began in 1987,[153] and was completed on July 31, 1997.[154][153] Work to twin Highway 16 New began in mid-1996,[155] and was completed in sections between June 1997,[156] and September 1999, after which nearly the entire length of Highway 16 was redesignated as Highway 416.[157]

2000–2022: Recent history

In recent years, highway construction has generally been limited to the expansion of existing highways, principal among them Highway 11, Highway 400/69, and the Herb Gray Parkway extension of Highway 401 into Windsor. The four-laning of 240 kilometres (150 mi) of Highway 11 between Barrie and North Bay was a long-term expansion that was completed August 8, 2012, having been worked on since 1955.[158][159][160] The four-laning of Highway 69, which will be replaced by Highway 400, has progressed northward from Waubaushene since 1991,[161] reaching as far as Nobel on October 26, 2010.[162] Work has also progressed south from Sudbury since 2005,[163][164] and as of 2022 has reached the French River, leaving a 68-kilometre (42 mi) gap of two-lane highway between Toronto and Sudbury.[165]

Construction began in 2012 on a provincially operated 65-kilometre (40 mi) long extension to the 407 ETR, known as Highway 407 East (or 407E) during planning, with the project undertaken in two separate phases. Phase 1 was opened on June 20, 2016, consisting of a 22-kilometre (14 mi) extension to Harmony Road in Oshawa, as well as the 10-kilometre (6.2 mi) Highway 412.[166] The extension was free of tolls until February 1, 2017.[167] Phase 2A, which opened on January 2, 2018, added a 9.6-kilometre (6.0 mi) extension to Taunton Road at the future Highway 418 interchange.[168] Phase 2B, which opened on December 9, 2019, added a 23.3-kilometre (14.5 mi) extension to Highway 35 and Highway 115, as well as the 12.8-kilometre (8.0 mi) Highway 418.[169]

In 2004, a joint announcement by the federal government of the United States and Government of Canada confirmed a new Canada–U.S. border crossing would be constructed between Detroit and Windsor. The MTO took advantage of this opportunity to extend Highway 401 to the Canada–US border and began an environmental impact assessment on the entire project in late 2005.[170] Despite protest from area residents,[171] as well as a dismissed lawsuit from Ambassador Bridge owner Matty Moroun,[172][173] it was announced on May 1, 2008, that a preferred route had been selected and the new route would be named the Windsor–Essex Parkway.[174] The below-grade route has six through-lanes and follows Huron Church Road from the former end of Highway 401 to the E. C. Row Expressway, which it then follows alongside to near the border.[175] Construction began in August 2011,[176] It was partially opened on June 28, 2015,[177] and completed to the Ojibway Parkway on November 21,[178][179] The Gordie Howe International Bridge is scheduled for completion in 2024, and will tie Highway 401 in with Interstate 75 and Interstate 96 in Detroit.[180][181]

Future

The current proposals by the MTO consist of two new freeways in the GTA and continued widening and four-laning of existing highways. Highway 413 is a proposed four-to-six lane freeway bypass of the GTA around Brampton, connecting Highway 401 and Highway 407 with Highway 400 north of Vaughan. The 52-kilometre (32 mi) route would include extensions of Highway 410 and Highway 427 as well as a right-of-way for a transitway; the highway has attracted considerable attention, with opinions divided over the benefits of shorter travel times versus irreversible environmental impacts and urban sprawl.[182][183][184] The Bradford Bypass is a proposed four lane rural freeway connecting Highway 400 and Highway 404 north of Bradford and Newmarket.[185] Like Highwaay 413, it has attracted criticism for its environmental impact,[186][187] though it has the support of adjacent municipalities.[188][189] Preliminary construction works for the route are underway as of 2022.[190]

While planning for the twinning of Highway 11/17 between Thunder Bay and Nipigon began in 1989,[191] construction did not begin until 2009.[192] As of 2022, 55 kilometres (34 mi) of two-laned highway remains to be twinned or bypassed, almost all of which is in the engineering phase.[193] The four-laning of the remaining 68-kilometre (42 mi) gap of Highway 69 has been promised by multiple governments, but no timeline for completion has been announced as of 2022.[194]

See also

References

Footnotes

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Bibliography

  • Berchem, F.R. (1977). The Yonge Street Story: 1793–1860. McGraw-Hill Ryerson. ISBN 0-07-082567-X.
  • Bradford, Robert (2015). Keeping Ontario Moving: The History of Roads and Road Building in Ontario. Dundurn Press. ISBN 978-1-4597-2412-9.
  • Brown, Ron (1997). Toronto's Lost Villages. Toronto: Polar Bear Press. ISBN 978-1-896757-02-5.
  • Legislative Assembly of Ontario (1896). Appendix to the Report of the Ontario Bureau of Industries. Retrieved March 28, 2021.
  • Legislative Assembly of Ontario (1897). Report of the Provincial Instructor in Road-Making. Ontario Department of Agriculture. Retrieved March 28, 2021.
  • A.A.D.T. Traffic Volumes 1955–1969 And Traffic Collision Data 1967–1969. Ontario Department of Highways. 1970.
  • Shragge, John; Bagnato, Sharon (1984). From Footpaths to Freeways. Historical Committee, Ministry of Transportation and Communications. ISBN 978-0-7743-9388-1.
  • Stamp, Robert M. (1987). QEW – Canada's First Superhighway. The Boston Mills Press. ISBN 0-919783-84-8.

GIS datasets

  1. ^ a b Ministry of Transportation of Ontario Geomatics Office; Land Information Ontario (December 10, 2020). "Ontario Road Network - Ontario Provincial Highways". ArcGIS.com. Retrieved March 8, 2021.
  2. ^ Ministry of Transportation of Ontario Geomatics Office; Land Information Ontario (May 7, 2020). "Speed Limits in Ontario". ArcGIS.com. Retrieved March 8, 2021.
  3. ^ Ministry of Transportation of Ontario Geomatics Office; Land Information Ontario (November 13, 2019). "Ontario Road Network - MTO Jurisdiction by Highway Shield Type". ArcGIS.com. Retrieved March 14, 2021.

External links

  • Ministry of Transportation of Ontario (MTO)
  • MTO 100th Anniversary - History
  • Official Ontario road map
  • Ontario 511 Traveller Information - Highway conditions
  • Ontario's Highway Programs
  • Road maps of Ontario, 1923–2010

ontario, provincial, highway, network, king, highways, redirects, here, other, uses, king, highway, provincial, highway, network, consists, roads, ontario, maintained, ministry, transportation, ontario, including, those, designated, part, king, highway, second. King s Highways redirects here For other uses see King s Highway The Provincial Highway Network consists of all the roads in Ontario maintained by the Ministry of Transportation of Ontario MTO including those designated as part of the King s Highway secondary highways and tertiary roads Components of the system comprising 16 900 kilometres 10 500 mi of roads and 2 880 bridges GIS 1 range in scale from Highway 401 the busiest highway in North America to unpaved forestry and mining access roads The longest highway is nearly 2 000 kilometres 1 200 mi long while the shortest is less than a kilometre Some roads are unsigned highways lacking signage to indicate their maintenance by the MTO these may be remnants of highways that are still under provincial control whose designations were decommissioned roadway segments left over from realignment projects or proposed highway corridors Provincial Highway NetworkHighway markers for King s Highway 17 King s Highway 401 Secondary Highway 600 and Tertiary Highway 800System informationMaintained by the MTOLength16 900 km 2 GIS 1 10 500 mi FormedFebruary 26 1920 1920 02 26 1 Highway namesTypesKing s Highway n 2 169 Secondary Highway n 500 673 Tertiary Road n 800 813 System linksOntario provincial highwaysCurrent Former 400 seriesPredecessors to today s modern highways include the foot trails and portages used by indigenous peoples in the time before European settlement Shortly after the creation of the Province of Upper Canada in 1791 the new government under John Graves Simcoe built overland military roads to supplement water based transportation including Yonge Street and Dundas Street At the time road construction was under the control of the township and county governments Local township roads were financed and constructed through a statute labour system that required landowners to make improvements in lieu of taxes Private companies constructed corduroy and later plank roads and charged tolls in the second half of the 19th century The rising popularity of the bicycle led to the formation of Ontario Good Roads Association which advocated for the improvement of roads and recreation as the automobile rose to prominence By the early 20th century the province had taken interest in road improvement and began funding it through counties The increasing adoption of the automobile resulted in the formation of the Department of Public Highways of Ontario DPHO in 1916 The passing of the Canada Highways Act in 1919 resulted in the establishment of a provincial network of highways The DPHO assigned internal highway numbers to roads in the system and in 1925 the numbers were signposted along the roads and marked on maps In 1930 provincial highways were renamed King s Highways and the familiar crown route markers created The DPHO was also renamed the Department of Highways DHO The 1930s saw several major depression relief projects built by manual labour including the first inter city divided highway in North America along the Middle Road which would become the Queen Elizabeth Way in 1939 In 1937 the DHO merged with the Department of Northern Development extending the highway network into the Canadian Shield and Northern Ontario Significant traffic engineering and surveying through the war years during which construction came to a near standstill led to the planning and initial construction of controlled access highways The 400 series highways were built beginning in the late 1940s and numbered in 1952 The vast majority of modern road infrastructure in Ontario was built throughout the 1950s 1960s and early 1970s The cancellation of the Spadina Expressway and the introduction of the Environmental Assessment Act in the 1970s resulted in a decline in new highway construction in the decades since In the late 1990s nearly 5 000 kilometres 3 100 mi of provincial highways were transferred or downloaded back to lower levels of government Few new provincial highways have been built in the early years of the 21st century although several major infrastructure projects including the Herb Gray Parkway and expansion of Highway 69 have proceeded Recent construction has included the controversial Bradford Bypass and Highway 413 Contents 1 Naming signage and regulations 1 1 Marker design 2 Classification 2 1 The King s Highway 2 1 1 400 series 2 2 Secondary 2 3 Tertiary 2 4 Trans Canada 2 5 Others 3 History 3 1 Before 1791 Native footpaths 3 2 1792 1849 Settlement of Upper Canada 3 3 1850 1893 Colonization roads and the railway 3 4 1894 1915 The Good Roads Movement 3 5 1916 1933 The first provincial highways 3 6 1934 1948 Dual highways and the Queen Elizabeth Way 3 7 1950 1971 The freeway age and the Trans Canada Highway 3 8 1972 1995 Growth of public transit 3 9 1996 1999 Highway Transfers 3 10 2000 2022 Recent history 4 Future 5 See also 6 References 6 1 Footnotes 6 2 Bibliography 7 GIS datasets 8 External linksNaming signage and regulations Edit The very first Ontario Road Map published in 1923 In Ontario all public roads are legally considered highways under the Highway Traffic Act HTA which sets forth regulations for traffic or the rules of the road 3 The Public Transportation and Highway Improvement Act PTHIA sets forth the regulations concerning roads that are under the authority of the Province of Ontario The act distinguishes and sets out the applicability of the HTA to provincial highways which are designated as part of The King s Highway primary a secondary highway or a tertiary road Tertiary roads may also be designated as a resource road allowing for vehicles otherwise prohibited from public roads Industrial roads are privately owned routes with which the MTO has entered an agreement to improve or allow public access and are not considered part of the provincial highway network 4 The 407 ETR is likewise not considered part of the provincial highway network While it is still subject to the rules set forth by the HTA it is otherwise governed independently under the legislation of the Highway 407 Act 5 Speed limits on provincial highways are legislated by sections of the road and vary between 50 km h 30 mph and 110 km h 70 mph Freeways including the 400 series highways are generally signed at 100 km h 60 mph although sections exist that are signed lower 6 GIS 2 Three segments of freeway are part of an ongoing pilot project to test speed limits of 110 km h in rural areas that are not subject to congestion A fourth segment located in Northern Ontario was set to be announced in 2020 but has been delayed since 7 Marker design Edit This marker assembly at an intersection with Highway 6 features junction crowns and trailblazer shields directing traffic to several highways and illustrates the increasingly common use of shields in junction assemblies the colours on the QEW arrow plate are inverted Ontario uses two distinct shapes of signage to mark the King s Highways Confirmation markers or reassurance markers are utilized along the designated road to confirm near intersections or reassure elsewhere drivers that they are on the correct route The markers known as shields feature the route number within an outline in the shape of a shield topped by a St Edward s Crown In other cases particularly when approaching the junction of another highway a square crown marker is used featuring the route number within an outline of the St Edward s Crown paired with an arrow plate exit signs on freeways and at major junctions also use this crown symbol For secondary highways the route number is within an outline of an isosceles trapezoid while tertiary roads place the number within an outline of a rectangle When these markers appear along or at an intersection with the indicated highway they feature black text on a reflective white background There are two exceptions to this The QEW which features blue text on a yellow background and the provincially maintained section of the tolled Highway 407 which feature white text on a blue background with an orange plate with TOLL below in black Signs prior to 1993 had the words The King s Highway below the crown but current versions do not have the words 8 In addition to regular highway markers there are trailblazers which indicate a route towards that highway These are the same shape as their corresponding highway marker Trailblazers for the King s Highway which can be shields or crowns feature white text on a reflective green background with the exception of trailblazers for the QEW which feature yellow text on a reflective blue background For secondary highways trailblazers simply add the word TO above the route number 8 Since August 2004 Highway of Heroes shields featuring a diagram of a poppy have been posted along Highway 401 between Toronto and CFB Trenton These were erected to honour fallen Canadian soldiers whose bodies were repatriated from Afghanistan in funeral convoys along that stretch of the highway 9 A King s Highway junction shield A blue on yellow QEW reassurance marker A King s Highway toll route shield with toll tab A trailblazer shield Queen Elizabeth Way trailblazer Highway of Heroes shield A 407 Express Toll Route 407 ETR reassurance marker 407 ETR trailblazerClassification EditOntario has several distinct classes of highways GIS 3 The King s Highway Edit Reassurance markers for the QEW and Highway 403 concurrency The King s Highway is the primary highway network of Ontario and constitutes the majority of the principal inter urban roadways in the province As a whole it is referred to in the singular form as opposed to as a group of its parts i e the King s Highway not the King s Highways 4 6 Individual highways are known as part of the King s Highway or the King s Highway known as n 6 10 However in common parlance they are simply referred to as Highway n 11 Ontario highways rank second safest in North America for fatality rates with 0 55 fatalities per 10000 licensed drivers in 2019 12 The phrase King s Highway is used regardless of the gender of the monarch The 400 series highways and the QEW form the backbone of the King s Highway with other routes numbered from 2 to 148 2 The Ministry of Transportation never designated a Highway 1 13 Some highway numbers are suffixed with a letter A alternate route 14 B business route 15 or N new route 16 In the past there have also been routes with C and S scenic route suffixes 17 18 The entire King s Highway network is fully paved 14 The term the King s Highway was first adopted in place of provincial highway in 1930 and signs similar to the current design replaced the previous triangular signs at that time 19 20 Some legislative acts refer to roads that are under the jurisdiction of the province as provincial highways 21 400 series Edit Main article 400 series highways The 400 series highways are a network of controlled access highways throughout the southern portion of Ontario forming a special subset of the provincial highway network They are analogous to the Interstate Highway System in the United States or the Autoroute system of neighbouring Quebec and are regulated by the MTO 22 The 400 series designations were introduced in 1952 although Ontario had been constructing divided highways for two decades prior 23 Initially only Highways 400 401 and 402 were numbered other designations followed in the subsequent decades 24 While older freeways have some lapses in safety features contemporary 400 series highways have design speeds of 130 km h 81 mph speed limits of 100 km h 62 mph various collision avoidance and traffic management systems and several design standards adopted throughout North America 25 Of note are the Ontario Tall Wall median barrier and the Parclo A 4 interchange design the latter which became standard in the design for the widening of Highway 401 through Toronto in 1962 The Institute of Traffic Engineers subsequently recommended this design to replace the cloverleaf interchange throughout North America 26 27 Secondary Edit A typical secondary highway with route marker Secondary highways exist solely within the districts of Northern Ontario that lack a county road system to which they are analogous The sole exception to this is Highway 537 in Greater Sudbury They generally serve to connect remote communities to the King s Highway or to interconnect the King s Highway A few secondary highways remain gravel surfaced although most have been paved 14 The speed limit on nearly all of these routes is 80 km h 50 mph although Highway 655 is posted at 90 km h 55 mph 6 The Secondary Highway system was introduced in 1956 to service regions in Northern and Central Ontario though it once included a route as far south as Lake Ontario Many routes that would become secondary highways were already maintained by the province as development roads prior to being designated 28 29 Since 1998 none have existed south of the districts of Parry Sound and Nipissing 30 Secondary highways are numbered in the 500s and 600s with existing highways numbered between 502 and 673 2 28 Tertiary Edit Tertiary roads are remote routes entirely within Northern Ontario that provide access to resources e g mining and forestry Tertiary roads are numbered in the 800s with the five existing highways numbered between 802 and 811 Most of these roads are gravel surfaced and of low standard The speed limit on these routes is 80 km h 50 mph although design standards generally prevent such 14 6 Unlike other roads in the Provincial Highway Network the MTO is not responsible for winter maintenance nor liable for damage incurred as a result of using these routes 4 The MTO introduced the Tertiary Road system in 1962 31 With the exception of Highway 802 none end in settlements Trans Canada Edit A Trans Canada Highway marker mounted under a Highway 400 shield left with the TCH departing the 400 to follow Highway 12 right The Trans Canada Highway TCH forms several major routes across Canada The provincial governments are entirely responsible for signage and maintenance of the routes except through National Parks It is signed with distinctive green markers with a white maple leaf on them throughout Canada While other provinces generally place a highway number within the maple leaf of the TCH marker with a shared Highway 1 designation across the western provinces Ontario places them below or beside provincial shields and either leaves them blank or inserts a name instead these are the Central Ontario Route Georgian Bay Route Lake Superior Route Northern Ontario Route and Ottawa Valley Route Several portions of King s Highways are designated as part of the Trans Canada Highway system within Ontario with the TCH having a main route and several branches often only following sections of any given provincial highway They are Highway 7 Section as branch Highway 11 2 sections as branches Highway 12 Section as branch Highway 17 Entire length as main route Highway 66 Section as branch Highway 69 Entire length as branch Highway 71 Entire length as branch Highway 400 Section as branch Highway 417 Entire length as main route freeway continuation of Highway 17 Others Edit In addition to these classes of highways the MTO maintains other roads such as resource roads or industrial roads that are of strategic importance to the provincial government These roads are designated with 7000 series numbers for internal inventory purposes though they are not publicly marked as such They are often but not always former highway segments which were decommissioned as a King s Highway but remain important as connecting routes to communities or other highways in areas without municipal governance 14 There were formerly several designated Ontario Tourist Routes that were located throughout the entire province 32 However beginning in February 1997 Tourism Oriented Directional Signs TODS began to appear on highways 33 Tourist Routes no longer appeared on maps after 1998 30 History EditBefore 1791 Native footpaths Edit Prior to the arrival of Europeans in the 17th century transportation across what became Ontario was generally via the thousands of lakes and rivers Short trails existed between bodies of water known as a portage or carrying place as well as along the shorelines of the larger lakes 34 In 1615 French explorer Samuel de Champlain was the first European to pass through the lands between the Great Lakes accompanied by Huron and Iroquois guides His emissary Etienne Brule as well as Franciscan Recollets such as Joseph Le Caron and Joseph de La Roche Daillon were the first to explore various lands of the area all with the assistance of the local First Nations 35 36 37 For the next 150 years France and Britain wrestled for control of the colony of Canada while simultaneously exploiting the land for the fur trade of North America 34 This culminated in the global Seven Years War that ended with the signing of the Treaty of Paris in 1763 which ceded Canada to the British 38 The colony of Canada was renamed the Province of Quebec until 1791 when it was divided into Upper Canada modern Southern Ontario and Lower Canada modern Southern Quebec by the Constitutional Act 39 This was done to provide a British style governance to the United Empire Loyalists fleeing north following the American Revolution 40 In addition to the native portages and lake shore trails routes developed alongside significant rivers such as the St Lawrence Ottawa Humber and Grand Rivers These meandering trails followed the lay of the land as opposed to the straight tangents of the surveyed roads yet to come Some roads in Ontario still closely follow these early Native and European trails 41 42 including the Kente Portage Trail Old Portage Road in Carrying Place the oldest continuously used road in the province 43 1792 1849 Settlement of Upper Canada Edit Lieutenant Governor Simcoe and surveyor general Augustus Jones supervise the Queen s Rangers as they clear the path of Yonge Street in 1794 The Spit of Land which forms its Entrance is capable of being fortified with a few heavy Guns as to prevent any Vessel from entering the Harbour or from remaining within it I have good Information that a Road is very easy to be made to communicate with those Waters which fall into Lake Huron In regard to Lake Huron tho it is not so immediate an object of Attention yet I consider it ultimately of the most extensive and serious Magnitude John Graves Simcoe 44 John Graves Simcoe the first Lieutenant Governor of Upper Canada landed at Niagara on July 26 1792 after overwintering in Quebec City 45 from England and set forth to colonize the province in the image of Britain 46 The ambitious abolitionist statesman whom served the British during the American Revolutionary War was appointed to lead the new colony on September 12 1791 47 Although Niagara on the Lake then known as Newark served as the capital for a year Simcoe moved it to what is now Toronto after July 30 1793 at the behest of French merchant Philippe de Rocheblave 48 following the arrival of news in May of France s declaration of war against Britain 46 Having reformed the Queen s Rangers whom he fought alongside during the American War Simcoe set out to establish military roads to connect his new capital with the Upper Great Lakes and other strategic points 49 The first road he ordered built was Dundas Street from the head of Lake Ontario near present day Dundas to the forks of the Thames River in present day London His Rangers began work on this route on September 10 1793 50 Between September 25 and October 14 Simcoe travelled with native guides to Penetanguishene and back Following the advice of an Ojibwa named Old Sail the return voyage followed the east branch of the Holland River and thence south to Toronto known as York from 1793 to 1834 this would become the route of Yonge Street 51 Simcoe s Rangers would commence run ning the line of the new road with Surveyor General Augustus Jones in February 1794 52 By mid May the Rangers had cleared and marked 14 lots from Eglinton Avenue to just north of Sheppard Avenue before being redirected to defend Fort Miami William Berczy and the nearly 200 Pennsylvania Dutch settlers whom accompanied him from the US into Upper Canada in July 1794 would complete the opening of the route to Bond Lake by the end of 1794 The remainder to Holland Landing was opened by the Rangers under the supervision of Augustus Jones between December 28 1795 and February 16 1796 53 This image of Kingston Road circa 1830 shows the typical pioneer road in dry conditions In 1798 Asa Danforth was hired by the government of Upper Canada to build a road to the Trent River in what in now Trenton by July 1 of the following year He began at the Don River where Queen Street crosses it today on June 5 of that year and proceeded east 54 55 Danforth was paid 90 per mile to cut a road 10 metres 33 ft wide of which the middle half was cut to the level of the ground He was also to build 5 0 metre 16 5 ft wide causeways wherever necessary and ensure that slopes were gradual enough for a sleigh or carriage to pass He completed the first 101 kilometres 63 mi to Port Hope by December 56 The government ultimately decided that his road was unacceptable and reportedly paid him less than owed Portions of Danforth s road were later incorporated into Highway 2 as well as several local roads in Scarborough 57 The majority of settlers up to this point were United Empire Loyalists settlers of the Thirteen Colonies loyal to Britain who fled north to the new colony These pioneers endured starting anew in untamed wilderness with little provisions beyond what they could carry 58 Many were strategically placed along Yonge Street and Dundas Street and given the duty of clearing half the width of a road along the front of their property lot Settlers were responsible for the upkeep and often the building of roads in this period with each male over 21 years of age required to perform three or more days of statute labour per year based on the value of their land The intention was for settlers throughout the length of the roads to work on the portion fronting their lot which was generally twenty chains or 400 metres 1 300 ft long 59 60 However many lots were given to absent clergymen and English nobles resulting in these roads being poorly maintained quagmires of mud 61 During the early 1800s the government of Upper Canada appropriated settlers to various lots which had been surveyed along the lake shores of Lake Erie and Lake Ontario The townships established along these fronts contained generally fertile land composed of glacial till and clay rich loam As these townships filled up business opportunities presented themselves for investors to purchase native lands and open them to settlement The Canada Company was the most successful of these ventures and brought settlers to vast areas of land in what would become Southwestern Ontario by building routes such as Huron Road and Toronto Sydenham Road during the 1830s and 1840s 62 1850 1893 Colonization roads and the railway Edit A corduroy road in 1901 winding through a stripped forest in Brudenell Township is representative of the appearance of colonization roads in central Ontario after logging razed the forests by the early 1900s As the second township frontage along Lake Ontario also filled the government came under pressure to open up the unforgiving terrain of the Canadian Shield to settlement and sought to establish a network of east west and north south roads between the Ottawa Valley and Georgian Bay This area was known as the Ottawa Huron Tract 63 59 In 1847 an exploration survey was carried out by Robert Bell to lay out the lines that would become the Opeongo Hastings and Addington colonization roads The Public Lands Act passed in 1853 permitted the granting of land to settlers who were at least 18 Those settlers who cleared at least 12 acres 4 9 ha within four years built a house within a year and resided on the grant for at least five years would receive the title to that land The government subsequently built over 1 600 kilometres 1 000 mi of roads over the following 20 years to provide access to these grants although the roads were often little more than a trail cut through the forest wide enough for a wagon 64 Like the lands to the south statute labour was responsible for the majority of road development and maintenance However by 1860 due to the unsuitability of much of the land for any kind of settlement or agriculture the roads were almost impassable in many places except when frozen in winter or dry in summer The large timber drive that was clearing the forests of the Ottawa Huron Tract in this period contributed somewhat to road construction and maintenance but the settlers themselves were largely left to their own resolve 64 59 Statute labour was gradually abolished around the turn of the 20th century Malden Township was the first to do so in 1890 65 and a majority of other municipalities followed suit by the 1920s However the law remained in place provincially until being officially repealed on January 1 2022 66 Beginning in 1852 the Grand Trunk Railway gradually assembled together many of the various shortline railroads in what was soon to become Ontario to form a single route across the province connecting Sarnia with Montreal via Toronto by 1884 Simultaneously the Canadian Pacific Railway constructed a route across northern Ontario connecting Thunder Bay with Ottawa by 1880 67 The government largely subsidized these endeavours and funding for road construction fell to the wayside despite the pleas of townships villages and settlers 59 68 In 1896 the provincial Instructor in Road Making reported It is doubtful if there is a mile of true macadam road in Ontario outside of a few towns or cities by far the greatest part of the milage of the province is mud ruts and pitch holes 69 1894 1915 The Good Roads Movement Edit Dr Perry Doolittle one of the first automobile owners in Canada and the first to cross the country in one is often credited as the Father of the Trans Canada Highway Doolittle was one of the chief proponents of the Good Roads Movement 70 The cries of municipalities went unanswered but it would not stop their ambition Coupled with the increasing adoption of the bicycle as a means of transport and the desire of farmers to get their goods to market quicker the Ontario Good Roads Association was formed in 1894 by representatives from numerous townships villages and cities The Good Roads Movement encouraged education on the building of proper roads and later equipment to aid in the improvement of roads as well as lobbying the various levels of government to fund road development and maintenance Members would travel from town to town and across the countryside espousing the value of properly built roads to communities 71 72 Two of the most influential members in its early days were Archibald William Campbell and Dr Perry Doolittle 71 73 Good Roads Campbell would become the province s first Instructor in Roadmaking when the position was established on April 15 1896 under the Department of Agriculture 74 Doolittle a Toronto physician became one of the earliest automobile owners in Canada and spurred the good roads movement 73 He became the first person to drive across Canada in 1925 utilizing the railways around Lake Superior where no roads existed and is known as the Father of the Trans Canada Highway 70 The arrival of automobiles rapidly changed the approach to roads and roadbuilding in the first years of the 20th century In 1900 the provincial Instructor in Roadmaking was renamed as the Commissioner of Public Highways in 1900 as well as the Deputy Minister in the new Department of Public Works in 1905 75 The first legislation on driving was introduced in 1903 and included the first speed limits 15 miles per hour 24 km h The first license plates were created that year the first highway patrol established in 1907 licences for chauffeurs in 1909 regular drivers did not require a licence until 1927 and safety requirements such as headlights These laws culminated in the creation of the Highway Traffic Act in 1923 76 Roadbuilding advanced considerably with the most notable project of the period being the Toronto Hamilton Highway the first paved intercity road in Ontario The highway was chosen to run along the macadamized old Lake Shore Road between the two cities instead of Dundas Street to the north because of the numerous hills encountered along Dundas 77 In November 1914 the proposed highway was approved 78 and work began quickly to construct the road known today as Lake Shore Boulevard and Lakeshore Road from Toronto to Hamilton The road was finished in November 1917 5 5 metres 18 ft wide and nearly 64 kilometres 40 mi long becoming the first concrete road in Ontario 77 The highway became the favourite drive of many motorists and it quickly became a tradition for many families to drive it every Sunday 79 1916 1933 The first provincial highways Edit Roads and highways in Ontario were given their first serious consideration by the provincial government when the Department of Public Highways DPHO predecessor to the modern Ministry of Transportation of Ontario was established on January 17 1916 Until then the majority of the primary roads through southern Ontario formed part of the county road systems The Department of Public Works paid up to 60 of the construction and maintenance costs for these roads while the counties were responsible for the remaining 40 80 The Ontario government passed an act in 1917 to permit the newly formed Department of Public Highways DPHO to take over or assume responsibility and upkeep of a provincial highway system The initial system between Windsor and Quebec was bookended by branches to Niagara and Ottawa 81 In 1919 the federal government passed the Canada Highways Act which provided 20 000 000 to provinces under the condition that they establish an official highway network up to 40 of construction costs would be subsidized The first network plan was approved on February 26 1920 At this time Campbell was now the Federal Commissioner of Highways 80 Until the summer of 1925 Ontario highways were named rather than numbered When route numbering was introduced the following numbers were allotted 82 83 Highway 2 Windsor Quebec 876 3 kilometres 544 5 mi Highway 3 Windsor Niagara Falls 413 9 kilometres 257 2 mi Highway 4 St Thomas Elginfield 51 2 kilometres 31 8 mi Highway 5 Jarvis Toronto 116 8 kilometres 72 6 mi Highway 6 Hamilton Owen Sound 181 5 kilometres 112 8 mi Highway 7 Sarnia Brampton 272 9 kilometres 169 6 mi Highway 8 Goderich Niagara Falls 252 3 kilometres 156 8 mi Highway 9 Kincardine Arthur 108 6 kilometres 67 5 mi Highway 10 Port Credit Owen Sound 169 0 kilometres 105 0 mi Highway 11 Toronto Severn River 154 2 kilometres 95 8 mi Highway 12 Whitby Lindsay 76 9 kilometres 47 8 mi Highway 12A Port Hope Peterborough 46 8 kilometres 29 1 mi Highway 14 Picton Foxboro 46 7 kilometres 29 0 mi Highway 15 Kingston Ottawa 210 8 kilometres 131 0 mi Highway 16 Prescott Ottawa 100 3 kilometres 62 3 mi Highway 17 Pembroke Quebec boundary 289 8 kilometres 180 1 mi The number of Provincial Highways as they were initially known expanded quickly from there The provincial highway network did not extend into the Canadian Shield nor Northern Ontario initially and Trunk Roads in the north were instead under the mandate of the Department of Northern Development The two primary trunk routes were extensions of Highway 11 and Highway 17 to North Bay and Sault Ste Marie respectively 84 Seeking to open the far north construction of a road to connect North Bay and Cochrane began in 1925 85 The new gravel highway was officially opened on July 2 1927 86 by Minister of Lands and Forests William Finlayson He suggested at the opening that the road be named the Ferguson Highway in honour of premier Ferguson The name was originally suggested by North Bay mayor Dan Barker 87 Despite the official opening a section between Swastika and Ramore wasn t opened until August 88 The Ferguson Highway name was also applied to the Muskoka Road between Severn Bridge and North Bay 86 During the 1920s the DPHO began to examine possible remedies to chronic congestion on along Highway 2 particularly between Toronto and Hamilton Lakeshore Road eventually deciding upon widening the roadway midway between Lakeshore Road and Highway 5 Dundas Street or the Middle Road It was to be more than twice the width of Lakeshore Road at 12 m 39 ft and would carry two lanes of traffic in either direction 89 90 Construction on what was then known as the Queen Street Extension west of Toronto began in early 1931 91 Before the highway could be completed Thomas McQuesten was appointed the new minister of the renamed DHO with Robert Melville Smith as deputy minister following the 1934 provincial elections 24 1934 1948 Dual highways and the Queen Elizabeth Way Edit Smith inspired by the German autobahns new dual lane divided highways modified the design for Ontario roads 92 and McQuesten ordered the Middle Road be converted into this new form of highway 93 94 95 A 40 m 130 ft right of way was purchased along the Middle Road and construction began to convert the existing sections to a divided highway Work also began on Canada s first interchange at Highway 10 96 The Middle Road was ceremoniously renamed the Queen Elizabeth Way during the 1939 royal tour of Canada taking its name from Queen Elizabeth The Queen Mother and was completed between Toronto and Niagara Falls on August 26 1940 89 Beginning in 1935 McQuesten applied the concept of a dual highway to several projects along Highway 2 including along Kingston Road in Scarborough Township 24 97 When widening in Scarborough reached the Highland Creek ravine in 1936 the Department of Highways began construction on a new bridge over the large valley bypassing the former alignment around West Hill 98 From here the highway was constructed on a new alignment to Oshawa avoiding construction on the congested Highway 2 99 As grading and bridge construction neared completion on the new highway between West Hill and Oshawa in September 1939 World War II broke out and gradually tax revenues were re allocated from highway construction to the war effort 24 As the war came to a close planning began in 1945 on the Toronto Barrie Highway to ease the congestion on the parallel routes of Highway 11 and Highway 27 The highway followed a completely new alignment and featured interchanges at nearly all crossroads Construction of an extension around Barrie began in 1950 and the completed freeway was opened on July 1 1952 100 The expressway between Highland Creek and Oshawa was also completed in this period and opened as far as Ritson Road in December 1947 becoming the progenitor to Highway 401 99 1950 1971 The freeway age and the Trans Canada Highway Edit See also 400 series highways and Trans Canada Highway When Ontario signed the Trans Canada Highway Agreement on April 25 1950 it had already chosen a Central Ontario routing via Highway 7 Highway 12 Highway 103 and Highway 69 101 Highway 17 through the Ottawa Valley was announced as a provincially funded secondary route of the Trans Canada the following day 102 Amongst some of the most difficult terrain encountered in Canada the 266 kilometres 165 mi of wilderness known as the Gap was a missing link in the Trans Canada Highway between Nipigon and Sault Ste Marie 103 Construction began in 1956 104 and it was completed and ceremoniously opened to traffic on September 17 1960 uniting the two segments and completing the route of Highway 17 from the Manitoba border to the Quebec border The construction boom following the war resulted in many new freeway construction projects in the province The Toronto Barrie Highway Highway 400 Trans Provincial Highway Highway 401 24 a short expansion of Highway 7 approaching the Blue Water Bridge in Sarnia Highway 402 105 and an expansion of Highway 27 eventually designated as Highway 427 by the mid 1970s into part of the Toronto Bypass were all underway or completed by the early 1950s 24 Seeking a way to distinguish the controlled access freeways from the existing two lane King s Highways the Department of Highways created the 400 series designations in 1952 By the end of the year Highway 400 401 and 402 were numbered although they were only short stubs of their current lengths 106 Highway 401 was assembled across the province in a patchwork fashion 24 becoming fully navigable between Windsor and the Quebec border on November 10 1964 107 Highway 400 was extended north to Coldwater on Christmas Eve 1959 108 Highway 402 was extended to London between 1972 and 1982 109 110 In addition to this network backbone plans for additional 400 series highways were initiated by the late 1950s comprising the Chedoke Expressway Highway 403 through Hamilton 111 the Don Valley Parkway Extension Highway 404 northward from the soon to be constructed Toronto expressway 112 Highway 405 to connect with the American border near St Catharines 113 Highway 406 south from St Catharines to Welland 114 Highway 407 encircling the Greater Toronto Area GTA though not built for another 40 years 115 Highway 409 to connect Highway 401 with Toronto International Airport 116 and The Queensway Highway 417 through Ottawa 117 The first sections of these freeways were opened in 1963 118 1977 119 1963 118 1965 120 1997 121 1974 122 and 1960 123 respectively In 1963 transportation minister Charles MacNaughton announced the widening of Highway 401 in Toronto from four to a minimum of 12 lanes between Islington Avenue and Markham Road 99 Construction began immediately while the plan initially called for construction to end in 1967 it continued for nearly a decade At least four lanes were always open during the large reconstruction project which included complex new interchanges at Highway 27 Highway 400 the planned Spadina Expressway and the Don Valley Parkway 24 Throughout the mid to late 1960s the provincial government also funded numerous urban expressways including the Conestoga Parkway in Kitchener Waterloo the Thunder Bay Expressway in Thunder Bay Highbury Avenue in London the Hanlon Expressway into Guelph and most infamously the Spadina Expressway into Downtown Toronto While the others were built the Spadina became a heated debate in the late 1960s between Metropolitan Toronto and urban activists including Jane Jacobs The battle culminated when premier Bill Davis rose in the legislature and declared If we are building a transportation system to serve the automobile the Spadina Expressway would be a good place to start But if we are building a transportation system to serve people the Spadina Expressway is a good place to stop 124 1972 1995 Growth of public transit Edit The cancellation of the Spadina Expressway led to the demise of other proposed expressways in Toronto and elsewhere in the province as well as a decline in new road building proposals 125 It remains to this day a controversial decision 126 127 The Environmental Assessment Act introduced in 1975 further restricted new highway building 128 and as a result the 1970s and 1980s saw less new highway construction compared to prior decades Despite this several existing freeways were extended or expanded including Highway 402 from Sarnia to London between 1972 and 1982 129 130 Highway 403 through Mississauga between 1978 and late 1982 131 132 the Don Valley Parkway as Highway 404 north from Toronto to Newmarket between 1976 and 1989 133 134 135 Highway 406 through St Catharines between 1977 and 1984 136 137 Highway 417 from Ottawa to the Quebec boundary between 1970 and late 1975 138 139 and the expansion of Highway 27 into Highway 427 between 1968 and late 1971 140 141 as well as its extension from Highway 401 to Highway 7 between 1976 and 1991 142 143 Highway 410 was also built initially as a two lane road between 1975 and late 1978 144 145 146 1996 1999 Highway Transfers Edit As part of a series of budget cuts initiated by premier Mike Harris under his Common Sense Revolution platform in 1995 numerous highways deemed to no longer be of significance to the provincial network were decommissioned and responsibility for the routes transferred to lower levels of government a process referred to as downloading Several thousand kilometres of provincially maintained highways were transferred to the various municipalities in which they are located These transfers were performed under the reasoning that they served a mostly local function as a cost saving measure and as part of a broader exchange of responsibilities between the province and its municipalities On April 1 1997 1 767 6 kilometres 1 098 3 mi of highways were removed from the King s Highway system 147 This was followed by the removal of 3 211 1 kilometres 1 995 3 mi on January 1 1998 148 for a total of 4 978 7 kilometres 3 093 6 mi the move was criticized by the media 149 150 In the 1980s and 1990s Highway 416 was constructed through a process known as twinning in which a second carriageway is built parallel to the existing road In addition existing intersections were rebuilt as grade separated interchanges 151 Highway 16 New was built during the 1960s and 1970s establishing the right of way and alignment of a future freeway as a two lane highway 152 Planning for a connection to Highway 417 began in 1987 153 and was completed on July 31 1997 154 153 Work to twin Highway 16 New began in mid 1996 155 and was completed in sections between June 1997 156 and September 1999 after which nearly the entire length of Highway 16 was redesignated as Highway 416 157 2000 2022 Recent history Edit See also Ontario Highway 11 Expansion and rerouting Ontario Highway 69 Four laning Ontario Highway 407 Highway 407 East project and Ontario Highway 401 Rt Hon Herb Gray Parkway In recent years highway construction has generally been limited to the expansion of existing highways principal among them Highway 11 Highway 400 69 and the Herb Gray Parkway extension of Highway 401 into Windsor The four laning of 240 kilometres 150 mi of Highway 11 between Barrie and North Bay was a long term expansion that was completed August 8 2012 having been worked on since 1955 158 159 160 The four laning of Highway 69 which will be replaced by Highway 400 has progressed northward from Waubaushene since 1991 161 reaching as far as Nobel on October 26 2010 162 Work has also progressed south from Sudbury since 2005 163 164 and as of 2022 has reached the French River leaving a 68 kilometre 42 mi gap of two lane highway between Toronto and Sudbury 165 Construction began in 2012 on a provincially operated 65 kilometre 40 mi long extension to the 407 ETR known as Highway 407 East or 407E during planning with the project undertaken in two separate phases Phase 1 was opened on June 20 2016 consisting of a 22 kilometre 14 mi extension to Harmony Road in Oshawa as well as the 10 kilometre 6 2 mi Highway 412 166 The extension was free of tolls until February 1 2017 167 Phase 2A which opened on January 2 2018 added a 9 6 kilometre 6 0 mi extension to Taunton Road at the future Highway 418 interchange 168 Phase 2B which opened on December 9 2019 added a 23 3 kilometre 14 5 mi extension to Highway 35 and Highway 115 as well as the 12 8 kilometre 8 0 mi Highway 418 169 In 2004 a joint announcement by the federal government of the United States and Government of Canada confirmed a new Canada U S border crossing would be constructed between Detroit and Windsor The MTO took advantage of this opportunity to extend Highway 401 to the Canada US border and began an environmental impact assessment on the entire project in late 2005 170 Despite protest from area residents 171 as well as a dismissed lawsuit from Ambassador Bridge owner Matty Moroun 172 173 it was announced on May 1 2008 that a preferred route had been selected and the new route would be named the Windsor Essex Parkway 174 The below grade route has six through lanes and follows Huron Church Road from the former end of Highway 401 to the E C Row Expressway which it then follows alongside to near the border 175 Construction began in August 2011 176 It was partially opened on June 28 2015 177 and completed to the Ojibway Parkway on November 21 178 179 The Gordie Howe International Bridge is scheduled for completion in 2024 and will tie Highway 401 in with Interstate 75 and Interstate 96 in Detroit 180 181 Future EditSee also Ontario Highway 413 and Bradford Bypass The current proposals by the MTO consist of two new freeways in the GTA and continued widening and four laning of existing highways Highway 413 is a proposed four to six lane freeway bypass of the GTA around Brampton connecting Highway 401 and Highway 407 with Highway 400 north of Vaughan The 52 kilometre 32 mi route would include extensions of Highway 410 and Highway 427 as well as a right of way for a transitway the highway has attracted considerable attention with opinions divided over the benefits of shorter travel times versus irreversible environmental impacts and urban sprawl 182 183 184 The Bradford Bypass is a proposed four lane rural freeway connecting Highway 400 and Highway 404 north of Bradford and Newmarket 185 Like Highwaay 413 it has attracted criticism for its environmental impact 186 187 though it has the support of adjacent municipalities 188 189 Preliminary construction works for the route are underway as of 2022 190 While planning for the twinning of Highway 11 17 between Thunder Bay and Nipigon began in 1989 191 construction did not begin until 2009 192 As of 2022 55 kilometres 34 mi of two laned highway remains to be twinned or bypassed almost all of which is in the engineering phase 193 The four laning of the remaining 68 kilometre 42 mi gap of Highway 69 has been promised by multiple governments but no timeline for completion has been announced as of 2022 194 See also Edit Ontario portal Roads portal Canada portalList of Ontario provincial highwaysReferences EditFootnotes Edit Shragge amp Bagnato 1984 pp 74 75 a b c Ministry of Transportation of Ontario 2016 Annual Average Daily Traffic AADT counts Retrieved March 13 2021 Highway Traffic Act R S O 1990 Chapter H 8 s 1 e Laws Government of Ontario July 24 2014 Retrieved March 8 2021 a b c Public Transportation and Highway Improvement Act R S O 1990 Chapter P 50 parts I VI e Laws Government of Ontario July 24 2014 Retrieved March 8 2021 Highway 407 Act S O 1998 Chapter 28 s 12 e Laws Government of Ontario July 24 2014 Retrieved March 8 2021 a b c d e Speed Limits R R O 1990 Reg 619 s 1 O Reg 319 19 s 1 e Laws Government of Ontario July 24 2014 Retrieved March 8 2021 Ontario s Increased Speed Limit Pilot Finds Wide Public Support Government of Ontario March 11 2020 Retrieved March 8 2021 a b Ministry of Transportation of Ontario May 2010 Ontario Traffic Manual Book 8 Volume 1 Guide and Information Signs PDF Vol 1 Government of Ontario Retrieved March 8 2021 Stretch of 401 to be renamed Highway of Heroes CTV Toronto August 24 2007 Archived from the original on January 6 2011 Retrieved February 3 2010 Restricted Use of the King s Highway R R O 1990 Reg 609 s 1 e Laws Government of Ontario July 24 2014 Retrieved March 8 2021 Traveller Road Information Portal Ontario 511 Retrieved March 8 2021 Ontario Road Safety Annual Report 2019 PDF Retrieved September 1 2022 Provincial Highways Now Being Numbered The Canadian Engineer Monetary Times Print 49 8 246 August 25 1925 Numbering of the various provincial highways in Ontario has been commenced by the Department of Public Highways Resident engineers are now receiving metal numbers to be placed on poles along the provincial highways These numbers will also be placed on poles throughout cities towns and villages and motorists should then have no trouble in finding their way in and out of urban municipalities Road designations from 2 to 17 have already been allotted a b c d e IBI Group November 2016 Draft Technical Backgrounder Highways and Roads PDF Report Ministry of Transportation of Ontario p 8 Retrieved March 9 2021 Alternate Highway 17 Starts West End Fight The Ottawa Citizen Vol 123 no 903 September 22 1965 p 3 Retrieved March 9 2021 via Newspapers com MMM Group April 9 2014 Highway 7 New Kitchener to Guelph 18 km G W P 408 88 00 Initial Design Report 2014 PDF Report Ministry of Transportation of Ontario Retrieved March 9 2021 Lewis Malcolm R September 1964 A Geographical Study of Bertie Township Thesis McMaster University hdl 11375 18581 Retrieved March 9 2021 A Forest of Highway Signs The Ottawa Journal September 21 1948 p 4 Retrieved January 19 2021 via Newspapers com Don W Thompson 1969 Men and Meridians The History of Surveying and Mapping in Canada 1917 to 1947 Vol 3 Canadian Government Publishing Centre p 141 ISBN 0 660 00359 7 Canadian Press March 20 1930 Convicted Drivers may be Compelled to Take Insurance The Gazette Vol 159 no 68 Montreal p 21 Retrieved March 7 2021 via Newspapers com Municipal Act 2001 SO 2001 c 25 e Laws Government of Ontario July 24 2014 Retrieved March 8 2021 Rzeznikiewiz Damian Tamim Hala Macpherson Alison K December 28 2012 Risk of Death in Crashes on Ontario s Highways BMC Public Health 12 1125 doi 10 1186 1471 2458 12 1125 PMC 3543722 PMID 23273001 Hopes to Improve Roads The Gazette Montreal February 18 1936 p 14 Retrieved February 9 2010 a b c d e f g h Shragge John G 2007 Highway 401 The Story Archived from the original on March 28 2008 Retrieved February 12 2010 Revie Nancy September 19 2005 An Expressway in Name Only The Guelph Mercury p A9 Proceedings Annual Meeting Report Institute of Traffic Engineers 1962 pp 100 103 Partial Cloverleaf Interchange Parclo The Canadian Design Resource Retrieved June 4 2015 a b Ontario Secondary Roads Now Designated 500 600 Vol 112 no 33 119 The Globe and Mail February 4 1956 p 4 Two new Ontario road numbers appear on the province s 1956 official road map which will be ready for distribution next week The new numbers are the 500 and 600 series and designate hundreds of miles of secondary roads which are wholly maintained by the Highways Department More than 100 secondary roads will have their own numbers and signs this year All of these secondary roads were taken into the province s main highways system because they form important connecting links with the King s Highways Ontario Road Map Map Cartography by C P Robins Ontario Department of Highways 1957 R38 39 a b Ontario Road Map Map Cartography by Geomatics Office Ministry of Transportation 1999 Retrieved March 9 2021 via Archives of Ontario Mining Access Resources and Forestry Report 1961 62 Annual Report Report Ontario Department of Highway March 31 1964 pp 59 61 Ontario Road Map Map Cartography by Surveys and Mapping Section Ministry of Transportation 1998 Retrieved February 15 2021 Antler Jim 1997 New Tourism Sign System Unveiled The Outfitter No March April Nature and Outdoor Tourism Ontario pp 15 18 Retrieved March 13 2021 a b Bradford 2015 Roads and Transportation in Upper Canada Before 1800 Mansfield J B 1899 Chapter 6 French Discovery and Occupation History of the Great Lakes Vol I J H Beers amp Co Retrieved March 14 2021 Deziel Paul November 10 1934 Historic Shores of River St Clair The Border Cities Star p 1 Section Three Retrieved February 27 2021 via Newspapers com O Gorman John J March 1916 Ontario s Pioneer Priest Catholic World No 102 pp 751 756 Retrieved March 14 2021 Treaty of Paris 1763 via Wikisource His Most Christian Majesty cedes and guaranties to his said Britannick Majesty in full right Canada with all its dependencies as well as the island of Cape Breton and all the other islands and coasts in the gulph and river of St Lawrence and in general every thing that depends on the said countries lands islands and coasts Constitutional Act 1791 University of Ottawa Compendium of Language Management in Canada CLMC Retrieved March 15 2021 Historical Documents Constitution 150 Retrieved March 15 2021 Henderson Bob Bermingham Patrick The Dundas Portage Exploring the Logic of Trails PDF Ontario Professional Surveyor No Summer 2008 pp 10 14 Retrieved March 15 2021 via Krcmar Surveyors Ministry of Transportation History of Ministry of Transportation www mto gov on ca Government of Ontario Retrieved March 15 2021 Harvey Garrett May 1 2019 The Oldest Road in Ontario Bay of Quinte Region Retrieved March 28 2021 Berchem 1977 p 11 Mutrie Ronald Robert 1992 Lieutenant Governor Simcoe s Strategy The Long Point Settlers Log Cabin Books ISBN 978 0969281245 Retrieved March 28 2021 a b Berchem 1977 p 10 Toby Barrett September 28 2017 Simcoe Day Act 2017 Bill 159 PDF Parliamentary Debates Hansard Ontario Legislative Assembly of Ontario pp 5359 5366 Retrieved March 28 2021 Berchem 1977 pp 14 16 Berchem 1977 p 15 Legislative Assembly of Ontario 1896 p 31 Berchem 1977 pp 16 20 Berchem 1977 pp 20 21 Berchem 1977 pp 21 24 29 35 Quattrociocchi Loryssa Phil D March 2021 Danforth Avenue Complete Street and Planning Study Preliminary Draft for Discussion Historic Context Statement The History and Evolution of the Danforth Broadview Avenue to Coxwell Avenue PDF Report p 3 Retrieved November 25 2022 Danforth Asa Dictionary of Canadian Biography Retrieved November 25 2022 Shragge amp Bagnato 1984 p 13 Filey Mike July 27 2019 The Way We Were The road to Avenue was paved with good intentions Toronto Sun Retrieved November 26 2022 Berchem 1977 pp 38 39 a b c d Murray Derek 2013 Equitable Claims and Future Considerations Road Building and Colonization in Early Ontario 1850 1890 PDF Journal of the Canadian Historical Association 24 2 156 188 doi 10 7202 1025077ar ISSN 1712 6274 Retrieved November 23 2022 Berchem 1977 p 29 Burghardt Andrew F 1969 The Origin and Development of the Road Network of the Niagara Peninsula Ontario 1770 1851 Annals of the Association of American Geographers 59 3 417 440 doi 10 1111 j 1467 8306 1969 tb00683 x ISSN 0004 5608 Shragge amp Bagnato 1984 pp 31 40 Shragge amp Bagnato 1984 p 17 a b Shragge amp Bagnato 1984 pp 17 19 Report of the Provincial Instructor in Road Making Report Legislative Assembly of Ontario March 23 1897 p 15 The township of Malden Essex county is the only township municipality which has yet completely abolished the statute labor system The change was made in March 1890 Aaron Bob August 18 2021 A centuries old law requiring Ontario landowners to work on local roads is coming off the books Toronto Star Retrieved November 25 2022 Fleming Sandford 1880 Report and Documents in Reference to the Canadian Pacific Railway Maclean Roger amp Co pp 25 26 ISBN 978 06653 0185 8 Retrieved November 24 2022 via Archive org Shragge amp Bagnato 1984 pp 43 44 Shragge amp Bagnato 1984 p 7 a b Dr Perry Ernest Doolittle and the push for the Trans Canada Highway Soo Today Village Media June 14 2020 Retrieved November 26 2022 a b Shragge amp Bagnato 1984 p 43 The Ontario Good Roads Association Working for Municipalities The Canadian Business Journal Retrieved November 26 2022 a b Genesis of Good Roads Campaign in Ontario The Toronto World February 23 1919 p 8 Retrieved November 26 2022 Shragge amp Bagnato 1984 p 71 Shragge amp Bagnato 1984 pp 43 44 71 Shragge amp Bagnato 1984 pp 55 63 a b Shragge amp Bagnato 1984 pp 68 69 The Toronto World October 26 1914 Council Meets Today To Pass Agreement Vol 34 no 12402 p 3 Retrieved February 9 2010 Shragge John G 2007 Story Archive Retrieved February 24 2010 a b Shragge amp Bagnato 1984 pp 73 75 III Provincial Highways Annual Report Report 1918 ed Department of Public Highways April 11 1919 p 13 Retrieved February 15 2022 via Internet Archive Provincial Highways Now Being Numbered The Canadian Engineer Monetary Times Print 49 8 246 August 25 1925 Numbering of the various provincial highways in Ontario has been commenced by the Department of Public Highways Resident engineers are now receiving metal numbers to be placed on poles along the provincial highways These numbers will also be placed on poles throughout cities towns and villages and motorists should then have no trouble in finding their way in and out of urban municipalities Road designations from 2 to 17 have already been allotted Ontario Road Map Map Cartography by D Barclay Ontario Department of Public Highways 1926 Mileage Tables inset Shragge amp Bagnato p 73 75 sfn error no target CITEREFShraggeBagnato help Slashing for Northern Road is Completed The Nugget Vol 17 no 13 March 27 1925 p 12 Retrieved May 28 2022 via Newspapers com a b Shragge amp Bagnato 1984 p 77 Road Links North With Old Ontario The Brantford Expositor July 4 1927 p 4 Retrieved May 28 2022 via Newspapers com Will Not Cut Road Budgets in the North The Nugget Vol 19 no 53 July 8 1927 p 10 Retrieved May 28 2022 via Newspapers com a b Shragge amp Bagnato 1984 pp 79 81 Increased Volume of Traffic County And Suburbs Toronto World Vol 40 no 14472 June 26 1920 p 7 Retrieved February 12 2010 Filey pp 61 62 Stamp pp 19 20 Hopes to Improve Roads The Gazette Vol 165 no 42 Montreal February 18 1936 p 14 Retrieved February 9 2010 English Bob March 16 2006 Remember That Little Four lane Freeway Globe And Mail Toronto Archived from the original on September 30 2007 Retrieved November 8 2017 the freeway concept was promoted by Hamiltonian Thomas B McQuesten then the highway minister The Queen Elizabeth Way was already under construction but McQuesten changed it into a dual lane divided highway based on Germany s new autobahns Stamp pp 11 12 Shragge amp Bagnato 1984 p 79 Highway Conditions In Eastern Ontario The Ottawa Citizen Vol 94 no 127 Southam Newspapers November 13 1936 p 29 Retrieved February 16 2010 Brown 1997 p 105 a b c Shragge amp Bagnato 1984 p 93 Shragge amp Bagnato 1984 pp 89 91 Baldwin Warren April 25 1950 Six Sign Road Pact After Ontario Given Concession The Globe and Mail p 1 ProQuest 1291203460 Retrieved April 12 2021 Highway No 17 Secondary Link Of Trans Canada The Globe and Mail April 26 1950 p 7 ProQuest 1291386930 Retrieved April 12 2021 Shragge amp Bagnato 1984 pp 84 87 Parker George W August 29 1960 New Road Opens Up Ontario Wilderness to Tourists Detroit Free Press p 14 Retrieved November 30 2022 via Newspapers com subscription required Built Heritage Cultural Landscape and Planning Section January 2006 2 0 Background History PDF Heritage Impact Assessment Christina Street Bridge over Highway 402 Sarnia Report Archaeological Services Inc p 4 Retrieved January 6 2014 Walter Karena February 21 2014 Search Engine Highway Mysteries Solved The Niagara Falls Review Archived from the original on December 22 2015 Retrieved December 17 2015 Highway Construction Program King s and Secondary Highways Ministry of Transportation and Communications 1972 1973 p 8 9 Open 400 Link to Coldwater The Toronto Star December 24 1959 p 18 The new 22 mile extension from south of Crown Hill to Coldwater will be ready for traffic this afternoon Highway Construction Program King s and Secondary Highways Ministry of Transportation and Communications 1972 1973 p xi Annual Report Construction ed Ministry of Transportation and Communications 1982 1983 p 76 Annual Report for the Fiscal Year Report Ontario Department of Highways March 31 1958 Retrieved July 25 2010 Don Valley Parkway Extension Highway 401 to Steeles Avenue Report Desjardines 1957 Above the Regular Budget The Ottawa Citizen July 31 1958 p 7 Retrieved October 20 2010 Annual Report Department of Highways March 31 1961 Retrieved July 29 2011 Sewell John 2009 The Shape of the Suburbs Understanding Toronto s Sprawl University of Toronto Press p 72 ISBN 978 0 8020 9884 9 Retrieved July 1 2010 Hicks Kathleen A 2006 Road Controversy 1968 Malton Farms to Flying PDF Friends of the Mississauga Library System pp 208 209 ISBN 0 9697873 9 1 Retrieved April 4 2010 Robertson Peter The Queensway Began with a Royal Blast Flashback to 1957 Carlington Community Association Archived from the original on April 26 2012 Retrieved December 17 2015 a b Ontario Department of Highways 1970 p 11 Construction Program King s and Secondary Highways Report Ministry of Transportation and Communications 1976 1977 p XV Ontario Department of Highways 1970 p 12 Settlement of Claim of Richard Prendiville PDF Report Ontario Superior Court of Justice December 12 2001 p 7 Archived from the original PDF on July 27 2014 Retrieved December 17 2015 Construction Program King s and Secondary Highways Report Ministry of Transportation and Communications 1976 1977 p XIV Clark Glenn April 14 2012 A Historical Timeline for the Township of Gloucester The Gloucester Historical Society Retrieved July 1 2012 Bradburn Jamie June 3 2021 The streets belong to the people Why a premier killed the Spadina Expressway TVO Today Retrieved November 20 2022 Butler Don July 14 1982 Need for freeway link not proven Ottawa Citizen p 9 Retrieved December 3 2022 via Newspapers com subscription required Warmington Joe June 6 2021 No cheers for the death of the Spadina Expressway Toronto Sun Retrieved December 1 2022 Gupta Rahul June 21 2017 Canada 150 Remembering the Spadina Expressway North York Mirror Retrieved December 1 2022 Ministries at Loggerheads Over Extension of Highway The Globe and Mail Toronto May 26 1981 p 5 ProQuest 1143169307 subscription required Highway Construction Program King s and Secondary Highways Ministry of Transportation and Communications 1972 1973 p xi Annual Report Construction ed Ministry of Transportation and Communications 1982 1983 p 76 Calleja Frank November 8 1979 Doubts Raised About Route of New 403 Toronto Star p A19 ProQuest 1373285177 subscription required 87 Million Highway 403 Complete As Last Leg Opens Toronto Star December 2 1982 p A18 Headache on the 401 The Globe and Mail Toronto May 4 1976 p 5 Construction Program King s and Secondary Highways Report Ministry of Transportation and Communications Ontario 1975 1976 p xvii Dexter Brian October 25 1989 Ontario Studies Plan to Extend Highway 404 Farther North News The Toronto Star p A8 Highway Construction Program King s and Secondary Highways Ministry of Transportation and Communications 1980 1981 p XV Bassi Kris G Lin Watone L Ai Bazi George Ramakko Osmo E 1984 The Twelve Mile Creek Precast Prestressed Segmental Bridges PDF PCI Journal Prestressed Concrete Institute 29 1 46 doi 10 15554 pcij 11011984 30 47 Retrieved December 1 2022 The bridges were opened to traffic in October 1984 on completion of Highway 406 to the Queen Elizabeth Way Two Big Road Jobs Ending The Ottawa Citizen July 20 1970 p 10 Retrieved June 18 2012 Construction Program Ministry of Transportation and Communications 1976 1977 p XII Drivers Face Three More Years of QE 27 401 Motoring Misery The Toronto Star July 22 1969 p 43 Highway 27 Interchange Fully in Service The Globe and Mail Toronto December 4 1971 p 5 Construction Program Report Ministry of Transportation and Communications 1976 77 p XIV Provincial Highways Construction Projects Report Ministry of Transportation 1991 92 p 13 ISSN 0714 1149 Claridge Thomas May 3 1975 Years of Headaches Driver Prospect as 401 is Widened The Globe and Mail Vol 132 no 39 125 Toronto p 1 Public and Safety Information Section November 9 1978 Highway 410 Opens November 15 Press release Ministry of Transportation and Communications Regional and District Operations Central Region Annual Report Report Ministry of Transportation and Communications March 31 1979 p 14 Highway Transfers List Report Ministry of Transportation of Ontario April 1 1997 Highway Transfers List Who Does What Report Ministry of Transportation of Ontario June 20 2001 Ibbitson John February 1 1997 Rough Roads Ahead Under Tories The Ottawa Citizen p E10 Retrieved March 13 2021 via Newspapers com Boswell Randy July 21 1997 On A Back Road to Ruin City The Ottawa Citizen p B3 Retrieved March 13 2021 via Newspapers com What is Involved in Constructing a Four Lane Highway Ministry of Transportation of Ontario Archived from the original on June 8 2011 Retrieved October 12 2011 New 45 Mile Highway to Link Ottawa with 401 The Globe and Mail Vol 124 no 36 795 Toronto November 14 1967 p 4 a b EA 86 01 PDF Report Environmental Assessment Board July 31 1987 p 9 Retrieved September 30 2011 Ministry of Transportation of Ontario June 17 2010 Highway 416 North Government of Ontario Archived from the original on August 31 2011 Retrieved October 26 2011 Ministry of Transportation of Ontario June 17 2010 Highway 416 South Government of Ontario Archived from the original on May 20 2001 Retrieved October 26 2011 Ministry of Transportation of Ontario June 12 1997 Transportation Minister Officially Opens Another 7 6 Kilometres of Highway 416 Press release Government of Ontario Archived from the original on May 20 2001 Retrieved October 26 2011 Ottawa Highway Link Opens Ontario Toronto Star Canadian Press September 24 1999 p A4 Report of the Chief Engineer W A Clarke Annual Report Report 1954 ed Department of Highways April 1 1955 p 14 Hartill Mary Beth August 16 2012 Four laning finally done Huntsville Forester Metroland Media Group Retrieved September 1 2022 Young Gord August 10 2012 Highway 11 four laning complete North Bay Nugget Canoe Sun Media Archived from the original on July 14 2014 Retrieved December 30 2019 Ross Ian July 13 2008 Highway 69 and 11 expansion rolling north Northerners say safety efficiency new development will open up the region Northern Ontario Business Retrieved August 14 2021 177 million section of highway now open CottageCountryNow ca October 27 2010 Archived from the original on July 26 2011 Retrieved August 14 2021 Contract awarded for widening of highway 69 Sault Star December 18 2004 p A6 Ministry of Transportation of Ontario 2006 Status of Construction Activity Government of Ontario Archived from the original on December 19 2006 Retrieved August 24 2021 Ontario Opens Newly Expanded Highway 69 Government of Ontario December 23 2021 Retrieved December 23 2021 Hwy 407 eastern extension opens between Pickering and Oshawa Inside Toronto June 21 2016 Highway 407 extension opens in Durham Region 680 News Toronto June 20 2016 Ontario Opens New Section of Highway in Durham Region Ontario Newsroom Retrieved January 2 2018 Extension of Ontario Hwy 407 new Hwy 418 open east of Toronto On Site December 9 2019 Retrieved December 11 2019 Detroit River International Crossing Study team DRIC Reports Canada Detroit River International Crossing Project Archived from the original on May 4 2010 Retrieved February 26 2010 Liltwin Natalie June 3 2009 DRIC Controversy Goes On Windsor Star Canwest Publishing Archived from the original on June 11 2009 Retrieved June 16 2010 Ambassador Bridge Boss Sues Canada U S CBC News March 25 2010 Archived from the original on April 9 2011 Retrieved June 16 2010 Kristy Dylan May 5 2011 Sierra Club Bridge Lose bid to Derail DRIC The Windsor Star Archived from the original on April 23 2012 Retrieved January 2 2012 Detroit River International Crossing Study team May 1 2008 The DRIC Announces Preferred Access Road Press release URS Corporation Archived from the original on December 2 2010 Retrieved February 26 2010 Detroit River International Crossing Study team May 1 2008 Parkway Map PDF URS Corporation Archived from the original PDF on July 6 2011 Retrieved February 26 2010 Ground Breaks on Windsor Essex Parkway Today s Trucking August 19 2011 Archived from the original on May 27 2015 Retrieved May 27 2015 Battagello Dave June 24 2015 Herb Gray Parkway Opening This Weekend to Traffic The Windsor Star Archived from the original on June 25 2015 Retrieved June 25 2015 Ministry of Transportation of Ontario November 20 2015 Highway 401 Section of the New Rt Hon Herb Gray Parkway Now Complete PDF Press release Ministry of Transportation of Ontario Archived from the original PDF on March 4 2016 Retrieved March 10 2016 Thompson Chris December 16 2015 Meeting Gauges Feedback on How Highway 401 Should Cross Ojibway Parkway Windsor Star Archived from the original on December 25 2015 Retrieved March 10 2016 Gallagher John July 15 2018 Gordie Howe Bridge groundbreaking message No stopping this bridge now Detroit Free Press Retrieved December 13 2019 Gordie Howe International Bridge to cost 5 7B create 2 500 jobs CTV News Windsor September 27 2018 Retrieved December 5 2018 Javed Noor January 2 2015 Proposed Highway to Pave Parts of Greenbelt Proving Controversial Toronto Star Retrieved March 17 2021 Javed Noor January 30 2015 GTA West Highway Forward Thinking or Retro Mistake Toronto Star Retrieved March 17 2021 Buist Steve Javed Noor McIntosh Emma April 3 2021 Friends with benefits An inside look at the money power and influence behind the Ford government s push to The Toronto Star ISSN 0319 0781 Retrieved November 2 2021 One study commissioned by the previous Liberal government estimated the proposed highway would save drivers a mere 30 to 60 seconds of driving time The Ministry of Transportation contends that it would save drivers 30 minutes McCormick Rankin December 1997 Highway 400 Highway 404 Extension Link Bradford Bypass Route Planning and Environmental Assessment Study PDF Report Ministry of Transportation of Ontario pp 141 148 Retrieved April 1 2021 Groups Request the Federal Government Conduct Environmental Assessments for Two Proposed Ontario Highways On Environmentally Sensitive Land Environmental Defence February 3 2021 Archived from the original on January 30 2022 Retrieved May 3 2021 Fact Sheet Bradford Bypass aka the Holland Marsh Highway PDF Rescue Lake Simcoe Coalition Archived PDF from the original on January 19 2021 Retrieved May 3 2021 Philpott Natasha March 21 2021 York Region Council Vote to Send Letter to Federal Government in Support Bradford Bypass Project Bradford Today Retrieved April 7 2021 Letter to Minister of Municipal Affairs and Housing RE Co ordinated Land Use Planning Review Highway 400 404 Connecting Link PDF Town of East Gwillimbury August 12 2016 Retrieved April 7 2021 Ontario Taking Next Steps to Build Bradford Bypass Press release Government of Ontario November 9 2022 Retrieved November 27 2022 Accesllerated highway improvement program for Northwestern Ontario PDF The Nipigon Red Rock Gazette Vol 25 no 51 December 19 1989 pp 1 15 Retrieved September 4 2022 Staff August 17 2012 Open for business MTO opens new section of divided highway TBNewsWatch com Retrieved September 3 2022 Staff December 8 2020 A new Highway 11 17 twinning project begins TBNewsWatch com Retrieved September 3 2022 West reiterates call to complete Hwy 69 four laning Sudbury com September 1 2022 Retrieved November 27 2022 Bibliography Edit Berchem F R 1977 The Yonge Street Story 1793 1860 McGraw Hill Ryerson ISBN 0 07 082567 X Bradford Robert 2015 Keeping Ontario Moving The History of Roads and Road Building in Ontario Dundurn Press ISBN 978 1 4597 2412 9 Brown Ron 1997 Toronto s Lost Villages Toronto Polar Bear Press ISBN 978 1 896757 02 5 Legislative Assembly of Ontario 1896 Appendix to the Report of the Ontario Bureau of Industries Retrieved March 28 2021 Legislative Assembly of Ontario 1897 Report of the Provincial Instructor in Road Making Ontario Department of Agriculture Retrieved March 28 2021 A A D T Traffic Volumes 1955 1969 And Traffic Collision Data 1967 1969 Ontario Department of Highways 1970 Shragge John Bagnato Sharon 1984 From Footpaths to Freeways Historical Committee Ministry of Transportation and Communications ISBN 978 0 7743 9388 1 Stamp Robert M 1987 QEW Canada s First Superhighway The Boston Mills Press ISBN 0 919783 84 8 GIS datasets Edit a b Ministry of Transportation of Ontario Geomatics Office Land Information Ontario December 10 2020 Ontario Road Network Ontario Provincial Highways ArcGIS com Retrieved March 8 2021 Ministry of Transportation of Ontario Geomatics Office Land Information Ontario May 7 2020 Speed Limits in Ontario ArcGIS com Retrieved March 8 2021 Ministry of Transportation of Ontario Geomatics Office Land Information Ontario November 13 2019 Ontario Road Network MTO Jurisdiction by Highway Shield Type ArcGIS com Retrieved March 14 2021 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Highways in Ontario Ministry of Transportation of Ontario MTO MTO 100th Anniversary History Official Ontario road map Ontario 511 Traveller Information Highway conditions Ontario s Highway Programs Road maps of Ontario 1923 2010 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Ontario Provincial Highway Network amp oldid 1147202209, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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