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Queen Elizabeth Way

The Queen Elizabeth Way (QEW) is a 400-series highway in the Canadian province of Ontario linking Toronto with the Niagara Peninsula and Buffalo, New York. The freeway begins at the Peace Bridge in Fort Erie and travels 139.1 kilometres (86.4 mi) around the western end of Lake Ontario, ending at Highway 427 as the physical highway continues as the Gardiner Expressway into downtown Toronto. The QEW is one of Ontario's busiest highways, with an average of close to 200,000 vehicles per day on some sections. Major highway junctions are at Highway 420 in Niagara Falls, Highway 405 in Niagara-on-the-Lake, Highway 406 in St. Catharines, the Red Hill Valley Parkway in Hamilton, Highway 403 and Highway 407 in Burlington, Highway 403 at the OakvilleMississauga boundary, and Highway 427 in Etobicoke. Within the Regional Municipality of Halton the QEW is signed concurrently with Highway 403. The speed limit is 100 km/h (62 mph) throughout most of its length, with the exceptions being between Hamilton and St. Catharines where the posted limit is 110 km/h (68 mph).

Queen Elizabeth Way

Queen Elizabeth Way highlighted in red
Route information
Maintained by the Ministry of Transportation of Ontario
Length139.1 km[1] (86.4 mi)
HistoryBuilt: 1931 – October 14, 1956
Major junctions
Fort Erie endPeace Bridge to I-190 at the Canada–United States border in Fort Erie
Major intersections
Toronto end Highway 427 / Gardiner Expressway in Toronto
Location
CountryCanada
ProvinceOntario
Highway system

The history of the QEW dates back to 1931, when work began to widen the Middle Road in a similar fashion to the nearby Dundas Highway and Lakeshore Road as a relief project during the Great Depression. Following the 1934 provincial election, Ontario Minister of Highways Thomas McQuesten and his deputy minister Robert Melville Smith changed the design to be similar to the autobahns of Germany, dividing the opposite directions of travel and using grade-separated interchanges at major crossroads. When opened to traffic in 1937, it was the first intercity divided highway in North America and featured the longest stretch of consistent illumination in the world. While not a true freeway at the time, it was gradually upgraded, widened, and modernized beginning in the 1950s, more or less taking on its current form by 1975. Since then, various projects have continued to widen the route. In 1997, the provincial government turned over the responsibility for the section of the QEW between Highway 427 and the Humber River to the City of Toronto, who redesignated this segment as a westward extension of the Gardiner Expressway.

Name and signage edit

 
Original Queen Elizabeth Way signage, 1940

The Queen Elizabeth Way was named for the wife and royal consort of King George VI who would later become known as Queen Elizabeth The Queen Mother. It is sometimes referred to as the Queen E.[2] In 1939, the royal couple toured Canada and the United States in part to bolster support for the United Kingdom in anticipation of war with Nazi Germany, and also to mark George VI's coronation. The highway received its name to commemorate the visit; it was unveiled on June 7 as the King and Queen ceremonially opened the highway at a site near the Henley Bridge in St. Catharines. Originally, the highway featured stylized light standards with the letters "ER", the Royal Cypher for Elizabeth Regina, the Latin equivalent to "Queen Elizabeth." While mostly replaced with modern lighting masts like other Ontario highways, replicas of these stylized "ER" poles have been installed upon three bridges along the QEW: in Mississauga over the Credit River, in Oakville over Bronte Creek, and in St. Catharines over Twelve Mile Creek. In addition Highway 420 in Niagara Falls and its extension, Falls Avenue, has these "ER" light standards installed since 2002, as a nod to this route being part of the original QEW upon its inauguration in 1940 until being bypassed by QEW's extension to Fort Erie in 1941.[3]

The markers identifying the QEW have always used blue lettering on a yellow background instead of the black-on-white scheme other provincial highway markers use. They originally showed the highway's full name only in small letters, with the large script letters "ER" placed where the highway number is on other signs. In 1955, these were changed to the current design, with the lettering "QEW."[4] Although the QEW has no posted highway number, it is considered to be part of the Province of Ontario's 400-series highway network.[5] The Ministry of Transportation of Ontario designates the QEW as Highway 451 for internal, administrative purposes.[6]

A monument was originally in the highway median at the Toronto terminus of the highway west of the Humber River bridges, dedicated to the 1939 visit of King George VI and Queen Elizabeth and known as the "Lucky Lion." The column, with a crown at the top and a lion at the base, was designed by W. L. Somerville and sculptors Frances Loring and Florence Wyle for $12,000 (equivalent to $212,400 in 2021[7]). The monument was removed in 1972 in order to accommodate widening of the original QEW, and relocated in August 1975 to the nearby Sir Casimir Gzowski Park along Lake Ontario, on the east side of the Humber River.[8]

Route description edit

 
 
QEW just south of interchange with Highway 405 as seen in 2005 and 2009, respectively, showing the original railway overpass, and the replacement structure which is longer to accommodate the widened freeway.

The QEW is a 139 km (86 mi) route that travels from the Peace Bridge – which connects Fort Erie with Buffalo, New York – to Toronto, the economic hub of the province. The freeway circles the western lakehead of Lake Ontario, cutting through Niagara Falls, St. Catharines, Hamilton, Burlington, Oakville, and Mississauga en route.[9] A 22 km (14 mi) portion of the freeway in Burlington is signed concurrently with Highway 403.[1] Unlike other provincial highways in Ontario, the QEW is directionally signed using locations along the route as opposed to cardinal directions. Driving towards Toronto, the route is signed as "QEW Toronto" throughout its length. In the opposing direction, it is signed as "QEW Hamilton", "QEW Niagara", and "QEW Fort Erie" depending on the location.[4]

Fort Erie–Niagara Falls edit

The Queen Elizabeth Way begins at the foot of the Peace Bridge, which crosses the United States border and connects with I-190 in Buffalo, New York. A customs booth is between the bridge and the freeway, beyond which a toll is charged to Canada-bound drivers. West of there, access is provided to nearby Highway 3 and the Niagara Parkway. Through customs, the four-lane freeway proper begins, immediately curving northwest. Within Fort Erie, interchanges provide access to and from the QEW at Central Avenue, Concession Road, Thompson Road, Gilmore Road, and Bowen Road. While there is some urban development at the beginning of the freeway, the majority of the first 25 km (16 mi) are within lowland forests. Numerous creeks flow through these forests, often flooding them. The Willoughby Marsh Conservation Area lies southwest of the freeway, approximately 10 km (6.2 mi) south of Niagara Falls. After an interchange with Lyons Creek Road, the freeway turns northward.[9]

After crossing the Welland River, the original route of the Welland Canal, the freeway exits the forests and enters agricultural land surrounding the suburbs of Niagara Falls, which the highway enters north of the McLeod Road interchange. Within the city, Highway 420 meets the QEW at a large four-level junction and widens to six lanes. The opposing carriageways split at this interchange to accommodate the left-hand exit/entry of the flyover ramps accessing Highway 420, with the Toronto-bound traffic passing under these flyovers and a CN rail crossing. Exiting the northern fringe of Niagara Falls, the freeway again curves northwest and begins to descend through the Niagara Escarpment, a World Biosphere Reserve. Highway 405 merges with the QEW along the short rural stretch between Niagara Falls and St. Catharines. While there is no Toronto-bound access to Highway 405, Niagara-bound drivers can follow this short freeway to the Lewiston–Queenston Bridge, which crosses the U.S. border into Lewiston, New York. The QEW continues west into St. Catharines.[9]

St. Catharines–Hamilton edit

 
The Niagara-bound QEW at the Red Hill Valley Parkway interchange in Hamilton

As the Queen Elizabeth Way enters St. Catharines, it ascends the Garden City Skyway to cross the Welland Canal. This 2.2 km (1.4 mi) structure replaced the lift bridge south of it, one of two major bottlenecks prior to the early 1960s, and is one of two high-level skyways along the route. As the QEW was the first long distance freeway in North America, several modern engineering concepts were not considered in its original 1939 design, and although it was modernized in a recent reconstruction that concluded in 2011, further expansion of the highway is inhibited by the proximity of properties throughout most of its length. Consequently, most of the route beyond the Welland Canal is wedged between service roads which provide access to and from the QEW as well as to local businesses and residences. After passing the Ontario Street (Regional Road 42) interchange, the freeway crosses Martindale Pond, which forms the mouth of Twelve Mile Creek. West of the crossing is a trumpet interchange with Highway 406, which travels south to Welland, after which the QEW crosses out of St. Catharines and into the town of Lincoln at Fifteen Mile Creek, continuing with a six-lane cross-section.[10]

Throughout Lincoln, the QEW travels along the Lake Ontario shoreline through the Niagara Fruit Belt; numerous wineries line the south side of the freeway. Interchanges at Victoria Road (Regional Road 24) and Ontario Street (Regional Road 18) provide access to the communities of Vineland and Beamsville, respectively. The latter encroaches upon the south side of the QEW, interrupting the otherwise agricultural surroundings of the highway in Lincoln. Immediately east of the Bartlett Avenue interchange, the freeway enters Grimsby, where it becomes sandwiched between the Niagara Escarpment and Lake Ontario. The route passes under three overpasses that have remained unchanged since the highway was built: Maple Avenue, Ontario Street, and Christie Street, all served by a single diamond interchange. South of the Fifty Point Conservation Area, the freeway exits the Niagara Region and enters the city of Hamilton.[11]

Within Hamilton, the highway passes almost entirely within an industrial park, with interchanges at Fifty Road, Fruitland Road, and Centennial Parkway (formerly Highway 20). The third of these is intertwined with the Red Hill Valley Parkway interchange (completed in 2009), at which point the freeway widens to eight lanes. From here, the freeway curves northwest onto Burlington Beach and begins to ascend the Burlington Bay James N. Allan Skyway, the second high-level bridge along the route. As it crosses over the entrance to Hamilton Harbour, the freeway enters the Regional Municipality of Halton and descends into the city of Burlington.[10]

 
Panoramic view of Burlington Bay James N. Allan Skyway, near Beach Boulevard

Burlington–Oakville edit

After descending into Burlington, the QEW crosses North Shore Boulevard (former Highway 2) and Fairview Street/Plains Road as it passes by Mapleview Centre. Next to the Burlington Transmission Station, the QEW encounters the Freeman Interchange, originally opened in 1958 to allow construction of Highway 403 and expanded in the early 1990s to accommodate the western terminus of Highway 407.[12] The freeway turns to the east, becoming concurrent with Highway 403 through Burlington and Oakville. The two routes travel straight though a commercial office area. Service roads reappear through this stretch to serve businesses fronting the highway. The segment, which was expanded in 2011, is eight lanes wide, including one high-occupancy vehicle lane (HOV lanes) in each direction, which required the construction of a second structure over Sixteen Mile Creek. In the eastern end of Oakville, the route curves northeast, passing the Ford Motor Assembly Plant. Highway 403 then diverges north from the QEW while the QEW turns back to the east, entering Mississauga and the Peel Region.[9]

Mississauga-Toronto edit

 
The Queen Elizabeth Way in Mississauga, looking west, at the Evans Avenue interchange and bridges over Etobicoke Creek.

Within Mississauga, the freeway encounters its narrowest right-of-way, wedged between residential subdivisions on either side that prevent further expansion from its six-lane cross section. It crosses the Credit River valley, where a second bridge will soon be under construction. The segment east of the Credit River is being examined for expansion possibilities, but like the previous section, there is little room for more lanes without property acquisition. Some of the interchanges through Mississauga have ramp meters on the entrances onto the QEW, meaning only one vehicle is allowed to enter the on-ramp per each green light on a traffic signal, depending on the time of day, or the amount of traffic is on the highway at a certain time. After crossing Etobicoke Creek, which forms the boundary between Peel Region and Toronto, the route passes through a sprawling four-level interchange with Highway 427, as the freeway continues eastward as the municipal Gardiner Expressway.[9]

The QEW formerly continued beyond the Highway 427 interchange to the Old Toronto city limits at the Humber River, although this section between was downloaded from provincial to municipal authorities on April 1, 1997 and became a westward extension of the Gardiner Expressway. Provincial control of the freeway ends shortly after an onramp from Highway 427; municipal ownership is evident from the use of different high-mast illumination poles that are shaded to reduce light pollution at the underpasses with Wickman Road and a railway line. East of that point the freeway retains its provincial-installed conventional lighting as it splits into a short collector-express system about ten lanes wide to serve the interchanges with Kipling Avenue and Islington Avenue. East of Grand Avenue, the municipality's shaded high-mast lighting has been erected as the freeway crosses Parklawn Avenue and a CN rail line followed by offramps to Lake Shore Boulevard, then it curves as it passes the residential condominium towers of The Queensway – Humber Bay neighbourhood along the waterfront, the Mr. Christie cookie factory (which later became a part of Mondelēz International) and the Ontario Food Terminal on the north side, and then a tunnel leading to the Humber Loop streecar right-of-way.[13]

As the freeway crosses the west bank of the Humber River this marks the QEW's old eastern terminus and the beginning of the Metro Toronto-constructed portion of the Gardiner. Coincidentally at the former eastern end of the QEW, the Metro-built Gardiner Expressway also assumed the provincial Highway 2 designation from Lake Shore Boulevard (from Lake Shore Boulevard's on-ramp to the Gardiner), until most of Highway 2 was decommissioned in 1998 leaving both Lake Shore and the Gardiner without a provincial route number. This old demarcation line was quite visible on the freeway as a change in pavement quality and the use of different guardrail and lighting (since the late 1960s the province used conventional truss poles originally fitted with mercury halide lamps before being replaced by high-pressure sodium lamps in the 1990s, while Metro installed had the distinctive cobra-neck 30-foot (9.1 m) poles with fluorescent tubes that were since swapped for orange low-pressure sodium lamps in 1978).[14] The Gardiner Expressway continues through downtown Toronto, and after crossing the Don River it ends at Lake Shore Boulevard (where it ceded the Highway 2 provincial routing back to Lake Shore until 1998), although a partial interchange connects to the Don Valley Parkway (DVP) which turns ninety degrees and heads northbound when it eventually meets Highway 401.

History edit

 
The QEW opened as The Middle Road in the mid-1930s, lacking most modern safety standards

Toronto-Hamilton Highway edit

As automobile use in southern Ontario grew in the early 20th century, road design and construction advanced significantly. A major issue faced by planners was the improvement of the routes connecting Toronto and Hamilton, which were consistently overburdened by the growing traffic levels.[15] Following frequent erosion of the former macadamized Lakeshore Road,[16] a cement road known as the Toronto–Hamilton Highway was proposed in January 1914.[17] The highway was designed to run along the lake shore, instead of Dundas Street to the north, because the numerous hills encountered along Dundas would have increased costs without improving accessibility. Middle Road, a dirt lane named because of its position between the two, was not considered since Lakeshore and Dundas were both overcrowded and in need of serious repairs.[18] Construction began on November 8, 1914, but dragged on throughout the ongoing war.[15][19] It was formally opened on November 24, 1917,[16] 5.5 m (18 ft) wide and nearly 64 km (40 mi) long. It was the first concrete road in Ontario, as well as one of the longest stretches of concrete road between two cities in the world.[20] Though many minor improvements in alignment were made, the original highway was without modern bridges for the crossings of the Credit River and Bronte, Etobicoke, and Mimico Creeks.[21] Modern concrete arch bridges for all crossings except Bronte Creek were completed in 1919.[22]

The Middle Road edit

 
The Toronto entrance to the QEW and the Queen Elizabeth Way Monument in 1940. In 1974, the monument was removed. It was later reinstalled nearby in 1975.

Over the next decade, vehicle usage increased substantially, and by 1920 Lakeshore Road was again highly congested on weekends.[23] In response, the Department of Highways examined improving another road between Toronto and Hamilton. The road 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.[24] Construction on what was then known as the Queen Street Extension west of Toronto began in early 1931 as a Great Depression relief project.[25]

Before the highway could be completed, Thomas McQuesten was appointed the new minister of the Department of Highways, with Robert Melville Smith as deputy minister, following the 1934 provincial elections.[26] Smith, inspired by the German autobahns—new "dual-lane divided highways"—modified the design for Ontario roads,[27] and McQuesten ordered that the Middle Road be converted into this new form of highway.[28][29][30] 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.[24]

By the end of 1937, the Middle Road was open between Toronto and Burlington. When it opened, it was the first intercity divided highway in North America[Note 1] and boasted the longest continuous stretch of illumination in the world until the Second World War.[31][32]

The New Niagara Falls Highway edit

McQuesten also foresaw the financial opportunities that came with cross-border tourism and opening the "Ontario frontier" to Americans. In 1937, construction began on a new dual highway from Hamilton to Niagara Falls (first known as the Hamilton-Niagara Falls Highway) along the bottom of the Niagara Escarpment. This route was intended to connect with the Middle Road on the opposing shore of Lake Ontario.[33] Work began at the end of March to grade the route between Stoney Creek and Jordan. The Hamilton-Niagara Falls Highway connected to the Middle Road via a trumpet junction known as the Burlington Interchange.[34][35]

The prospect of removing hundreds of acres of farmland did not sit well with many, especially farmers in the path of the new highway. Rumours spread the prices paid for land were to be well below market value, and local protests erupted throughout the summer. However, the purpose of the new highway was to replace the congested, winding and hilly route of Highway 8 along the escarpment; several groups of collisions that summer gradually persuaded the public to support the new highway. By the autumn, 340 acres (140 ha) of fruitland were cleared to make way for the route.[36]

Over the next two years, numerous bridges and cloverleaf interchanges along the new highway were constructed. In addition, a large traffic circle was built in Stoney Creek to connect with Highway 20. The majority of this structural work was completed by June 1939. However, despite being opened to traffic between Stoney Creek and Jordan, the majority of the new route was gravelled. Over a ten-week period in the late spring and early summer of 1940, 58 km (36 mi) were paved, completing the four-lane highway between Hamilton and Niagara Falls.

It soon came time to name the new highway, and an upcoming visit by King George VI and Queen Elizabeth proved to be the focal point for a dedication ceremony. On June 7, 1939, the two royal family members drove along both the newly connected Toronto-Hamilton and Hamilton-Niagara Falls highways and passed through a light beam near the Henley Bridge in St. Catharines.[37] This caused two Union Jacks to swing out, revealing a sign which read The Queen Elizabeth Way.[38]

However, the ceremony only named the segment of the highway between St. Catharines and Niagara Falls as The Queen Elizabeth Way. The remainder of the road was still known by various names, including the Toronto–Burlington/Hamilton Highway and The New Middle Road Highway.[38] On August 23, 1940, McQuesten cut a ribbon at the Henley Bridge in St. Catharines and officially declared the Queen Elizabeth Way open between Toronto and Niagara Falls, at which point the entire route was given the Queen Elizabeth Way name.[39] Over a ten-week period in the late spring and early summer of 1940, 58 km (36 mi) were paved, completing the four-lane highway between Hamilton and Niagara Falls.

Construction on an extension towards Fort Erie, which became known as the QEW Extension, was underway, but the ongoing war delayed its completion. As an interim measure, the unpaved highway was opened during the summer of 1941. Bypassed by the new QEW extension to Fort Erie in 1941, the Niagara Falls bridge approach became a spur route that was no longer part of the QEW so it was officially named the Rainbow Bridge Approach for the next three decades (until upgraded and designated as Highway 420 in 1972). Two lanes of pavement were laid in 1946, but the four-lane highway was not fully paved until 1956, with the portion from Niagara Falls to Fort Erie being the last to be fully paved. The entire route – from Toronto's Humber River all the way to Fort Erie, all named as the QEW – was officially opened on October 14 of that year, completing the envisioned highway 25 years after work had begun.[40]

Conversion to freeway edit

 
Long traffic jams, such as this one entering Toronto prior to the construction of the Gardiner Expressway, became commonplace on the unupgraded highway.

1950s: Control of access edit

Despite some modern infrastructure, including traffic circles, interchanges, and some grade-separations, the majority of the new superhighway was not controlled-access. This meant existing farmers and homeowners along several segments that were once concession roads were permitted to build driveways and entrances onto the road. In addition, the majority of the crossroads encountered along the route were at-grade intersections. This, combined with the ever-increasing number of automobiles, traffic jams, accidents, and deteriorating pavement, led the Department of Highways to state it had begun "salvaging" the QEW in its 1953 annual report.[41]

The first new interchange opened at Dixie Road in 1953, beginning a seven-year program to make the Hamilton–Toronto section into a full-fledged freeway.[42] Over the next three years, the route was improved west to Highway 10 (Hurontario Street). This work was completed in early 1956. Service roads were installed and 13 intersections eliminated, resulting in a 50% reduction of the accident rate along that section.[43] In Toronto, work began in 1955 to construct the Gardiner Expressway, which would tie in with the end of the QEW.[44] The first section of the Gardiner, connecting the QEW to Jameson Avenue, was officially opened by Metropolitan Toronto chairman Fred Gardiner and Premier Leslie Frost on August 8, 1958.[45] Work was also underway on the Toronto Bypass, involving the upgrade of Highway 27 to a freeway between the QEW and the new Highway 401. Construction began in 1953,[46] and included an upgrade of the cloverleaf interchange with the QEW with larger loop ramps. This interchange would become one of the worst bottlenecks in the province a decade after its completion, according to Highways Minister Charles MacNaughton.[47]

 
Expanding the QEW to six lanes between Hamilton and Toronto required the expansion of several large bridges, such as this one at Bronte Creek in 1959. The former Service Road interchange west of Bronte Creek is under construction in the background.

On September 11, 1957, construction began to widen the QEW to six lanes between Highway 27 and the Humber River. It was completed by December 1958,[48] as were interchanges with Mississauga Road and Kerr Street.[49] Service roads allowed engineers to separate local access from the highway and avoid space-consuming interchanges in many places.[41] Therefore, interchanges were only opened at Bronte Road (then Highway 25), Kerr Street, Royal Windsor Drive (then Highway 122), Southdown Road (now Erin Mills Parkway north of the interchange), Mississauga Road, Hurontario Street (then Highway 10), Cawthra Road, Dixie Road, and Highway 27.

The Skyways edit

Two major projects were ongoing near Burlington at this point. On April 29, 1952, the W.E. Fitzgerald struck the two-lane lift bridge at the entrance to Hamilton Harbour.[50] Damage to the crossing resulted in the QEW's closure until a temporary bridge was erected. To remedy what was becoming a major delay and hazard, the Department of Highways began planning a high-level bridge to cross the shipping channel. Immediately west of the Guelph Line interchange, construction also began to improve access to the new bridge with the Freeman Diversion, a new routing of the QEW that would bypass the existing Middle Road section which passed through the community of Freeman that was becoming increasingly built-up, then connect to a new three-way junction (the Freeman Interchange) with the proposed Chedoke Expressway, and continue to the existing Burlington Interchange which would retain the underpass for Middle Road but be reconfigured to accept traffic primarily from the Diversion. Work on the new bridge and Diversion proceeded over the next six years.[51]

 
The Garden City Skyway in September 1963, soon before opening. The old bridge lies to the left, raised for a passing ship. Traffic is queued on both sides, a frequent occurrence each summer until the skyway was built.

The Freeman Diversion opened to traffic in August 1958,[52] with the old alignment becoming an eastward extension of Plains Road (still directly accessible via a split west of Guelph Line).[9] Premier Frost opened the 2,700-metre-long (8,900 ft), four-lane skyway two months later on October 30. Although the skyway greatly reduced traffic delays, it was not without controversy due to its height, cost, tolling, and most especially its name. Residents in Burlington demanded it be named the Burlington Skyway, while Hamilton residents countered with the Hamilton Skyway. As a compromise, the Thomas B. McQuesten Skyway was proposed. However, the provincial government had the final say in the matter, and opted to name it the Burlington Bay Skyway. Tolls were collected beginning on November 10.[51]

Elsewhere, in St. Catharines, planning was already advanced on a second skyway to cross the Welland Canal. The Homer Lift Bridge, a longstanding feature along Highway 8, was another point where the QEW narrowed to two lanes and traffic faced regular delays. Construction of the Homer Skyway, as it was tentatively known, began in July 1960 and progressed over the following three years.[51][53] The $20 million (in $1963, 176,000,000 adjusted for inflation) structure was officially opened by Premier John Robarts on November 15, 1963. However, traffic had already been flowing on the 2,200-metre-long (7,200 ft) bridge since October 18.[54] As with the Burlington Bay Skyway, tolls were collected on the new bridge. However, the name was almost unanimously chosen by St. Catharines residents to be the Garden City Skyway.[55] The collection of tolls on both skyways continued until December 28, 1973.[56]

 
The Shook's Hill interchange serving Erin Mills Parkway, in June 1961. This rotary junction was the only example built in Ontario. It was reconfigured to a conventional Parclo A4 in 2001.

1960s and 1970s: Expansion and new interchanges edit

On September 15, 1960, the Shook's Hill interchange, a rotary junction or grade-separated traffic circle (the only example in Ontario, although this interchange type is common in the United Kingdom), was completed at what is now Erin Mills Parkway. It was opened to traffic the following day, and completed the program to make the QEW a freeway between Burlington and Toronto.[57][58] A final project, to reconstruct the intersection with Brant Street into an interchange, was carried out in 1964 and made the QEW a freeway between Hamilton and Toronto.[59]

By 1963, work was underway to improve the Niagara Falls–Hamilton stretch of the QEW into a controlled-access highway.[60] At the end of 1966, the QEW was six lanes wide through Mississauga and Toronto, as well as between the Freeman Interchange and east of Brant Street.[61] This six-laning was extended west from Ninth Line to Kerr Street by 1968. The remaining section of four-lane highway along the Burlington to Toronto stretch, between Brant Street and Kerr Street, was reconstructed beginning in 1970 and completed by 1972.[62][63]

The late 1960s and early 1970s also saw the complete reconstruction of three important interchanges: the Rainbow Bridge Approach (later Highway 420) in Niagara Falls, Highway 20 (Centennial Parkway) in Hamilton, and Highway 27 in Toronto. The former two were traffic circles in place since the QEW was opened in 1940; the third was a large cloverleaf interchange that had become outdated with the expansion of Highway 27 to twelve lanes throughout the 1960s. The connections with the Rainbow Bridge Approach and with Highway 27 required new massive high-speed interchanges to accommodate freeway-to-freeway traffic movements.[41][44]

 
The reconstruction of the interchange between QEW and Highway 27 (later renumbered to Highway 427) from a cloverleaf to a semi-directional T took just one year in the late 1960s. Note the temporary diversion of QEW traffic to an overpass that would eventually be used for The Queensway.

The four-level junction with Highway 27 was built over 48.5 ha (120 acres) and required the construction of 19 bridges and the equivalent of 42 km (26 mi) of two-lane roadway, as well as the temporary diversion of QEW traffic to an overpass that would eventually be used for The Queensway. Construction began in September 1968,[64] although preliminary work had been ongoing since 1966;[61] the interchange opened to traffic on November 14, 1969. Between the recently expanded Highway 27 (which would be renumbered as Highway 427 on December 4, 1971) and Lake Shore Boulevard, the QEW was also expanded to 8–10 lanes which included a short collector-express system between Kipling Avenue and Royal York Road.[64][65]

Construction of the four-level interchange between the QEW and Rainbow Bridge Approach began in 1971, removing the two traffic circles along the approach at the QEW and Dorchester Road.[66] The interchange between the QEW and Lundy's Lane (Highway 20) was also removed; instead, the new interchange provided access to Montrose Road.[67] The work was completed by April 1972, at which point the Rainbow Bridge Approach was designated as Highway 420.[68]

Planning for the removal of the Stoney Creek traffic circle was completed by 1970,[62] and reconstruction began in 1974.[69] This involved the removal of a rail line which crossed through the circle, and was the demise of one of two major features along the route.[41][44] The new interchange opened in 1978,[70] completing the transformation of the QEW into a controlled-access highway.[69]

During the late 1970s, construction was carried out on several new interchanges between Hamilton and Toronto. New interchanges at Dorval Drive and Trafalgar Road replaced the one at Kerr Street. In Mississauga, work commenced at Cawthra Road, while in Burlington a new interchange was built at Appleby Line.[71][72]

 
The Freeman Interchange in Burlington

1980s to 1997: Growing capacity edit

Now functioning as a freeway, the QEW was already overburdened by the ever-increasing number of vehicles. The Burlington Bay Skyway, which was built to bypass Hamilton Harbour and the Port of Hamilton, was the lone four-lane link on the route between Hamilton and Toronto. It was initially designed to handle 50,000 vehicles daily, but by 1973 there were 60,000 vehicles crossing it. Preliminary work on a second parallel structure began a decade later in 1983.[73] In July of that year, Transportation Minister James Snow broke ground for the new bridge.[55] Construction was carried out over two years, and the twinned structure was opened on October 11, 1985.[56] It was named the James N. Allan Skyway, in honour of James Allan, Minister of Highways during construction of the original skyway. The new name was not well received by locals, and debate erupted once again whilst the original bridge was closed and repaired for several years.[55] It reopened on August 22, 1988,[56] with Toronto-bound traffic crossing the original bridge. The twin structure was renamed the Burlington Bay James N. Allan Skyway, though it is commonly referred to as simply the Burlington Skyway.[55]

Alongside the twinning of the skyway to eight lanes, the QEW was widened to at least six lanes from the Freeman Interchange to Centennial Parkway. A variable lighting system, changeable message signs and traffic cameras were added to create a new traffic-management system called COMPASS. Modern interchanges were constructed for Fairview Street/Plains Road (steel tub girder bridges replaced the 1937-built structure originally used for the Burlington Interchange[74]) and Northshore Boulevard (then Highway 2) including a collector lane for Niagara-bound traffic and on/off-ramps to Eastport Drive. Eastport Drive was built at the same time to relieve traffic on Beach Boulevard. This work was completed between late 1984 and 1990.[75][76]

 
The former QEW in Etobicoke which was re-designated as part of the Gardiner Expressway in 1997, looking east from Royal York Road overpass.

With the expanded capacity of the skyway, and the unanticipated traffic volumes on Highway 403, the Freeman Interchange was now faced with a capacity problem.[77] To resolve this, the renamed Ministry of Transportation began planning for the missing link of Highway 403 between Burlington and Mississauga that would run parallel to the QEW;[78] this right-of-way would be sold to the 407 ETR consortium in 1995 and built as part of that route.[79] Work began in August 1991 to reconfigure the interchange to modern standards which included realigning the QEW carriageways as mainline traffic, and adding a fourth leg for the future Burlington-Mississauga link. Due to land and cost constraints of the reconstruction, this necessitated replacing the directional ramp with a lower-capacity loop ramp for the movement from Toronto-bound QEW to the Brantford-bound Highway 403 (as some traffic was expected to be diverted away from the Burlington Skyway to the under-construction Lincoln M. Alexander Parkway and planned Red Creek Expressway). The rebuilt Freeman Interchange was partially opened on October 23, 1993 to serve the existing QEW and Highway 403 segments; the first sod for what would open as Highway 407 was turned that day.[80] The completed ramps (the first to be built were cast-in-place post-tensioned bridges to cross Highway 403 westbound, followed in 2000 by precast girder bridges to pass over the North Service Road[81][82]) connecting to the future Burlington-Mississauga freeway sat unused until that segment finally opened on July 30, 2001, as part of Highway 407 ETR.[83]

Budgetary restraints in the 1990s forced the provincial government to sell off or download many highways to lower levels of government, or, in the case of Highway 407, to a private consortium.[84] As part of recommendations, the QEW east of Highway 427 to the Humber River was transferred to the responsibility of Metro Toronto. The transfer took place on April 1, 1997.[14] The city subsequently renamed it as part of the Gardiner Expressway.[85] After the provincial downloading and Amalgamation of Toronto, much of this former QEW has remained largely unchanged though some segments have received a mix of high mast and low masts with shaded high pressure sodium lamps (similar to the Don Valley Parkway), while the old steel guardrail in the median was replaced by an Ontario "tall-wall" concrete barrier in 2007. Worn-out bilingual provincial signage have received unilingual replacements, while billboards which the province had long prohibited have been erected in proximity of the now-municipal freeway.[14]

Since 1998 edit

The Shook's Hill rotary interchange (originally opened in 1960) with Erin Mills Parkway and Southdown Road, was completely reconstructed to a conventional Parclo A4 from May 1999 to 2001.[86] The nearby Hurontario Street interchange, originally a cloverleaf junction, was reconfigured to a five-ramp Parclo by 2010.[87]

The Red Hill Valley Parkway, which opened on November 16, 2007, added a significant new interchange to the QEW.[88] The ramp to the southbound parkway did not open until December 2008.[89] The nearby interchange to Burlington Street had its 1958-built overpass replaced to accommodate the widening of the QEW to eight lanes, which included a collector lane on the Niagara-bound QEW to avoid weaving that otherwise would have resulted from the close proximity to the Red Hill Valley Parkway junction.[90] Construction was completed in 2009.[91]

 
HOV lanes along the co-signed QEW / Highway 403

From 1998 to 2003, the QEW between Brant Street and Guelph Line was expanded from four to eight lanes,[92] necessitating the removal of the underused Freeman Diversion split including the Niagara-bound carriageway's left-hand exit to Plains Road, so the Toronto-bound carriageway could be shifted next to the Niagara-bound carriageway where the opposing directions would be separated by a concrete median barrier and high mast lighting. This complemented the replacement of the existing railway grade separation (where each carriageway had its own underpass in order to accommodate the Plains Road off-ramp) with a new single structure wide enough to accommodate both directions of the expanded freeway. Plains Road was redirected to the existing service road (Queensway Drive/Harvester Road) that meets Guelph Line at an intersection just south of Guelph Line's interchange with the QEW. The interchange with Guelph Line (originally a full cloverleaf when built, with the northern half modified to a diamond in the mid-1960s[93][94]) was reconfigured to modern Parlo A4 that exclusively served QEW traffic after the ramps to Plains Road were removed, which was completed in 2006.[95]

Starting in 2007, the highway was widened to permit an additional HOV lane in either direction between Guelph Line and Trafalgar Road, which involved twinning the Bronte Creek and Sixteen Mile Creek Bridges following by rehabilitating the original structures.[96] These lanes were opened to traffic on November 29, 2010.[97]

Work began in 2005 to widen the QEW from four to six lanes through St. Catharines from Highway 406 to the Garden City Skyway.[98] This segment whose original design dated back to 1939, saw several interchanges improved and numerous structures replaced, although the widened Henley Bridge kept its classic architecture while existing service roads and local properties beside the freeway were largely retained. Work was completed on August 26, 2011, at a cost of $186 million.[99][100]

In the late 2000s, for the section between the Freeman Interchange to North Shore Boulevard, an additional lane was added for Niagara-bound traffic, while the widening of the structure crossing Fairview Street/Plains Road enabled the loop ramp from Fairview Street to be reinstated; this onramp was originally opened in 1985 and closed off in 2001 when Highway 407 ETR opened after concerns from the city over cyclists' safety.[101] As part of the future widening of the QEW, the existing cast-in-place concrete bridges for the North Shore Boulevard underpass were joined by two precast box girder structures on either side in 2021.[102]

 
QEW at the Highway 403 split in Oakville prior to reconstruction that commenced in 2016; the Ford Assembly Plant is in the background.

In Oakville, improvements are being made to the Highway 403/QEW/Ford Drive interchange. Since 2017, traffic using the existing loop ramp in the NE corner to access Highway 403/QEW was directed onto a new overpass instead of sharing the existing overpass with westbound Highway 403 traffic. From November 2016 to 2020, the 1970s-era bridges carrying QEW traffic across Ford Drive and the eastbound ramp to Highway 403 were demolished and replaced by new wider structures which can accommodate future HOV lanes and high-mast lighting.[103][104][105] At the present Highway 403 only connects to the QEW west of the interchange, but a new set of flyover ramps are being proposed from Highway 403 to the QEW east of that junction using the existing right-of-way which would allow for a direct freeway connection from Milton to south Mississauga.[106]

There are also plans to twin the bridge spanning the Credit River in Mississauga. A second bridge will be built alongside the existing structure, which will then be repaired while traffic is shifted to the new bridge. In November 2019 the Ford government announced that the historic bridge would be demolished and replaced,[107] but changed course due to public opposition on December 18 by restricting project bids to those that would rehabilitate the structure.[108]

Construction of Ontario's first diverging diamond interchange, at Glendale Avenue, began in January 2021.[109] The new interchange, which includes a dedicated ramp to Airport Road, opened to traffic on September 26, 2022.[110]

A stretch of the QEW from east of Cawthra Road to the west of Etobicoke Creek is to be widened with the removal of the adjacent service roads, with the centerpiece of the project involving reconfiguring the Dixie Road interchange to a five-ramp Parclo and replacing the aging Dixie Road overpass. Construction commenced in May 2022 with an anticipated completion date in July 2026.[111]

In November 2023, the municipal and provincial governments announced a tentative deal which will see responsibility for the Gardiner Expressway and Don Valley Parkway transferred to the provincial government, with the two highways to be maintained as provincial highways. For the foreseeable future, the downloaded QEW segment east of Highway 427 will remain signed as part of the Gardiner.[112][113]

High-occupancy toll lanes edit

On December 7, 2015, Ontario's Transportation Ministry announced it was working on a plan to create permanent high-occupancy toll lanes (HOT) on a 16.5-kilometre (10.3 mi) stretch, in both ways, between Trafalgar Road in Oakville and Guelph Line in Burlington starting on September 15, 2016.[114] This would require vehicles with a single occupant to purchase a permit for such use. (A portion of Highway 427 would also have HOT lanes.) Vehicles classified as environmentally-friendly and denoted with a green license plate would not be required to pay when using the HOT lanes.[115] Prices for the permits had not yet been determined for this plan, described as a pilot project, said Transportation Minister Steven Del Duca during a press conference.[116]

Exit list edit

The following table lists the exits along the QEW. Exits are numbered from Fort Erie to Toronto. The following table lists the major junctions along Queen Elizabeth Way, as noted by the Ministry of Transportation of Ontario.[1] 

DivisionLocationkm[1]miExit[9]DestinationsNotes
Niagara River
Canada–United States border
0.00.0 
 
NY 955B to I-190 – Buffalo
Continuation into New York (state)
Peace Bridge (toll)
Regional Municipality of NiagaraFort EriePeace Bridge Border Crossing
0.20.12  Regional Road 124 (Central Avenue) / Duty Free WayLast Fort Erie-bound exit before U.S.A.; no exit number; no access from Central Avenue to Peace Bridge; Duty Free Way not signed Toronto-bound
1.10.681Concession Road (Regional Road 126)Toronto-bound exit and Fort Erie-bound entrance
2.11.32  To Highway 3 / Thompson Road (Regional Road 122)Toronto-bound exit and Fort Erie-bound entrance
  Regional Road 122 (Thompson Road) / Bertie Street (Regional Road 17)Fort Erie-bound exit and Toronto-bound entrance
4.62.95  Regional Road 19 (Gilmore Road)
6.74.27  Regional Road 21 (Bowen Road) – Stevensville
Fort Erie–Niagara Falls boundary12.27.612  Regional Road 25 (Netherby Road) – Welland
Niagara Falls15.59.616  Regional Road 116 (Sodom Road) – Chippawa, Crystal Beach
22.113.721  Regional Road 47 (Lyons Creek Road) – Welland
26.616.527  Regional Road 49 (McLeod Road)
29.518.330  Highway 420 – The Falls, Niagara Falls U.S.A.
  Regional Road 20 (Lundy's Lane) / Dorchester Road
Split into exits 30A (Hwy 420) and 30B (Lundy's Ln.) Fort Erie-bound
31.519.632  Regional Road 57 (Thorold Stone Road) – Thorold
34.021.134  Regional Road 101 (Mountain Road)
Niagara-on-the-Lake36.522.737  Highway 405Queenston (to Lewiston, New York)Fort Erie-bound exit and Toronto-bound entrance
37.823.538  Regional Road 89 (Glendale Avenue) – Niagara-on-the-LakeCurrently being rebuilt into Ontario's first diverging diamond interchange (DDI)
Welland CanalGarden City Skyway
St. Catharines43.927.344  Regional Road 48 (Niagara Street) / Service Road
45.628.346  Regional Road 44 (Lake Street)
46.929.147  Regional Road 42 (Ontario Street)
Henley Bridge over Twelve Mile Creek
47.729.648  Regional Road 38 (Martindale Road)Toronto-bound exit and Fort Erie-bound entrance
48.430.149  Highway 406Thorold, Welland
  Regional Road 39 (3rd Street / North Service Road)
50.431.351  Regional Road 34 (Seventh Street)
Lincoln54.734.055  Regional Road 26 (Jordan Road) – Jordan Station
57.635.857  Regional Road 24 (Victoria Avenue) – Vineland
64.340.064  Regional Road 18 (Ontario Street) – Beamsville
Grimsby68.142.368  Regional Road 14 (Bartlett Avenue)
70.643.971  Regional Road 12 (Christie Street) / Maple Avenue / Ontario Street
74.246.174  Regional Road 10 (Casablanca Boulevard)
Hamilton77.848.378Fifty RoadFormerly City Road 450
82.951.583Fruitland RoadFormerly City Road 455
88.154.788  City Road 20 (Centennial Parkway)Formerly Highway 20
89  Red Hill Valley Parkway
89.855.890Nikola Tesla Boulevard, Woodward AvenueWoodward Ave. not signed Toronto-bound
93.858.393Eastport Drive (Highway 7189)Toronto-bound exit and Fort Erie-bound entrance
Burlington BayBurlington Bay James N. Allan Skyway
HaltonBurlington97.160.397North Shore Boulevard, Eastport DriveFormerly Highway 2
99.561.899Plains Road, Fairview StreetToronto-bound exit and Fort Erie-bound entrance
100.562.4100   Highway 403 – Hamilton (Downtown), BrantfordBeginning of Highway 403 concurrency; serves John C. Munro Hamilton International Airport
  407 ETR eastToronto-bound exit and Fort Erie-bound entrance; toll highway
101.362.9101  Regional Road 18 (Brant Street)No Toronto-bound exit and Fort Erie-bound entrance
103.264.1102  Regional Road 1 (Guelph Line)
105.265.4105Walkers Line
107.366.7107  Regional Road 20 (Appleby Line)
Burlington–Oakville boundary109.367.9109  Regional Road 21 (Burloak Drive)
Oakville110.968.9110Service RoadFort Erie-bound exit only. Access removed in 2008 to accommodate widening of the QEW for HOV Lanes
111.369.2111  Regional Road 25 (Bronte Road) – Milton
113.470.5113Third Line
116.572.4116  Regional Road 17 (Dorval Drive)
Kerr StreetFort Erie-bound exit only
118.673.7118  Regional Road 3 (Trafalgar Road)
120.074.6119Royal Windsor DriveToronto-bound exit and Fort Erie-bound entrance; formerly Highway 122
123.176.5123  Regional Road 13 (Ford Drive)
   Highway 403 to Highway 401TorontoEnd of Highway 403 concurrency; Toronto-bound exit and Fort Erie-bound entrance
Halton–Peel boundaryOakville–Mississauga boundary124.577.4124  Regional Road 19 (Winston Churchill Boulevard)
PeelMississauga126.678.7126  Regional Road 1 (Erin Mills Parkway) / Southdown RoadSouthdown Rd. was formerly Highway 122
130.781.2130Mississauga Road
132.782.5132Hurontario StreetFormerly Highway 10
134.983.8134  Regional Road 17 (Cawthra Road)
136.784.9136  Regional Road 4 (Dixie Road)Fort Erie-bound exit and Toronto-bound entrance
Toronto138.586.1138Evans Avenue, West Mall, Brown's LineToronto-bound exit and Fort Erie-bound entrance
139.186.4139    Highway 427 to Highway 401 – Pearson Airport
  Gardiner Expressway – Downtown Toronto
Toronto-bound terminus; freeway continues east through downtown Toronto as the Gardiner Expressway
141Evans Avenue, Kipling Avenue
St. Lawrence AvenueFort Erie-bound Right-out exit only; access to Islington Avenue south
142Islington AvenueSigned as exits 142A (south) and 142B (north); no Fort Erie-bound entrance from southbound Islington Avenue
144Park Lawn RoadToronto-bound exit and Fort Erie-bound entrance
145Lake Shore BoulevardFort Erie-bound exit and Toronto-bound entrance; formerly Highway 2 west; former beginning of Highway 2 concurrency
146Lake Shore Boulevard, South KingswayFormer end of Highway 2 concurrency
149Jameson Avenue, Lake Shore Boulevard, Dunn AvenueNo major junctions[117]
153Spadina Avenue
154York Street, Bay Street, Yonge StreetYork Street was formerly Highway 11A; Yonge Street formerly Highway 11
155Jarvis Street, Sherbourne StreetFort Erie-bound exit to Jarvis/Sherbourne, Toronto-bound entrance from Jarvis
  Don Valley Parkway
157Lake Shore BoulevardFormerly Highway 2; former Toronto-bound terminus
1.000 mi = 1.609 km; 1.000 km = 0.621 mi

In popular culture edit

As the principal travel route between Toronto and Buffalo, whenever sports teams from the two cities face each other (particularly the Sabres and Maple Leafs in the National Hockey League) the game is called The Battle of the QEW.[118] This name has also been used to describe CFL games between longtime arch-rivals the Toronto Argonauts and Hamilton Tiger-Cats.

See also edit

References edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ While the Long Island Parkway and several similar roadways opened in the late twenties and early thirties, these parkways were designed to move traffic in and out of a city's downtown. The Middle Road was designed to provide travel between cities, and opened a year before the Pennsylvania Turnpike, the first U.S. highway to do this.

Sources edit

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  2. ^ Miller, Tim; Stancu, Henry (July 27, 2012). "The QEW: 75 Years and Counting". Wheels.ca. from the original on July 14, 2014. Retrieved June 7, 2014.
  3. ^ Stamp 1987, pp. 31–34.
  4. ^ a b Stamp 1987, p. 9.
  5. ^ Walter, Karena (February 21, 2014). "Search Engine: Highway Mysteries Solved". The Niagara Falls Review. from the original on April 20, 2014. Retrieved April 19, 2014.
  6. ^ Ministry of Transportation of Ontario (March 31, 1984). Annual Report 1983–1984 (Report). Government of Ontario. p. 65. Retrieved December 19, 2020.
  7. ^ 1688 to 1923: Geloso, Vincent, A Price Index for Canada, 1688 to 1850 (December 6, 2016). Afterwards, Canadian inflation numbers based on Statistics Canada tables 18-10-0005-01 (formerly CANSIM 326-0021) "Consumer Price Index, annual average, not seasonally adjusted". Statistics Canada. Retrieved April 17, 2021. and table 18-10-0004-13 "Consumer Price Index by product group, monthly, percentage change, not seasonally adjusted, Canada, provinces, Whitehorse, Yellowknife and Iqaluit". Statistics Canada. Retrieved April 17, 2021.
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  59. ^ "Division No. 4 – Hamilton". Annual Report (Report). Department of Highways. March 31, 1965. p. 99.
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  102. ^ https://local-news.ca/2022/02/23/how-things-work-mechanically-stabilized-earth-walls/
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  104. ^ (PDF). Bot Construction Group. Archived from the original (PDF) on December 28, 2016. Retrieved March 14, 2020.
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  107. ^ "Archived copy". from the original on November 24, 2019. Retrieved November 24, 2019.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
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  113. ^ Carter, Adam (November 27, 2023). "Toronto uploads Gardiner, DVP to province, steps aside on Ontario Place redevelopment". CBC News. Retrieved November 27, 2023.
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Bibliography edit

  • Emery, Claire; Ford, Barbara (1967). . Confederation Centennial Committee of Burlington. pp. 179–182. Archived from the original on June 14, 2011. Retrieved May 3, 2010.
  • Filey, Mike (1994). Toronto sketches 3: the way we were. Dundurn Press. pp. 61–62. ISBN 1-55002-227-X. from the original on August 19, 2021. Retrieved February 10, 2010.
  • Shragge, John; Bagnato, Sharon (1984). From Footpaths to Freeways. Ontario Ministry of Transportation and Communications, Historical Committee. ISBN 0-7743-9388-2.
  • Stamp, Robert M. (1987). QEW – Canada's First Superhighway. The Boston Mills Press. ISBN 0-919783-84-8.

External links edit

KML is from Wikidata
  • Live QEW Traffic Cameras through Hamilton, Halton Region and Peel Region
  • Live QEW Traffic Cameras through St. Catharines and Niagara Falls
  • Video of the Niagara-bound QEW from Highway 406 to 420
  • Video of the QEW eastbound in Greater Toronto
  • Queen Elizabeth Way at AsphaltPlanet.ca
  • Dirt Roads to Freeways … And All That, ca.1970s, Archives of Ontario YouTube Channel

queen, elizabeth, confused, with, queen, elizabeth, driveway, series, highway, canadian, province, ontario, linking, toronto, with, niagara, peninsula, buffalo, york, freeway, begins, peace, bridge, fort, erie, travels, kilometres, around, western, lake, ontar. Not to be confused with Queen Elizabeth Driveway The Queen Elizabeth Way QEW is a 400 series highway in the Canadian province of Ontario linking Toronto with the Niagara Peninsula and Buffalo New York The freeway begins at the Peace Bridge in Fort Erie and travels 139 1 kilometres 86 4 mi around the western end of Lake Ontario ending at Highway 427 as the physical highway continues as the Gardiner Expressway into downtown Toronto The QEW is one of Ontario s busiest highways with an average of close to 200 000 vehicles per day on some sections Major highway junctions are at Highway 420 in Niagara Falls Highway 405 in Niagara on the Lake Highway 406 in St Catharines the Red Hill Valley Parkway in Hamilton Highway 403 and Highway 407 in Burlington Highway 403 at the Oakville Mississauga boundary and Highway 427 in Etobicoke Within the Regional Municipality of Halton the QEW is signed concurrently with Highway 403 The speed limit is 100 km h 62 mph throughout most of its length with the exceptions being between Hamilton and St Catharines where the posted limit is 110 km h 68 mph Queen Elizabeth WayQueen Elizabeth Way highlighted in redRoute informationMaintained by the Ministry of Transportation of OntarioLength139 1 km 1 86 4 mi HistoryBuilt 1931 October 14 1956Major junctionsFort Erie endPeace Bridge to I 190 at the Canada United States border in Fort ErieMajor intersections Highway 420 in Niagara Falls Highway 405 in Niagara on the Lake Highway 406 in St Catharines Red Hill Valley Parkway in Hamilton Highway 403 407 ETR in Burlington Highway 403 at the Mississauga Oakville boundaryToronto end Highway 427 Gardiner Expressway in TorontoLocationCountryCanadaProvinceOntarioHighway systemOntario provincial highways Current Former 400 series Highway 427 Highway 502Former provincial highwaysHighway 500 The history of the QEW dates back to 1931 when work began to widen the Middle Road in a similar fashion to the nearby Dundas Highway and Lakeshore Road as a relief project during the Great Depression Following the 1934 provincial election Ontario Minister of Highways Thomas McQuesten and his deputy minister Robert Melville Smith changed the design to be similar to the autobahns of Germany dividing the opposite directions of travel and using grade separated interchanges at major crossroads When opened to traffic in 1937 it was the first intercity divided highway in North America and featured the longest stretch of consistent illumination in the world While not a true freeway at the time it was gradually upgraded widened and modernized beginning in the 1950s more or less taking on its current form by 1975 Since then various projects have continued to widen the route In 1997 the provincial government turned over the responsibility for the section of the QEW between Highway 427 and the Humber River to the City of Toronto who redesignated this segment as a westward extension of the Gardiner Expressway Contents 1 Name and signage 2 Route description 2 1 Fort Erie Niagara Falls 2 2 St Catharines Hamilton 2 3 Burlington Oakville 2 4 Mississauga Toronto 3 History 3 1 Toronto Hamilton Highway 3 2 The Middle Road 3 3 The New Niagara Falls Highway 3 4 Conversion to freeway 3 4 1 1950s Control of access 3 4 2 The Skyways 3 4 3 1960s and 1970s Expansion and new interchanges 3 4 4 1980s to 1997 Growing capacity 3 5 Since 1998 3 5 1 High occupancy toll lanes 4 Exit list 5 In popular culture 6 See also 7 References 7 1 Notes 7 2 Sources 7 3 Bibliography 8 External linksName and signage edit nbsp Original Queen Elizabeth Way signage 1940 The Queen Elizabeth Way was named for the wife and royal consort of King George VI who would later become known as Queen Elizabeth The Queen Mother It is sometimes referred to as the Queen E 2 In 1939 the royal couple toured Canada and the United States in part to bolster support for the United Kingdom in anticipation of war with Nazi Germany and also to mark George VI s coronation The highway received its name to commemorate the visit it was unveiled on June 7 as the King and Queen ceremonially opened the highway at a site near the Henley Bridge in St Catharines Originally the highway featured stylized light standards with the letters ER the Royal Cypher for Elizabeth Regina the Latin equivalent to Queen Elizabeth While mostly replaced with modern lighting masts like other Ontario highways replicas of these stylized ER poles have been installed upon three bridges along the QEW in Mississauga over the Credit River in Oakville over Bronte Creek and in St Catharines over Twelve Mile Creek In addition Highway 420 in Niagara Falls and its extension Falls Avenue has these ER light standards installed since 2002 as a nod to this route being part of the original QEW upon its inauguration in 1940 until being bypassed by QEW s extension to Fort Erie in 1941 3 The markers identifying the QEW have always used blue lettering on a yellow background instead of the black on white scheme other provincial highway markers use They originally showed the highway s full name only in small letters with the large script letters ER placed where the highway number is on other signs In 1955 these were changed to the current design with the lettering QEW 4 Although the QEW has no posted highway number it is considered to be part of the Province of Ontario s 400 series highway network 5 The Ministry of Transportation of Ontario designates the QEW as Highway 451 for internal administrative purposes 6 A monument was originally in the highway median at the Toronto terminus of the highway west of the Humber River bridges dedicated to the 1939 visit of King George VI and Queen Elizabeth and known as the Lucky Lion The column with a crown at the top and a lion at the base was designed by W L Somerville and sculptors Frances Loring and Florence Wyle for 12 000 equivalent to 212 400 in 2021 7 The monument was removed in 1972 in order to accommodate widening of the original QEW and relocated in August 1975 to the nearby Sir Casimir Gzowski Park along Lake Ontario on the east side of the Humber River 8 Route description edit nbsp nbsp QEW just south of interchange with Highway 405 as seen in 2005 and 2009 respectively showing the original railway overpass and the replacement structure which is longer to accommodate the widened freeway The QEW is a 139 km 86 mi route that travels from the Peace Bridge which connects Fort Erie with Buffalo New York to Toronto the economic hub of the province The freeway circles the western lakehead of Lake Ontario cutting through Niagara Falls St Catharines Hamilton Burlington Oakville and Mississauga en route 9 A 22 km 14 mi portion of the freeway in Burlington is signed concurrently with Highway 403 1 Unlike other provincial highways in Ontario the QEW is directionally signed using locations along the route as opposed to cardinal directions Driving towards Toronto the route is signed as QEW Toronto throughout its length In the opposing direction it is signed as QEW Hamilton QEW Niagara and QEW Fort Erie depending on the location 4 Fort Erie Niagara Falls edit The Queen Elizabeth Way begins at the foot of the Peace Bridge which crosses the United States border and connects with I 190 in Buffalo New York A customs booth is between the bridge and the freeway beyond which a toll is charged to Canada bound drivers West of there access is provided to nearby Highway 3 and the Niagara Parkway Through customs the four lane freeway proper begins immediately curving northwest Within Fort Erie interchanges provide access to and from the QEW at Central Avenue Concession Road Thompson Road Gilmore Road and Bowen Road While there is some urban development at the beginning of the freeway the majority of the first 25 km 16 mi are within lowland forests Numerous creeks flow through these forests often flooding them The Willoughby Marsh Conservation Area lies southwest of the freeway approximately 10 km 6 2 mi south of Niagara Falls After an interchange with Lyons Creek Road the freeway turns northward 9 After crossing the Welland River the original route of the Welland Canal the freeway exits the forests and enters agricultural land surrounding the suburbs of Niagara Falls which the highway enters north of the McLeod Road interchange Within the city Highway 420 meets the QEW at a large four level junction and widens to six lanes The opposing carriageways split at this interchange to accommodate the left hand exit entry of the flyover ramps accessing Highway 420 with the Toronto bound traffic passing under these flyovers and a CN rail crossing Exiting the northern fringe of Niagara Falls the freeway again curves northwest and begins to descend through the Niagara Escarpment a World Biosphere Reserve Highway 405 merges with the QEW along the short rural stretch between Niagara Falls and St Catharines While there is no Toronto bound access to Highway 405 Niagara bound drivers can follow this short freeway to the Lewiston Queenston Bridge which crosses the U S border into Lewiston New York The QEW continues west into St Catharines 9 St Catharines Hamilton edit nbsp The Niagara bound QEW at the Red Hill Valley Parkway interchange in Hamilton As the Queen Elizabeth Way enters St Catharines it ascends the Garden City Skyway to cross the Welland Canal This 2 2 km 1 4 mi structure replaced the lift bridge south of it one of two major bottlenecks prior to the early 1960s and is one of two high level skyways along the route As the QEW was the first long distance freeway in North America several modern engineering concepts were not considered in its original 1939 design and although it was modernized in a recent reconstruction that concluded in 2011 further expansion of the highway is inhibited by the proximity of properties throughout most of its length Consequently most of the route beyond the Welland Canal is wedged between service roads which provide access to and from the QEW as well as to local businesses and residences After passing the Ontario Street Regional Road 42 interchange the freeway crosses Martindale Pond which forms the mouth of Twelve Mile Creek West of the crossing is a trumpet interchange with Highway 406 which travels south to Welland after which the QEW crosses out of St Catharines and into the town of Lincoln at Fifteen Mile Creek continuing with a six lane cross section 10 Throughout Lincoln the QEW travels along the Lake Ontario shoreline through the Niagara Fruit Belt numerous wineries line the south side of the freeway Interchanges at Victoria Road Regional Road 24 and Ontario Street Regional Road 18 provide access to the communities of Vineland and Beamsville respectively The latter encroaches upon the south side of the QEW interrupting the otherwise agricultural surroundings of the highway in Lincoln Immediately east of the Bartlett Avenue interchange the freeway enters Grimsby where it becomes sandwiched between the Niagara Escarpment and Lake Ontario The route passes under three overpasses that have remained unchanged since the highway was built Maple Avenue Ontario Street and Christie Street all served by a single diamond interchange South of the Fifty Point Conservation Area the freeway exits the Niagara Region and enters the city of Hamilton 11 Within Hamilton the highway passes almost entirely within an industrial park with interchanges at Fifty Road Fruitland Road and Centennial Parkway formerly Highway 20 The third of these is intertwined with the Red Hill Valley Parkway interchange completed in 2009 at which point the freeway widens to eight lanes From here the freeway curves northwest onto Burlington Beach and begins to ascend the Burlington Bay James N Allan Skyway the second high level bridge along the route As it crosses over the entrance to Hamilton Harbour the freeway enters the Regional Municipality of Halton and descends into the city of Burlington 10 nbsp Panoramic view of Burlington Bay James N Allan Skyway near Beach Boulevard Burlington Oakville edit After descending into Burlington the QEW crosses North Shore Boulevard former Highway 2 and Fairview Street Plains Road as it passes by Mapleview Centre Next to the Burlington Transmission Station the QEW encounters the Freeman Interchange originally opened in 1958 to allow construction of Highway 403 and expanded in the early 1990s to accommodate the western terminus of Highway 407 12 The freeway turns to the east becoming concurrent with Highway 403 through Burlington and Oakville The two routes travel straight though a commercial office area Service roads reappear through this stretch to serve businesses fronting the highway The segment which was expanded in 2011 is eight lanes wide including one high occupancy vehicle lane HOV lanes in each direction which required the construction of a second structure over Sixteen Mile Creek In the eastern end of Oakville the route curves northeast passing the Ford Motor Assembly Plant Highway 403 then diverges north from the QEW while the QEW turns back to the east entering Mississauga and the Peel Region 9 Mississauga Toronto edit nbsp The Queen Elizabeth Way in Mississauga looking west at the Evans Avenue interchange and bridges over Etobicoke Creek Within Mississauga the freeway encounters its narrowest right of way wedged between residential subdivisions on either side that prevent further expansion from its six lane cross section It crosses the Credit River valley where a second bridge will soon be under construction The segment east of the Credit River is being examined for expansion possibilities but like the previous section there is little room for more lanes without property acquisition Some of the interchanges through Mississauga have ramp meters on the entrances onto the QEW meaning only one vehicle is allowed to enter the on ramp per each green light on a traffic signal depending on the time of day or the amount of traffic is on the highway at a certain time After crossing Etobicoke Creek which forms the boundary between Peel Region and Toronto the route passes through a sprawling four level interchange with Highway 427 as the freeway continues eastward as the municipal Gardiner Expressway 9 The QEW formerly continued beyond the Highway 427 interchange to the Old Toronto city limits at the Humber River although this section between was downloaded from provincial to municipal authorities on April 1 1997 and became a westward extension of the Gardiner Expressway Provincial control of the freeway ends shortly after an onramp from Highway 427 municipal ownership is evident from the use of different high mast illumination poles that are shaded to reduce light pollution at the underpasses with Wickman Road and a railway line East of that point the freeway retains its provincial installed conventional lighting as it splits into a short collector express system about ten lanes wide to serve the interchanges with Kipling Avenue and Islington Avenue East of Grand Avenue the municipality s shaded high mast lighting has been erected as the freeway crosses Parklawn Avenue and a CN rail line followed by offramps to Lake Shore Boulevard then it curves as it passes the residential condominium towers of The Queensway Humber Bay neighbourhood along the waterfront the Mr Christie cookie factory which later became a part of Mondelez International and the Ontario Food Terminal on the north side and then a tunnel leading to the Humber Loop streecar right of way 13 As the freeway crosses the west bank of the Humber River this marks the QEW s old eastern terminus and the beginning of the Metro Toronto constructed portion of the Gardiner Coincidentally at the former eastern end of the QEW the Metro built Gardiner Expressway also assumed the provincial Highway 2 designation from Lake Shore Boulevard from Lake Shore Boulevard s on ramp to the Gardiner until most of Highway 2 was decommissioned in 1998 leaving both Lake Shore and the Gardiner without a provincial route number This old demarcation line was quite visible on the freeway as a change in pavement quality and the use of different guardrail and lighting since the late 1960s the province used conventional truss poles originally fitted with mercury halide lamps before being replaced by high pressure sodium lamps in the 1990s while Metro installed had the distinctive cobra neck 30 foot 9 1 m poles with fluorescent tubes that were since swapped for orange low pressure sodium lamps in 1978 14 The Gardiner Expressway continues through downtown Toronto and after crossing the Don River it ends at Lake Shore Boulevard where it ceded the Highway 2 provincial routing back to Lake Shore until 1998 although a partial interchange connects to the Don Valley Parkway DVP which turns ninety degrees and heads northbound when it eventually meets Highway 401 History edit nbsp The QEW opened as The Middle Road in the mid 1930s lacking most modern safety standards Toronto Hamilton Highway edit As automobile use in southern Ontario grew in the early 20th century road design and construction advanced significantly A major issue faced by planners was the improvement of the routes connecting Toronto and Hamilton which were consistently overburdened by the growing traffic levels 15 Following frequent erosion of the former macadamized Lakeshore Road 16 a cement road known as the Toronto Hamilton Highway was proposed in January 1914 17 The highway was designed to run along the lake shore instead of Dundas Street to the north because the numerous hills encountered along Dundas would have increased costs without improving accessibility Middle Road a dirt lane named because of its position between the two was not considered since Lakeshore and Dundas were both overcrowded and in need of serious repairs 18 Construction began on November 8 1914 but dragged on throughout the ongoing war 15 19 It was formally opened on November 24 1917 16 5 5 m 18 ft wide and nearly 64 km 40 mi long It was the first concrete road in Ontario as well as one of the longest stretches of concrete road between two cities in the world 20 Though many minor improvements in alignment were made the original highway was without modern bridges for the crossings of the Credit River and Bronte Etobicoke and Mimico Creeks 21 Modern concrete arch bridges for all crossings except Bronte Creek were completed in 1919 22 The Middle Road edit Main article The Middle Road nbsp The Toronto entrance to the QEW and the Queen Elizabeth Way Monument in 1940 In 1974 the monument was removed It was later reinstalled nearby in 1975 Over the next decade vehicle usage increased substantially and by 1920 Lakeshore Road was again highly congested on weekends 23 In response the Department of Highways examined improving another road between Toronto and Hamilton The road 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 24 Construction on what was then known as the Queen Street Extension west of Toronto began in early 1931 as a Great Depression relief project 25 Before the highway could be completed Thomas McQuesten was appointed the new minister of the Department of Highways with Robert Melville Smith as deputy minister following the 1934 provincial elections 26 Smith inspired by the German autobahns new dual lane divided highways modified the design for Ontario roads 27 and McQuesten ordered that the Middle Road be converted into this new form of highway 28 29 30 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 24 By the end of 1937 the Middle Road was open between Toronto and Burlington When it opened it was the first intercity divided highway in North America Note 1 and boasted the longest continuous stretch of illumination in the world until the Second World War 31 32 The New Niagara Falls Highway edit McQuesten also foresaw the financial opportunities that came with cross border tourism and opening the Ontario frontier to Americans In 1937 construction began on a new dual highway from Hamilton to Niagara Falls first known as the Hamilton Niagara Falls Highway along the bottom of the Niagara Escarpment This route was intended to connect with the Middle Road on the opposing shore of Lake Ontario 33 Work began at the end of March to grade the route between Stoney Creek and Jordan The Hamilton Niagara Falls Highway connected to the Middle Road via a trumpet junction known as the Burlington Interchange 34 35 The prospect of removing hundreds of acres of farmland did not sit well with many especially farmers in the path of the new highway Rumours spread the prices paid for land were to be well below market value and local protests erupted throughout the summer However the purpose of the new highway was to replace the congested winding and hilly route of Highway 8 along the escarpment several groups of collisions that summer gradually persuaded the public to support the new highway By the autumn 340 acres 140 ha of fruitland were cleared to make way for the route 36 Over the next two years numerous bridges and cloverleaf interchanges along the new highway were constructed In addition a large traffic circle was built in Stoney Creek to connect with Highway 20 The majority of this structural work was completed by June 1939 However despite being opened to traffic between Stoney Creek and Jordan the majority of the new route was gravelled Over a ten week period in the late spring and early summer of 1940 58 km 36 mi were paved completing the four lane highway between Hamilton and Niagara Falls It soon came time to name the new highway and an upcoming visit by King George VI and Queen Elizabeth proved to be the focal point for a dedication ceremony On June 7 1939 the two royal family members drove along both the newly connected Toronto Hamilton and Hamilton Niagara Falls highways and passed through a light beam near the Henley Bridge in St Catharines 37 This caused two Union Jacks to swing out revealing a sign which read The Queen Elizabeth Way 38 However the ceremony only named the segment of the highway between St Catharines and Niagara Falls as The Queen Elizabeth Way The remainder of the road was still known by various names including the Toronto Burlington Hamilton Highway and The New Middle Road Highway 38 On August 23 1940 McQuesten cut a ribbon at the Henley Bridge in St Catharines and officially declared the Queen Elizabeth Way open between Toronto and Niagara Falls at which point the entire route was given the Queen Elizabeth Way name 39 Over a ten week period in the late spring and early summer of 1940 58 km 36 mi were paved completing the four lane highway between Hamilton and Niagara Falls Construction on an extension towards Fort Erie which became known as the QEW Extension was underway but the ongoing war delayed its completion As an interim measure the unpaved highway was opened during the summer of 1941 Bypassed by the new QEW extension to Fort Erie in 1941 the Niagara Falls bridge approach became a spur route that was no longer part of the QEW so it was officially named the Rainbow Bridge Approach for the next three decades until upgraded and designated as Highway 420 in 1972 Two lanes of pavement were laid in 1946 but the four lane highway was not fully paved until 1956 with the portion from Niagara Falls to Fort Erie being the last to be fully paved The entire route from Toronto s Humber River all the way to Fort Erie all named as the QEW was officially opened on October 14 of that year completing the envisioned highway 25 years after work had begun 40 Conversion to freeway edit nbsp Long traffic jams such as this one entering Toronto prior to the construction of the Gardiner Expressway became commonplace on the unupgraded highway 1950s Control of access edit Despite some modern infrastructure including traffic circles interchanges and some grade separations the majority of the new superhighway was not controlled access This meant existing farmers and homeowners along several segments that were once concession roads were permitted to build driveways and entrances onto the road In addition the majority of the crossroads encountered along the route were at grade intersections This combined with the ever increasing number of automobiles traffic jams accidents and deteriorating pavement led the Department of Highways to state it had begun salvaging the QEW in its 1953 annual report 41 The first new interchange opened at Dixie Road in 1953 beginning a seven year program to make the Hamilton Toronto section into a full fledged freeway 42 Over the next three years the route was improved west to Highway 10 Hurontario Street This work was completed in early 1956 Service roads were installed and 13 intersections eliminated resulting in a 50 reduction of the accident rate along that section 43 In Toronto work began in 1955 to construct the Gardiner Expressway which would tie in with the end of the QEW 44 The first section of the Gardiner connecting the QEW to Jameson Avenue was officially opened by Metropolitan Toronto chairman Fred Gardiner and Premier Leslie Frost on August 8 1958 45 Work was also underway on the Toronto Bypass involving the upgrade of Highway 27 to a freeway between the QEW and the new Highway 401 Construction began in 1953 46 and included an upgrade of the cloverleaf interchange with the QEW with larger loop ramps This interchange would become one of the worst bottlenecks in the province a decade after its completion according to Highways Minister Charles MacNaughton 47 nbsp Expanding the QEW to six lanes between Hamilton and Toronto required the expansion of several large bridges such as this one at Bronte Creek in 1959 The former Service Road interchange west of Bronte Creek is under construction in the background On September 11 1957 construction began to widen the QEW to six lanes between Highway 27 and the Humber River It was completed by December 1958 48 as were interchanges with Mississauga Road and Kerr Street 49 Service roads allowed engineers to separate local access from the highway and avoid space consuming interchanges in many places 41 Therefore interchanges were only opened at Bronte Road then Highway 25 Kerr Street Royal Windsor Drive then Highway 122 Southdown Road now Erin Mills Parkway north of the interchange Mississauga Road Hurontario Street then Highway 10 Cawthra Road Dixie Road and Highway 27 The Skyways edit Two major projects were ongoing near Burlington at this point On April 29 1952 the W E Fitzgerald struck the two lane lift bridge at the entrance to Hamilton Harbour 50 Damage to the crossing resulted in the QEW s closure until a temporary bridge was erected To remedy what was becoming a major delay and hazard the Department of Highways began planning a high level bridge to cross the shipping channel Immediately west of the Guelph Line interchange construction also began to improve access to the new bridge with the Freeman Diversion a new routing of the QEW that would bypass the existing Middle Road section which passed through the community of Freeman that was becoming increasingly built up then connect to a new three way junction the Freeman Interchange with the proposed Chedoke Expressway and continue to the existing Burlington Interchange which would retain the underpass for Middle Road but be reconfigured to accept traffic primarily from the Diversion Work on the new bridge and Diversion proceeded over the next six years 51 nbsp The Garden City Skyway in September 1963 soon before opening The old bridge lies to the left raised for a passing ship Traffic is queued on both sides a frequent occurrence each summer until the skyway was built The Freeman Diversion opened to traffic in August 1958 52 with the old alignment becoming an eastward extension of Plains Road still directly accessible via a split west of Guelph Line 9 Premier Frost opened the 2 700 metre long 8 900 ft four lane skyway two months later on October 30 Although the skyway greatly reduced traffic delays it was not without controversy due to its height cost tolling and most especially its name Residents in Burlington demanded it be named the Burlington Skyway while Hamilton residents countered with the Hamilton Skyway As a compromise the Thomas B McQuesten Skyway was proposed However the provincial government had the final say in the matter and opted to name it the Burlington Bay Skyway Tolls were collected beginning on November 10 51 Elsewhere in St Catharines planning was already advanced on a second skyway to cross the Welland Canal The Homer Lift Bridge a longstanding feature along Highway 8 was another point where the QEW narrowed to two lanes and traffic faced regular delays Construction of the Homer Skyway as it was tentatively known began in July 1960 and progressed over the following three years 51 53 The 20 million in 1963 176 000 000 adjusted for inflation structure was officially opened by Premier John Robarts on November 15 1963 However traffic had already been flowing on the 2 200 metre long 7 200 ft bridge since October 18 54 As with the Burlington Bay Skyway tolls were collected on the new bridge However the name was almost unanimously chosen by St Catharines residents to be the Garden City Skyway 55 The collection of tolls on both skyways continued until December 28 1973 56 nbsp The Shook s Hill interchange serving Erin Mills Parkway in June 1961 This rotary junction was the only example built in Ontario It was reconfigured to a conventional Parclo A4 in 2001 1960s and 1970s Expansion and new interchanges edit On September 15 1960 the Shook s Hill interchange a rotary junction or grade separated traffic circle the only example in Ontario although this interchange type is common in the United Kingdom was completed at what is now Erin Mills Parkway It was opened to traffic the following day and completed the program to make the QEW a freeway between Burlington and Toronto 57 58 A final project to reconstruct the intersection with Brant Street into an interchange was carried out in 1964 and made the QEW a freeway between Hamilton and Toronto 59 By 1963 work was underway to improve the Niagara Falls Hamilton stretch of the QEW into a controlled access highway 60 At the end of 1966 the QEW was six lanes wide through Mississauga and Toronto as well as between the Freeman Interchange and east of Brant Street 61 This six laning was extended west from Ninth Line to Kerr Street by 1968 The remaining section of four lane highway along the Burlington to Toronto stretch between Brant Street and Kerr Street was reconstructed beginning in 1970 and completed by 1972 62 63 The late 1960s and early 1970s also saw the complete reconstruction of three important interchanges the Rainbow Bridge Approach later Highway 420 in Niagara Falls Highway 20 Centennial Parkway in Hamilton and Highway 27 in Toronto The former two were traffic circles in place since the QEW was opened in 1940 the third was a large cloverleaf interchange that had become outdated with the expansion of Highway 27 to twelve lanes throughout the 1960s The connections with the Rainbow Bridge Approach and with Highway 27 required new massive high speed interchanges to accommodate freeway to freeway traffic movements 41 44 nbsp The reconstruction of the interchange between QEW and Highway 27 later renumbered to Highway 427 from a cloverleaf to a semi directional T took just one year in the late 1960s Note the temporary diversion of QEW traffic to an overpass that would eventually be used for The Queensway The four level junction with Highway 27 was built over 48 5 ha 120 acres and required the construction of 19 bridges and the equivalent of 42 km 26 mi of two lane roadway as well as the temporary diversion of QEW traffic to an overpass that would eventually be used for The Queensway Construction began in September 1968 64 although preliminary work had been ongoing since 1966 61 the interchange opened to traffic on November 14 1969 Between the recently expanded Highway 27 which would be renumbered as Highway 427 on December 4 1971 and Lake Shore Boulevard the QEW was also expanded to 8 10 lanes which included a short collector express system between Kipling Avenue and Royal York Road 64 65 Construction of the four level interchange between the QEW and Rainbow Bridge Approach began in 1971 removing the two traffic circles along the approach at the QEW and Dorchester Road 66 The interchange between the QEW and Lundy s Lane Highway 20 was also removed instead the new interchange provided access to Montrose Road 67 The work was completed by April 1972 at which point the Rainbow Bridge Approach was designated as Highway 420 68 Planning for the removal of the Stoney Creek traffic circle was completed by 1970 62 and reconstruction began in 1974 69 This involved the removal of a rail line which crossed through the circle and was the demise of one of two major features along the route 41 44 The new interchange opened in 1978 70 completing the transformation of the QEW into a controlled access highway 69 During the late 1970s construction was carried out on several new interchanges between Hamilton and Toronto New interchanges at Dorval Drive and Trafalgar Road replaced the one at Kerr Street In Mississauga work commenced at Cawthra Road while in Burlington a new interchange was built at Appleby Line 71 72 nbsp The Freeman Interchange in Burlington 1980s to 1997 Growing capacity edit Now functioning as a freeway the QEW was already overburdened by the ever increasing number of vehicles The Burlington Bay Skyway which was built to bypass Hamilton Harbour and the Port of Hamilton was the lone four lane link on the route between Hamilton and Toronto It was initially designed to handle 50 000 vehicles daily but by 1973 there were 60 000 vehicles crossing it Preliminary work on a second parallel structure began a decade later in 1983 73 In July of that year Transportation Minister James Snow broke ground for the new bridge 55 Construction was carried out over two years and the twinned structure was opened on October 11 1985 56 It was named the James N Allan Skyway in honour of James Allan Minister of Highways during construction of the original skyway The new name was not well received by locals and debate erupted once again whilst the original bridge was closed and repaired for several years 55 It reopened on August 22 1988 56 with Toronto bound traffic crossing the original bridge The twin structure was renamed the Burlington Bay James N Allan Skyway though it is commonly referred to as simply the Burlington Skyway 55 Alongside the twinning of the skyway to eight lanes the QEW was widened to at least six lanes from the Freeman Interchange to Centennial Parkway A variable lighting system changeable message signs and traffic cameras were added to create a new traffic management system called COMPASS Modern interchanges were constructed for Fairview Street Plains Road steel tub girder bridges replaced the 1937 built structure originally used for the Burlington Interchange 74 and Northshore Boulevard then Highway 2 including a collector lane for Niagara bound traffic and on off ramps to Eastport Drive Eastport Drive was built at the same time to relieve traffic on Beach Boulevard This work was completed between late 1984 and 1990 75 76 nbsp The former QEW in Etobicoke which was re designated as part of the Gardiner Expressway in 1997 looking east from Royal York Road overpass With the expanded capacity of the skyway and the unanticipated traffic volumes on Highway 403 the Freeman Interchange was now faced with a capacity problem 77 To resolve this the renamed Ministry of Transportation began planning for the missing link of Highway 403 between Burlington and Mississauga that would run parallel to the QEW 78 this right of way would be sold to the 407 ETR consortium in 1995 and built as part of that route 79 Work began in August 1991 to reconfigure the interchange to modern standards which included realigning the QEW carriageways as mainline traffic and adding a fourth leg for the future Burlington Mississauga link Due to land and cost constraints of the reconstruction this necessitated replacing the directional ramp with a lower capacity loop ramp for the movement from Toronto bound QEW to the Brantford bound Highway 403 as some traffic was expected to be diverted away from the Burlington Skyway to the under construction Lincoln M Alexander Parkway and planned Red Creek Expressway The rebuilt Freeman Interchange was partially opened on October 23 1993 to serve the existing QEW and Highway 403 segments the first sod for what would open as Highway 407 was turned that day 80 The completed ramps the first to be built were cast in place post tensioned bridges to cross Highway 403 westbound followed in 2000 by precast girder bridges to pass over the North Service Road 81 82 connecting to the future Burlington Mississauga freeway sat unused until that segment finally opened on July 30 2001 as part of Highway 407 ETR 83 Budgetary restraints in the 1990s forced the provincial government to sell off or download many highways to lower levels of government or in the case of Highway 407 to a private consortium 84 As part of recommendations the QEW east of Highway 427 to the Humber River was transferred to the responsibility of Metro Toronto The transfer took place on April 1 1997 14 The city subsequently renamed it as part of the Gardiner Expressway 85 After the provincial downloading and Amalgamation of Toronto much of this former QEW has remained largely unchanged though some segments have received a mix of high mast and low masts with shaded high pressure sodium lamps similar to the Don Valley Parkway while the old steel guardrail in the median was replaced by an Ontario tall wall concrete barrier in 2007 Worn out bilingual provincial signage have received unilingual replacements while billboards which the province had long prohibited have been erected in proximity of the now municipal freeway 14 Since 1998 edit The Shook s Hill rotary interchange originally opened in 1960 with Erin Mills Parkway and Southdown Road was completely reconstructed to a conventional Parclo A4 from May 1999 to 2001 86 The nearby Hurontario Street interchange originally a cloverleaf junction was reconfigured to a five ramp Parclo by 2010 87 The Red Hill Valley Parkway which opened on November 16 2007 added a significant new interchange to the QEW 88 The ramp to the southbound parkway did not open until December 2008 89 The nearby interchange to Burlington Street had its 1958 built overpass replaced to accommodate the widening of the QEW to eight lanes which included a collector lane on the Niagara bound QEW to avoid weaving that otherwise would have resulted from the close proximity to the Red Hill Valley Parkway junction 90 Construction was completed in 2009 91 nbsp HOV lanes along the co signed QEW Highway 403 From 1998 to 2003 the QEW between Brant Street and Guelph Line was expanded from four to eight lanes 92 necessitating the removal of the underused Freeman Diversion split including the Niagara bound carriageway s left hand exit to Plains Road so the Toronto bound carriageway could be shifted next to the Niagara bound carriageway where the opposing directions would be separated by a concrete median barrier and high mast lighting This complemented the replacement of the existing railway grade separation where each carriageway had its own underpass in order to accommodate the Plains Road off ramp with a new single structure wide enough to accommodate both directions of the expanded freeway Plains Road was redirected to the existing service road Queensway Drive Harvester Road that meets Guelph Line at an intersection just south of Guelph Line s interchange with the QEW The interchange with Guelph Line originally a full cloverleaf when built with the northern half modified to a diamond in the mid 1960s 93 94 was reconfigured to modern Parlo A4 that exclusively served QEW traffic after the ramps to Plains Road were removed which was completed in 2006 95 Starting in 2007 the highway was widened to permit an additional HOV lane in either direction between Guelph Line and Trafalgar Road which involved twinning the Bronte Creek and Sixteen Mile Creek Bridges following by rehabilitating the original structures 96 These lanes were opened to traffic on November 29 2010 97 Work began in 2005 to widen the QEW from four to six lanes through St Catharines from Highway 406 to the Garden City Skyway 98 This segment whose original design dated back to 1939 saw several interchanges improved and numerous structures replaced although the widened Henley Bridge kept its classic architecture while existing service roads and local properties beside the freeway were largely retained Work was completed on August 26 2011 at a cost of 186 million 99 100 In the late 2000s for the section between the Freeman Interchange to North Shore Boulevard an additional lane was added for Niagara bound traffic while the widening of the structure crossing Fairview Street Plains Road enabled the loop ramp from Fairview Street to be reinstated this onramp was originally opened in 1985 and closed off in 2001 when Highway 407 ETR opened after concerns from the city over cyclists safety 101 As part of the future widening of the QEW the existing cast in place concrete bridges for the North Shore Boulevard underpass were joined by two precast box girder structures on either side in 2021 102 nbsp QEW at the Highway 403 split in Oakville prior to reconstruction that commenced in 2016 the Ford Assembly Plant is in the background In Oakville improvements are being made to the Highway 403 QEW Ford Drive interchange Since 2017 traffic using the existing loop ramp in the NE corner to access Highway 403 QEW was directed onto a new overpass instead of sharing the existing overpass with westbound Highway 403 traffic From November 2016 to 2020 the 1970s era bridges carrying QEW traffic across Ford Drive and the eastbound ramp to Highway 403 were demolished and replaced by new wider structures which can accommodate future HOV lanes and high mast lighting 103 104 105 At the present Highway 403 only connects to the QEW west of the interchange but a new set of flyover ramps are being proposed from Highway 403 to the QEW east of that junction using the existing right of way which would allow for a direct freeway connection from Milton to south Mississauga 106 There are also plans to twin the bridge spanning the Credit River in Mississauga A second bridge will be built alongside the existing structure which will then be repaired while traffic is shifted to the new bridge In November 2019 the Ford government announced that the historic bridge would be demolished and replaced 107 but changed course due to public opposition on December 18 by restricting project bids to those that would rehabilitate the structure 108 Construction of Ontario s first diverging diamond interchange at Glendale Avenue began in January 2021 109 The new interchange which includes a dedicated ramp to Airport Road opened to traffic on September 26 2022 110 A stretch of the QEW from east of Cawthra Road to the west of Etobicoke Creek is to be widened with the removal of the adjacent service roads with the centerpiece of the project involving reconfiguring the Dixie Road interchange to a five ramp Parclo and replacing the aging Dixie Road overpass Construction commenced in May 2022 with an anticipated completion date in July 2026 111 In November 2023 the municipal and provincial governments announced a tentative deal which will see responsibility for the Gardiner Expressway and Don Valley Parkway transferred to the provincial government with the two highways to be maintained as provincial highways For the foreseeable future the downloaded QEW segment east of Highway 427 will remain signed as part of the Gardiner 112 113 High occupancy toll lanes edit On December 7 2015 Ontario s Transportation Ministry announced it was working on a plan to create permanent high occupancy toll lanes HOT on a 16 5 kilometre 10 3 mi stretch in both ways between Trafalgar Road in Oakville and Guelph Line in Burlington starting on September 15 2016 114 This would require vehicles with a single occupant to purchase a permit for such use A portion of Highway 427 would also have HOT lanes Vehicles classified as environmentally friendly and denoted with a green license plate would not be required to pay when using the HOT lanes 115 Prices for the permits had not yet been determined for this plan described as a pilot project said Transportation Minister Steven Del Duca during a press conference 116 Exit list editThe following table lists the exits along the QEW Exits are numbered from Fort Erie to Toronto The following table lists the major junctions along Queen Elizabeth Way as noted by the Ministry of Transportation of Ontario 1 DivisionLocationkm 1 miExit 9 DestinationsNotes Niagara RiverCanada United States border0 00 0 nbsp nbsp NY 955B to I 190 BuffaloContinuation into New York state Peace Bridge toll Regional Municipality of NiagaraFort EriePeace Bridge Border Crossing 0 20 12 nbsp Regional Road 124 Central Avenue Duty Free WayLast Fort Erie bound exit before U S A no exit number no access from Central Avenue to Peace Bridge Duty Free Way not signed Toronto bound 1 10 681Concession Road Regional Road 126 Toronto bound exit and Fort Erie bound entrance 2 11 32 nbsp To Highway 3 Thompson Road Regional Road 122 Toronto bound exit and Fort Erie bound entrance nbsp Regional Road 122 Thompson Road Bertie Street Regional Road 17 Fort Erie bound exit and Toronto bound entrance 4 62 95 nbsp Regional Road 19 Gilmore Road 6 74 27 nbsp Regional Road 21 Bowen Road Stevensville Fort Erie Niagara Falls boundary12 27 612 nbsp Regional Road 25 Netherby Road Welland Niagara Falls15 59 616 nbsp Regional Road 116 Sodom Road Chippawa Crystal Beach 22 113 721 nbsp Regional Road 47 Lyons Creek Road Welland 26 616 527 nbsp Regional Road 49 McLeod Road 29 518 330 nbsp Highway 420 The Falls Niagara Falls U S A nbsp Regional Road 20 Lundy s Lane Dorchester RoadSplit into exits 30A Hwy 420 and 30B Lundy s Ln Fort Erie bound 31 519 632 nbsp Regional Road 57 Thorold Stone Road Thorold 34 021 134 nbsp Regional Road 101 Mountain Road Niagara on the Lake36 522 737 nbsp Highway 405 Queenston to Lewiston New York Fort Erie bound exit and Toronto bound entrance 37 823 538 nbsp Regional Road 89 Glendale Avenue Niagara on the LakeCurrently being rebuilt into Ontario s first diverging diamond interchange DDI Welland CanalGarden City Skyway St Catharines43 927 344 nbsp Regional Road 48 Niagara Street Service Road 45 628 346 nbsp Regional Road 44 Lake Street 46 929 147 nbsp Regional Road 42 Ontario Street Henley Bridge over Twelve Mile Creek 47 729 648 nbsp Regional Road 38 Martindale Road Toronto bound exit and Fort Erie bound entrance 48 430 149 nbsp Highway 406 Thorold Welland nbsp Regional Road 39 3rd Street North Service Road 50 431 351 nbsp Regional Road 34 Seventh Street Lincoln54 734 055 nbsp Regional Road 26 Jordan Road Jordan Station 57 635 857 nbsp Regional Road 24 Victoria Avenue Vineland 64 340 064 nbsp Regional Road 18 Ontario Street Beamsville Grimsby68 142 368 nbsp Regional Road 14 Bartlett Avenue 70 643 971 nbsp Regional Road 12 Christie Street Maple Avenue Ontario Street 74 246 174 nbsp Regional Road 10 Casablanca Boulevard Hamilton77 848 378Fifty RoadFormerly City Road 450 82 951 583Fruitland RoadFormerly City Road 455 88 154 788 nbsp City Road 20 Centennial Parkway Formerly Highway 20 89 nbsp Red Hill Valley Parkway 89 855 890Nikola Tesla Boulevard Woodward AvenueWoodward Ave not signed Toronto bound 93 858 393Eastport Drive Highway 7189 Toronto bound exit and Fort Erie bound entrance Burlington BayBurlington Bay James N Allan Skyway HaltonBurlington97 160 397North Shore Boulevard Eastport DriveFormerly Highway 2 99 561 899Plains Road Fairview StreetToronto bound exit and Fort Erie bound entrance 100 562 4100 nbsp nbsp Highway 403 Hamilton Downtown BrantfordBeginning of Highway 403 concurrency serves John C Munro Hamilton International Airport nbsp 407 ETR eastToronto bound exit and Fort Erie bound entrance toll highway 101 362 9101 nbsp Regional Road 18 Brant Street No Toronto bound exit and Fort Erie bound entrance 103 264 1102 nbsp Regional Road 1 Guelph Line 105 265 4105Walkers Line 107 366 7107 nbsp Regional Road 20 Appleby Line Burlington Oakville boundary109 367 9109 nbsp Regional Road 21 Burloak Drive Oakville110 968 9110Service RoadFort Erie bound exit only Access removed in 2008 to accommodate widening of the QEW for HOV Lanes 111 369 2111 nbsp Regional Road 25 Bronte Road Milton 113 470 5113Third Line 116 572 4116 nbsp Regional Road 17 Dorval Drive Kerr StreetFort Erie bound exit only 118 673 7118 nbsp Regional Road 3 Trafalgar Road 120 074 6119Royal Windsor DriveToronto bound exit and Fort Erie bound entrance formerly Highway 122 123 176 5123 nbsp Regional Road 13 Ford Drive nbsp nbsp Highway 403 to Highway 401 TorontoEnd of Highway 403 concurrency Toronto bound exit and Fort Erie bound entrance Halton Peel boundaryOakville Mississauga boundary124 577 4124 nbsp Regional Road 19 Winston Churchill Boulevard PeelMississauga126 678 7126 nbsp Regional Road 1 Erin Mills Parkway Southdown RoadSouthdown Rd was formerly Highway 122 130 781 2130Mississauga Road 132 782 5132Hurontario StreetFormerly Highway 10 134 983 8134 nbsp Regional Road 17 Cawthra Road 136 784 9136 nbsp Regional Road 4 Dixie Road Fort Erie bound exit and Toronto bound entrance Toronto138 586 1138Evans Avenue West Mall Brown s LineToronto bound exit and Fort Erie bound entrance 139 186 4139 nbsp nbsp nbsp Highway 427 to Highway 401 Pearson Airport nbsp Gardiner Expressway Downtown TorontoToronto bound terminus freeway continues east through downtown Toronto as the Gardiner Expressway 141Evans Avenue Kipling Avenue St Lawrence AvenueFort Erie bound Right out exit only access to Islington Avenue south 142Islington AvenueSigned as exits 142A south and 142B north no Fort Erie bound entrance from southbound Islington Avenue 144Park Lawn RoadToronto bound exit and Fort Erie bound entrance 145Lake Shore BoulevardFort Erie bound exit and Toronto bound entrance formerly Highway 2 west former beginning of Highway 2 concurrency 146Lake Shore Boulevard South KingswayFormer end of Highway 2 concurrency 149Jameson Avenue Lake Shore Boulevard Dunn AvenueNo major junctions 117 153Spadina Avenue 154York Street Bay Street Yonge StreetYork Street was formerly Highway 11A Yonge Street formerly Highway 11 155Jarvis Street Sherbourne StreetFort Erie bound exit to Jarvis Sherbourne Toronto bound entrance from Jarvis nbsp Don Valley Parkway 157Lake Shore BoulevardFormerly Highway 2 former Toronto bound terminus 1 000 mi 1 609 km 1 000 km 0 621 mi Closed former Concurrency terminus Incomplete access Tolled Route transitionIn popular culture editAs the principal travel route between Toronto and Buffalo whenever sports teams from the two cities face each other particularly the Sabres and Maple Leafs in the National Hockey League the game is called The Battle of the QEW 118 This name has also been used to describe CFL games between longtime arch rivals the Toronto Argonauts and Hamilton Tiger Cats See also edit nbsp Roads portal nbsp Canada portal Monarchy in Ontario Royal eponyms in CanadaReferences editNotes edit While the Long Island Parkway and several similar roadways opened in the late twenties and early thirties these parkways were designed to move traffic in and out of a city s downtown The Middle Road was designed to provide travel between cities and opened a year before the Pennsylvania Turnpike the first U S highway to do this Sources edit a b c Ministry of Transportation of Ontario 2007 Annual Average Daily Traffic AADT counts Government of Ontario Archived from the original on July 6 2011 Retrieved May 26 2011 Miller Tim Stancu Henry July 27 2012 The QEW 75 Years and Counting Wheels ca Archived from the original on July 14 2014 Retrieved June 7 2014 Stamp 1987 pp 31 34 a b Stamp 1987 p 9 Walter Karena February 21 2014 Search Engine Highway Mysteries Solved The Niagara Falls Review Archived from the original on April 20 2014 Retrieved April 19 2014 Ministry of Transportation of Ontario March 31 1984 Annual Report 1983 1984 Report Government of Ontario p 65 Retrieved December 19 2020 1688 to 1923 Geloso Vincent A Price Index for Canada 1688 to 1850 December 6 2016 Afterwards Canadian inflation numbers based on Statistics Canada tables 18 10 0005 01 formerly CANSIM 326 0021 Consumer Price Index annual average not seasonally adjusted Statistics Canada Retrieved April 17 2021 and table 18 10 0004 13 Consumer Price Index by product group monthly percentage change not seasonally adjusted Canada provinces Whitehorse Yellowknife and Iqaluit Statistics Canada Retrieved April 17 2021 Stamp 1987 pp 43 46 a b c d e f g Ontario Back Road Atlas Map Cartography by MapArt Peter Heiler 2010 pp 18 19 24 L28 U36 ISBN 978 1 55198 226 7 a b Golden Horseshoe Map Cartography by MapArt Peter Heiler 2011 pp 715 716 726 L17 N28 ISBN 978 1 55198 877 1 Golden Horseshoe Map Cartography by MapArt Peter Heiler 2011 pp 711 715 E33 F42 K1 L17 ISBN 978 1 55198 877 1 QEW and Highway 403 Freeman Interchange Preliminary Design Study and Class Environmental Assessment PDF qew403freeman ca October 10 2017 Archived from the original PDF on July 29 2021 Retrieved February 6 2021 White Craig ed 2002 The Golden Horseshoe 2002 MapArt p 119 a b c Highway Transfers List Report Ministry of Transportation of Ontario April 1 1997 p 3 a b Filey Mike November 20 2011 Road Pioneers of the Past Life The Toronto Sun p 44 a b Emery amp Ford 1967 pp 179 182 Toronto Hamilton Highway Proposed The Toronto World January 22 1914 p 14 Archived from the original on October 19 2021 Retrieved February 9 2010 Shragge amp Bagnato 1984 p 55 George H Gooderham December 26 1917 Difficulties in Construction of Toronto Hamilton Highway Engineering and the Contract Record 1048 9 Shragge p 55 the Toronto to Hamilton highway which when completed in 1917 was both Ontario s first concrete highway and one of the longest such inter city stretches in the world H S Van Sconynoc October 31 1917 Completion of Last Section of the Toronto Hamilton Concrete Highway Engineering and the Contract Record 899 902 Four Concrete Overhead Arch Bridges on Toronto Hamilton Highway Engineering and the Contract Record 301 306 April 2 1919 Increased Volume of Traffic County And Suburbs Toronto World June 26 1920 p 7 Archived from the original on August 18 2021 Retrieved February 12 2010 a b Shragge amp Bagnato 1984 pp 79 81 Filey 1994 pp 61 62 Shragge John G 2007 Highway 401 The Story Archived from the original on March 28 2008 Retrieved February 12 2010 Stamp 1987 pp 19 20 Hopes to Improve Roads The Gazette Montreal February 18 1936 p 14 Archived from the original on October 19 2021 Retrieved February 9 2010 English Bob March 16 2006 Remember That Little Four Lane Freeway Globe And Mail Toronto Retrieved February 9 2010 the freeway concept was promoted by Hamiltonian Thomas B McQuesten then the highway minister What would become The Queen Elizabeth Way was already under construction but McQuesten changed it into a dual lane divided highway based on Germany s new autobahns permanent dead link Stamp 1987 pp 11 12 Stamp 1987 p 11 Stamp 1987 p 47 Stamp 1987 p 25 1 2 Stamp 1987 p 27 Stamp 1987 pp 25 28 Sawchuk Bill June 9 2017 Building the Henley Bridge St Catharines Standard Archived from the original on August 24 2017 Retrieved August 23 2017 a b Filey Mike June 6 2010 A Royal Trip Around T O Life The Toronto Sun Sun Media p 37 Stamp 1987 pp 33 36 Stamp 1987 p 49 a b c d Stamp 1987 pp 50 54 Division No 6 Toronto Annual Report Report Department of Highways March 31 1954 p 61 Accident Alley Crashes Reduced by 50 Per Cent The Globe and Mail Toronto July 21 1956 p 22 a b c Stamp 1987 p 56 Frederick G Gardiner 13 000 000 Super Highway Opened Today By Premier Frost The Globe and Mail Clarke W A March 31 1954 Report of the Chief Engineer Annual Report Report Department of Highways p 12 Six Mile Stretch of Highway 27 Will Be Expanded to Six Lanes The Globe and Mail Toronto May 4 1965 p 5 Chronology Annual Report Report Department of Highways March 31 1959 p 267 Construction Report Central Area Annual Report Report Department of Highways March 31 1959 p 26 Blanchard Douglas April 30 1952 May Blow Up Bridge Expert Toronto Daily Star pp 1 3 a b c Stamp 1987 pp 59 61 AADT Traffic Volumes 1955 1969 And Traffic Collision Data 1967 1969 Department of Highways 1969 p 10 Shragge amp Bagnato 1984 p 81 Chronology Annual Report Report Department of Highways March 31 1964 p 296 a b c d Stamp 1987 pp 61 62 a b c Fast Facts from Hamilton s Past MyHamilton Archived from the original on September 5 2006 Retrieved January 8 2007 Division No 6 Toronto Annual Report Report Department of Highways March 31 1960 p 84 The construction of the Shook s Hill interchange will complete the facilities necessary for the complete control of access of the Queen Elizabeth Way between the Humber River and Highway 25 Chronology Annual Report Report Department of Highways March 31 1961 p 269 Division No 4 Hamilton Annual Report Report Department of Highways March 31 1965 p 99 Construction Central Area Annual Report Report Department of Highways March 31 1963 pp 31 32 a b Summary of the Report Annual Report Report Department of Highways March 31 1967 p xvi a b Queen Elizabeth Way Oakville Fort Erie Highway Construction Program Report Department of Highways 1970 1971 p xii Queen Elizabeth Way Oakville to Fort Erie Highway Construction Program Report Ministry of Transportation and Communications 1971 1972 p xii a b Drivers Face Three More Years of QE 27 401 Motoring Misery The Toronto Star July 22 1969 p 43 QE and 27 Interchange Opens Friday The Toronto Star November 13 1969 p 1 Stamp 1987 p 65 Ontario Road Map Map Cartography by Cartography Section Ministry of Transportation and Communications 1977 South Central Ontario inset Queen Elizabeth Way Hamilton to Fort Erie Highway Construction Program 1972 73 Report Ministry of Transportation and Communications April 1972 p xv a b Construction Program Report Ministry of Transportation and Communications 1975 1976 p xiii From Saltfleet to Stoney Creek Virtual Museum of Canada Archived from the original on February 22 2014 Retrieved February 6 2014 Construction Program Report Ministry of Transportation and Communications 1976 1977 p XIII Construction Program Report Ministry of Transportation and Communications 1980 1981 p XVI Shragge amp Bagnato 1984 p 83 https local news ca 2022 07 08 how things work what makes a good bridge Provincial Highways Construction Projects Report Ministry of Transportation and Communications 1985 1986 p X ISSN 0714 1149 Provincial Highways Construction Projects Report Ministry of Transportation and Communications 1989 1990 p 9 ISSN 0714 1149 https www thekingshighway ca PHOTOS qew 578 xlg jpg Provincial Highways Construction Projects Report Ministry of Transportation and Communications 1991 1992 p 8 ISSN 0714 1149 Boyle Theresa April 1 1995 Rae Announces 407 Extension News The Toronto Star p A12 Rae also announced yesterday that the province will ask for private sector proposals to design and construct the Burlington Oakville link of Highway 403 as part of Highway 407 Tait Eleanor October 23 1993 Sod Broken On QEW and Hwy 403 Link News The Hamilton Spectator p T8 https local news ca 2022 07 08 how things work what makes a good bridge https www thekingshighway ca PHOTOS Hwy11photos10 htm 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 June 30 2014 Schankula Tina November 18 1997 Transfer of Responsibility for Provincial Highways to Municipalities Report Ontario Federation of Agriculture The Gardiner Expressway Get Toronto Moving Archived from the original on February 23 2014 Retrieved June 7 2014 Hicks Kathleen A 2003 Clarkson and its Many Corners PDF Mississauga Library System p 258 ISBN 0 9697873 4 0 Archived PDF from the original on December 22 2014 Retrieved February 16 2014 Ministry of Transportation of Ontario 2010 2010 Completed Projects Southern Highways Program 2011 to 2015 PDF Report Government of Ontario p 8 Archived from the original PDF on February 22 2014 Retrieved February 16 2014 Red Hill Opening Delayed Local The Hamilton Spectator November 15 2007 p A4 De Lazzer Rachel November 13 2008 Ramp Delay Puts Pressure on Woodward Local The Hamilton Spectator p A4 https www thekingshighway ca PHOTOS QEWphotos17 htm Ministry of Transportation of Ontario 2010 Red Hill Creek Expressway Interchange QEW Burlington Street to Centennial Parkway Southern Highways Program 2010 2014 PDF Report Government of Ontario p 6 Archived from the original PDF on February 22 2014 Retrieved February 8 2014 Archived copy PDF Archived PDF from the original on July 29 2021 Retrieved February 14 2021 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint archived copy as title link https www thekingshighway ca PHOTOS 5 qew 745 lg jpg https www thekingshighway ca PHOTOS QEWphotos4 htm Archived copy PDF Archived PDF from the original on July 29 2021 Retrieved February 6 2021 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint archived copy as title link New 11 million twin bridge at Bronte InsideHalton com Archived from the original on February 8 2021 Retrieved January 29 2021 Ministry of Transportation November 29 2010 HOV Lanes Open On QEW Between Burlington and Oakville Government of Ontario Archived from the original on January 9 2015 Retrieved February 8 2014 Phillips Carol December 17 2004 QEW Widening Starts With 15 2m Bridges Project The Hamilton Spectator p A7 QEW widening right on schedule MTO says NiagaraThisWeek com Archived from the original on October 19 2021 Retrieved January 29 2021 Queen Elizabeth Way Widening in St Catharines Ontario Complete Daily Commercial News August 26 2011 Archived from the original on February 22 2014 Retrieved February 8 2014 Province has fight on their hands over proposed on ramp Mayor Archived from the original on October 19 2021 Retrieved January 27 2021 https local news ca 2022 02 23 how things work mechanically stabilized earth walls http www botconstruction ca projects recent projects html Archived March 24 2020 at the Wayback Machine Projects Bot Construction Group MTO 2015 2013 PDF Bot Construction Group Archived from the original PDF on December 28 2016 Retrieved March 14 2020 https www mcintoshperry com project qew hwy 403 interchange expansion Central Region June 2003 Transportation Environmental Study Report Highway 403 and Queen Elizabeth Way from Trafalgar Road to Winston Churchill Boulevard PDF Ministry of Transportation of Ontario Archived PDF from the original on March 7 2021 Retrieved January 30 2018 Archived copy Archived from the original on November 24 2019 Retrieved November 24 2019 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint archived copy as title link More than 80 year old highway bridge west of Toronto spared tear down as province pledges to rehabilitate December 18 2019 Archived from the original on December 19 2019 Retrieved January 30 2021 QEW and Glendale Ave Diverging Diamond Interchange Niagara Region Retrieved April 27 2022 Hocking Kyle September 23 2022 Ontario s first Diverging Diamond interchange to open September 26 CityNews Retrieved September 25 2022 https www qewdixie com Benzie Robert Rider David November 27 2023 Ontario and Toronto agree to new deal including the upload of DVP and Gardiner Expressway Toronto Star Retrieved November 27 2023 Carter Adam November 27 2023 Toronto uploads Gardiner DVP to province steps aside on Ontario Place redevelopment CBC News Retrieved November 27 2023 Edwards Peter June 23 2016 Toll Lanes Coming to QEW on Sept 15 Toronto Star Archived from the original on June 24 2016 Retrieved June 23 2016 Kalinowski Tess December 7 2015 Toll Lanes Coming to the QEW Toronto Star Archived from the original on December 7 2015 Retrieved December 7 2015 HOT Lanes Derided as Lexus Lanes Inch Ahead in Ontario CBC News CBC Radio Canada December 7 2015 Archived from the original on December 8 2015 Retrieved December 7 2015 Road and expressway closures road restrictions street events City of Toronto Retrieved February 5 2024 Campbell Caitlin April 4 2012 Sabres vs Leafs Historic Rivalry The Hockey Writers Archived from the original on December 22 2015 Retrieved August 23 2015 Bibliography edit Emery Claire Ford Barbara 1967 From Pathway to Skyway Confederation Centennial Committee of Burlington pp 179 182 Archived from the original on June 14 2011 Retrieved May 3 2010 Filey Mike 1994 Toronto sketches 3 the way we were Dundurn Press pp 61 62 ISBN 1 55002 227 X Archived from the original on August 19 2021 Retrieved February 10 2010 Shragge John Bagnato Sharon 1984 From Footpaths to Freeways Ontario Ministry of Transportation and Communications Historical Committee ISBN 0 7743 9388 2 Stamp Robert M 1987 QEW Canada s First Superhighway The Boston Mills Press ISBN 0 919783 84 8 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Queen Elizabeth Way KML file edit help Template Attached KML Queen Elizabeth WayKML is from Wikidata Live QEW Traffic Cameras through Hamilton Halton Region and Peel Region Live QEW Traffic Cameras through St Catharines and Niagara Falls Video of the Niagara bound QEW from Highway 406 to 420 Video of the QEW eastbound in Greater Toronto Queen Elizabeth Way at AsphaltPlanet ca Dirt Roads to Freeways And All That ca 1970s Archives of Ontario YouTube Channel Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Queen Elizabeth Way amp oldid 1216327452, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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