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Manitoba Highway 1

Provincial Trunk Highway 1 (PTH 1) is Manitoba's section of the Trans-Canada Highway. It is a heavily used, 4-lane divided highway, with the exception of a short 18 km section in the southeastern corner of the province. It is the main link between southern Manitoba's largest cities, and also serves as the province's main transportation link to the neighbouring provinces of Saskatchewan (to the west) and Ontario (to the east). The highway is the only major east-west divided highway in Manitoba, and carries a large majority of east-west traffic within and through the province. It has full freeway status sections at Portage la Prairie and Winnipeg. The total distance of the Trans-Canada Highway in Manitoba is approximately 490 km (300 mi).

Provincial Trunk Highway 1

Trans-Canada Highway
PTH 1 highlighted in red.
Route information
Maintained by Manitoba Infrastructure
Length488.8 km[1] (303.7 mi)
Existed1942–present
Major junctions
West end Hwy 1 (TCH) at Saskatchewan border near Kirkella
Major intersections PTH 41 at Kirkella
PTH 83 near Virden
PTH 21 near Griswold
PTH 10 in Brandon
PTH 5 near Carberry
PTH 34 near Austin
PTH 16 (TCH) near Portage la Prairie
PTH 26 near Portage la Prairie
PTH 13 near Oakville
PTH 26 near St. François Xavier
PTH 100 (TCH) / PTH 101 in Winnipeg
PTH 59 in Winnipeg
PTH 12 near Ste. Anne
PTH 11 near Hadashville
PTH 44 near West Hawk Lake
East end Highway 17 / TCH at Ontario border near West Hawk Lake
Location
CountryCanada
ProvinceManitoba
Rural municipalities
Major cities
Towns
Highway system
PR 632 PTH 1A

PTH 1 is a very important part of the national highway system. It is the only road that links the province of Manitoba (and thus the entirety of Western Canada) with the province of Ontario, making it a major section of Canada's primary commercial and leisure route for all traffic travelling between Canada's largest cities, from Toronto and Montreal in the east to Calgary and Vancouver in the west.

Routing Edit

 
Eastbound on the Trans Canada Highway in south-western Manitoba near Carberry.

The highway is routed from west to east across the province of Manitoba. It begins at the western provincial boundary with Saskatchewan, connecting with Saskatchewan's Highway 1 to become Manitoba Trans-Canada 1. The highway is designated as T-C 1 throughout Manitoba until it reaches the eastern provincial boundary with Ontario, where it continues as the main route to Kenora, Ontario and the rest of Eastern Canada as Highway 17.

The entire length of the Trans-Canada Highway in the province of Manitoba is a 4-lane divided highway, with the exception of the Winnipeg city route and an 18 kilometre section in eastern Manitoba between the town of Falcon Lake and the Manitoba-Ontario provincial boundary which is a two-lane highway.

PTH 1 has full expressway status on the routes around Winnipeg on the Perimeter Highway, and around Portage la Prairie. Plans do exist to bring the entire length of PTH 1 (except the Winnipeg city route) to full expressway status in the future (mentioned at the list of Manitoba expressways). Currently, exit numbers only exist at three interchanges,[2] and only small sections of PTH 1 and the Perimeter Highway have freeway status.

In the Winnipeg metro area, the Trans-Canada Highway has two official routes. The main route passes directly through the city of Winnipeg on city streets, entering the city from the west and continuing along Portage Avenue, Broadway, Main Street, Queen Elizabeth Way, St. Mary's Road, St. Anne's Road, and Fermor Avenue where it re-joins the Perimeter Highway (T-C 100) and continues east on TC 1. An alternate routing exits the main T-C 1 route on the western edge of Winnipeg onto the Perimeter Highway (T-C 100), which by-passes the city completely. The Perimeter Highway is a ring road which encircles Winnipeg and is frequently used by commuters and through traffic on the Trans Canada Highway wishing to avoid congested city streets.

History Edit

 
The "Manitoba Welcome/Bienvenue" sign, entering Manitoba from Saskatchewan at the provincial boundary on TCH 1.

The first Provincial Trunk Highways in Manitoba were numbered in 1926.[3] The original Highway 1 was one of nine highways fanning out from Winnipeg, but was different in that it fanned out from the west and the east. Highway 1 was routed via many already-existing highways and provincial secondary roads. (From west to east), these are:[4][5][6]

In 1949, Highway 1 had been rerouted on new construction northeast of Griswold, with the part of old route from Highway 21 to Highway 28 (as well as Highway 28 itself) becoming part of Highway 21, and the section from Highway 21 eastward being removed from the system, but later becoming PR 455. By the early 1950s, Highway 1 had become an important east-west route in all of the western provinces. Most of the provincial highways that Highway 1 originally traversed on were re-numbered and designated as Highway 4 between 1958 and 1968, and the #1 was relocated to its present route. In 1962, the Trans-Canada Highway in Manitoba was fully completed, and Highway 1 across all of the western provinces was incorporated as part of the Trans-Canada Highway.

In 1955, most intra-city traffic in the Winnipeg area was diverted onto the (then) newly built Perimeter Highway. Later that year, the Perimeter Highway's southern (PTH 100) section was merged with the Trans-Canada Highway system, due to the amount of traffic using it to bypass the city. That section of the highway was highly used, and still is today.

Recent developments Edit

On October 6, 2006 the Trans-Canada Highway Portage la Prairie by-pass was closed due to a structural defect found in the bridge over the CN Rail Line. On October 31, 2007, a $19 million project to rebuild the bridge was completed, and the by-pass was fully re-opened to traffic.

On October 25, 2007, a major federal/provincial construction project twinning the highway in western Manitoba between the Saskatchewan-Manitoba provincial boundary and the town of Hargrave was completed, with 34 kilometres (21 mi) of newly divided highway lanes opened to traffic.

On April 9, 2008, the Government of Manitoba announced that construction of a new interchange would begin in the summer of 2008 at the intersection of Highway 16 (the Yellowhead Highway) and the Trans Canada Highway mainline route, located a short distance west of Portage la Prairie.[7] As of 2020, the option for a new interchange was replaced by a study to instead construct a roundabout at this intersection[8]

Speed limits Edit

 
Westbound driving from Kenora, Ontario to Winnipeg, near Lorette (East of Winnipeg)

On February 27, 2008 the Manitoba Highway Traffic Board approved a request by the Government of Manitoba to raise the speed limit on the Trans Canada Highway in Manitoba to 110 km/h along the section between the Saskatchewan-Manitoba provincial boundary and Winnipeg.[9] The speed limit was officially raised on July 1, 2009, though it was only raised on one portion of the highway between the Saskatchewan provincial boundary to Virden.[10] On June 2, 2015, the speed limit between Virden and Headingley increased to 110 km/h, except at Brandon, Carberry, Portage la Prairie, and Elie, where speed is reduced due to major intersections at those locations.[11] The portion of the highway from Winnipeg to the Ontario provincial boundary remains at 100 km/h.

Saskatchewan provincial boundary to Headingley- 110 km/h (70 mph)

Virden- 80 km/h (50 mph)

Brandon- 80 km/h (50 mph)

Carberry- 100 km/h (60 mph)

Portage la Prairie (Freeway)- 100 km/h (60 mph)

Elie- 80 km/h (50 mph)

Headingley-70 km/h (45 mph)

Winnipeg bypass (Perimeter Hwy. PTH #100) - 100 km/h (60 mph)

Winnipeg city route

Portage Ave. - 60 km/h (35 mph) (50 km/h (30 mph) in downtown)

Broadway - 50 km/h (30 mph)

Queen Elizabeth Way. (S. Main Street) - 60 km/h (35 mph)

St. Mary's Rd. - 60 km/h (35 mph)

St. Anne's Rd. - 60 km/h (35 mph)

Fermor Ave. (To Autumnwood Dr./Lakewood Blvd.) - 70 km/h (45 mph)

Fermor Ave. (To Lagimodiere Blvd.) 80 km/h (50 mph)

Fermor Ave. (To Perimeter Hwy.) - 90 km/h (55 mph)

Eastern Manitoba- 100 km/h (60 mph)

All at-grade intersections with traffic lights -80 km/h (50 mph)

Major intersections Edit

DivisionLocationkm[1]miExitDestinationsNotes
Wallace – Woodworth0.00.0  Hwy 1 (TCH) west – ReginaContinuation into Saskatchewan
Kirkella5.53.4  PTH 41 north – St. Lazare
  PR 542 south – Kola
Elkhorn17.110.6  PR 256 (Cavendish Street) – Willen, Cromer, Elkhorn
18.511.5Richhill Avenue E / Road 66 NFormer PR 441 east
Hargrave31.219.4Road 159 WFormer PR 252 south
34.821.6  PTH 83 north – BirtleWest end of PTH 83 concurrency
41.625.8  PTH 83 south – Melita
  PR 259 east – Kenton
East end of PTH 83 concurrency
Town of Virden44.527.7King Street E / Commonwealth Drive
Wallace – Woodworth46.629.0  PR 257 west – Kola
Sifton62.839.0  PR 254 south – Oak Lake BeachWest end of PR 254 concurrency
Oak Lake68.042.3  PR 254 northEast end of PR 254 concurrency
SiftonWhitehead municipality lineGriswold81.750.8  PTH 21 – Shoal Lake, Sioux Valley, Hartney
WhiteheadAlexander94.959.0  PR 250 north – RiversWest end of PR 250 concurrency
98.461.1  PR 250 south – SourisEast end of PR 250 concurrency
Kemnay106.866.4  PTH 1A (TCH) east (City Route) – BrandonLow bridge east of Kemnay; eastbound vehicles higher than 3.7m (12 ft) advised to stay on TCH
110.868.8Crosses the Assiniboine River
111.569.3  PR 459 east – Grand Valley, BrandonInterchange
Elton / Cornwallis115.171.5  PR 270 north – Rapid City, Rivers
City of Brandon121.375.4  PTH 10 south (18th Street) – Brandon, BoissevainWest end of PTH 10 concurrency
123.076.4  PTH 1A (TCH) west (City Route / 1st Street) – Brandon
  PTH 10 north (John Bracken Highway) – Dauphin
East end of PTH 10 concurrency
Elton / Cornwallis127.879.4  PTH 110 south – Boissevain
131.181.5  PR 468 – Justice, Chater
Elton140.087.0  PR 340 south – Douglas
North Cypress – Langford148.292.1  PR 464 north – Brookdale
149.693.0  PR 351 east
164.6102.3  PTH 5 (Parks Route) – Neepawa, CarberryFormer PR 258; site of the 2023 Carberry highway collision
North Cypress – LangfordNorth Norfolk municipality line182.7113.5  PR 351 west – Melbourne
North NorfolkSidney184.3114.5  PR 352 – Firdale, Sidney
Austin196.4122.0  PTH 34 – Gladstone, Holland
MacGregor210.0130.5  PR 350 – Katrime, Lavenham, MacGregor
Bagot219.8136.6  PR 242 – Westbourne, Treherne, Bagot
Portage la Prairie231.3143.7   PTH 16 (TCH) west / YH – Neepawa, Saskatoon
  PR 305 south – St. Claude
West end of Yellowhead Highway concurrency
237.5147.6Crosses the Portage Diversion (Assiniboine River Floodway)
238.9148.4  PTH 1A (TCH) east (City Route) – Portage la PrairieInterchange
City of Portage la Prairie246.6153.2  PR 240 – Southport, St. ClaudeInterchange
Portage la Prairie250.7155.8  PTH 1A (TCH) west (City Route) – Portage la PrairieInterchange; no eastbound exit
251.9156.5  PTH 26 east (Chemin Assiniboine Trail) – Poplar PointFormer PTH 1 & 4 east
260.0161.6Crosses the Assiniboine River
266.7165.7  PTH 13 south – Oakville, Carman
  PR 430 north – St. Ambroise
275.2171.0Road 19 WestFormer PR 331 west
Cartier278.6173.1Benard RoadFormer PR 426 north
Elie285.4177.3  PR 248 – St. Eustache, Elie
294.1182.7  PR 332 south – Dacotah, Starbuck
301.5187.3  PR 424Former PR 241
CartierSt. François Xavier municipality line303.1188.3Crosses the Assiniboine River
St. François Xavier303.9188.8  PTH 26 west (Chemin Assiniboine Trail) – St. François XavierFormer PTH 1 & 4 west
Headingley311.0193.2Dodds RoadFormer west end of PR 334 concurrency
311.4193.5  PR 334 southFormer east end of PR 334 concurrency. PR 334's northern terminus is now here.
City of Winnipeg317.0197.0318    Perimeter Highway (PTH 100 east / PTH 101 north) / Route 85 begins – KenoraInterchange; signed as exits 318A (east) and 318B (north); PTH 100 / PTH 101 exit 42; west end of Route 85 (Portage Avenue) concurrency
321.7199.9  Moray Street (Route 96 south)
326.0202.6   Route 90 (Century Street) – AirportInterchange; to PTH 7 north
326.5202.9Empress Street – Polo ParkInterchange; eastbound access to Route 90 north
329.0204.4   Portage Avenue (Route 85 east) / YH / BroadwayPTH 1 turns onto Broadway; east end of Yellowhead Highway / Route 85 concurrency
329.3–
329.5
204.6–
204.7
  Maryland Street (Route 70 south)
  Sherbrook Street (Route 70 north)
One-way pair
330.1205.1  Osborne Street (Route 62)Manitoba Legislative Building
330.9–
331.0
205.6–
205.7
  Donald Street (Route 42 south)
  Smith Street (Route 42 north)
One-way pair; to PTH 75 south
331.3205.9  Main Street (Route 52 north)PTH 1 turns onto Main Street; west end of Route 52 concurrency; to PTH 9 north
331.7206.1Main Street Bridge crosses the Assiniboine River
331.9206.2River Avenue (via Stradbrook Avenue)No westbound access
332.1206.4Norwood Bridge crosses the Red River
332.3206.5  Marion Street (Route 115 east)No eastbound access; to PTH 15 east
334.7208.0   St. Anne's Road (Route 150 begins) / St. Mary's Road (Route 52 south)PTH 1 turns on St. Annes's Road; east end of Route 52 concurrency; west end of Route 150 concurrency; Route 150 northern terminus
335.9208.7   Fermor Avenue (Route 135 west) / St. Anne's Road (Route 150 south)PTH 1 turns onto Fermor Avenue; east end of Route 150 concurrency; west end of Route 135 concurrency
337.2209.5  Archibald Street (Route 30 north)
337.9210.0   PTH 59 / Lagimodiere Boulevard (Route 20)
339.5211.0  Route 135 endsWinnipeg City Limits; east end of Route 135 concurrency
Springfield342.5212.8Plessis Road northInterchange
347.0215.6348   Perimeter Highway (PTH 100 west / PTH 101 north) – BrandonInterchange; signed as exits 348A (west) and 348B (north)
347.6216.0Crosses the Red River Floodway
Deacon's Corner349.5217.2  PR 207 – Lorette
Taché357.4222.1  PR 206 north – Dugald, OakbankWest end of PR 206 concurrency
359.4223.3  PR 206 south – LandmarkEast end of PR 206 concurrency
363.3225.7  PR 501 east (Rosewood Road)
367.3228.2  To PR 207 (Dawson Road) – Dufresne
Ste. Anne374.2232.5375  PTH 12 (MOM's Way) – Beausejour, Steinbach, Ste. AnneInterchange; signed as exits 375A (south) and 375B (north)
382.5237.7  PR 207 west (Dawson Road)
Richer389.0241.7  PR 302 – Ross, Richer
Reynolds415.5258.2Spruce SidingFormer PR 506 east
429.0266.6  PTH 11 north – Lac du Bonnet, Hadashville
431.1267.9  PR 503 east (Old Dawson Trail)
Prawda437.2271.7  PR 506 north
451.0280.2  PR 308 south – East Braintree
No. 1468.3291.0Enters Whiteshell Provincial Park
Falcon Lake473.6294.3  PR 301 east – Falcon LakeInterchange
484.7301.2  PTH 44 west – West Hawk LakeInterchange; former PTH 1 & 4 west
488.8303.7   Highway 17 east / TCH – KenoraContinuation into Ontario
1.000 mi = 1.609 km; 1.000 km = 0.621 mi

See also Edit

KML is from Wikidata

References Edit

  1. ^ a b Google (January 25, 2018). "PTH 1 in Manitoba" (Map). Google Maps. Google. Retrieved January 25, 2018.
  2. ^ Exits 318, 348, & 375[verification needed]
  3. ^ "A.C. Emmett and the Development of Manitoba's Highways". The Government of Manitoba. Retrieved 2008-02-03.
  4. ^ . The H.M. Gousha Company. Archived from the original on 2007-09-27. Retrieved 2008-02-03.
  5. ^ . R. V. Droz. Archived from the original on 2009-10-27. Retrieved 2008-02-03.
  6. ^ . The Atlas of Canada. Archived from the original on 2012-02-29. Retrieved 2008-02-03.
  7. ^ . gov.mb.ca. Archived from the original on 2016-03-03. Retrieved 2017-09-04.
  8. ^ "PROVINCE ANNOUNCES IMPROVEMENTS TO INTERSECTION OF TRANS-CANADA HIGHWAY AND PTH 16". gov.mb.ca. Retrieved 2020-07-16.
  9. ^ . Archived from the original on 2015-09-24. Retrieved 2008-05-15.
  10. ^ . gov.mb.ca. Archived from the original on 2016-03-03. Retrieved 2017-09-04.
  11. ^ "TransCanada speed limit in Manitoba increases to 110 km/h on June 2". cbc.ca. 23 April 2015.

External links Edit

  • Official Name and Location - Declaration of Provincial Trunk Highways Regulation - The Highways and Transportation Act - Provincial Government of Manitoba
  • Official Highway Map - Published and maintained by the Department of Infrastructure - Provincial Government of Manitoba (see Legend and Maps#1,2 & 3)
  • Google Maps Search - Provincial Trunk Highway 1
Preceded by Trans-Canada Highway
  Provincial Trunk Highway 1
Succeeded by
Preceded by
Preceded by Succeeded by
Preceded by Yellowhead Highway
   Provincial Trunk Highway 1
Succeeded by

manitoba, highway, provincial, trunk, highway, manitoba, section, trans, canada, highway, heavily, used, lane, divided, highway, with, exception, short, section, southeastern, corner, province, main, link, between, southern, manitoba, largest, cities, also, se. Provincial Trunk Highway 1 PTH 1 is Manitoba s section of the Trans Canada Highway It is a heavily used 4 lane divided highway with the exception of a short 18 km section in the southeastern corner of the province It is the main link between southern Manitoba s largest cities and also serves as the province s main transportation link to the neighbouring provinces of Saskatchewan to the west and Ontario to the east The highway is the only major east west divided highway in Manitoba and carries a large majority of east west traffic within and through the province It has full freeway status sections at Portage la Prairie and Winnipeg The total distance of the Trans Canada Highway in Manitoba is approximately 490 km 300 mi Provincial Trunk Highway 1Trans Canada HighwayPTH 1 highlighted in red Route informationMaintained by Manitoba InfrastructureLength488 8 km 1 303 7 mi Existed1942 presentMajor junctionsWest endHwy 1 TCH at Saskatchewan border near KirkellaMajor intersectionsPTH 41 at Kirkella PTH 83 near Virden PTH 21 near Griswold PTH 10 in Brandon PTH 5 near Carberry PTH 34 near Austin PTH 16 TCH near Portage la Prairie PTH 26 near Portage la Prairie PTH 13 near Oakville PTH 26 near St Francois Xavier PTH 100 TCH PTH 101 in Winnipeg PTH 59 in Winnipeg PTH 12 near Ste Anne PTH 11 near Hadashville PTH 44 near West Hawk LakeEast endHighway 17 TCH at Ontario border near West Hawk LakeLocationCountryCanadaProvinceManitobaRural municipalitiesCartierCornwallisEltonHeadingleyNorth Cypress LangfordNorth NorfolkPortage la PrairieReynoldsSiftonSpringfieldSt Francois XavierSte AnneTacheWallace WoodworthWhiteheadMajor citiesBrandonPortage la PrairieWinnipegTownsVirdenHighway systemProvincial highways in ManitobaWinnipeg City Routes PR 632 PTH 1APTH 1 is a very important part of the national highway system It is the only road that links the province of Manitoba and thus the entirety of Western Canada with the province of Ontario making it a major section of Canada s primary commercial and leisure route for all traffic travelling between Canada s largest cities from Toronto and Montreal in the east to Calgary and Vancouver in the west Contents 1 Routing 2 History 2 1 Recent developments 3 Speed limits 4 Major intersections 5 See also 6 References 7 External linksRouting Edit nbsp Eastbound on the Trans Canada Highway in south western Manitoba near Carberry The highway is routed from west to east across the province of Manitoba It begins at the western provincial boundary with Saskatchewan connecting with Saskatchewan s Highway 1 to become Manitoba Trans Canada 1 The highway is designated as T C 1 throughout Manitoba until it reaches the eastern provincial boundary with Ontario where it continues as the main route to Kenora Ontario and the rest of Eastern Canada as Highway 17 The entire length of the Trans Canada Highway in the province of Manitoba is a 4 lane divided highway with the exception of the Winnipeg city route and an 18 kilometre section in eastern Manitoba between the town of Falcon Lake and the Manitoba Ontario provincial boundary which is a two lane highway PTH 1 has full expressway status on the routes around Winnipeg on the Perimeter Highway and around Portage la Prairie Plans do exist to bring the entire length of PTH 1 except the Winnipeg city route to full expressway status in the future mentioned at the list of Manitoba expressways Currently exit numbers only exist at three interchanges 2 and only small sections of PTH 1 and the Perimeter Highway have freeway status In the Winnipeg metro area the Trans Canada Highway has two official routes The main route passes directly through the city of Winnipeg on city streets entering the city from the west and continuing along Portage Avenue Broadway Main Street Queen Elizabeth Way St Mary s Road St Anne s Road and Fermor Avenue where it re joins the Perimeter Highway T C 100 and continues east on TC 1 An alternate routing exits the main T C 1 route on the western edge of Winnipeg onto the Perimeter Highway T C 100 which by passes the city completely The Perimeter Highway is a ring road which encircles Winnipeg and is frequently used by commuters and through traffic on the Trans Canada Highway wishing to avoid congested city streets History Edit nbsp The Manitoba Welcome Bienvenue sign entering Manitoba from Saskatchewan at the provincial boundary on TCH 1 The first Provincial Trunk Highways in Manitoba were numbered in 1926 3 The original Highway 1 was one of nine highways fanning out from Winnipeg but was different in that it fanned out from the west and the east Highway 1 was routed via many already existing highways and provincial secondary roads From west to east these are 4 5 6 Highway 1A into and out of Brandon Provincial Road 351 into and out of Carberry Highway 1A through Portage la Prairie Highway 26 from Portage la Prairie to Headingley Highway 9 from downtown Winnipeg to Lockport Highway 44 from Lockport to Whiteshell Provincial ParkIn 1949 Highway 1 had been rerouted on new construction northeast of Griswold with the part of old route from Highway 21 to Highway 28 as well as Highway 28 itself becoming part of Highway 21 and the section from Highway 21 eastward being removed from the system but later becoming PR 455 By the early 1950s Highway 1 had become an important east west route in all of the western provinces Most of the provincial highways that Highway 1 originally traversed on were re numbered and designated as Highway 4 between 1958 and 1968 and the 1 was relocated to its present route In 1962 the Trans Canada Highway in Manitoba was fully completed and Highway 1 across all of the western provinces was incorporated as part of the Trans Canada Highway In 1955 most intra city traffic in the Winnipeg area was diverted onto the then newly built Perimeter Highway Later that year the Perimeter Highway s southern PTH 100 section was merged with the Trans Canada Highway system due to the amount of traffic using it to bypass the city That section of the highway was highly used and still is today Recent developments Edit On October 6 2006 the Trans Canada Highway Portage la Prairie by pass was closed due to a structural defect found in the bridge over the CN Rail Line On October 31 2007 a 19 million project to rebuild the bridge was completed and the by pass was fully re opened to traffic On October 25 2007 a major federal provincial construction project twinning the highway in western Manitoba between the Saskatchewan Manitoba provincial boundary and the town of Hargrave was completed with 34 kilometres 21 mi of newly divided highway lanes opened to traffic On April 9 2008 the Government of Manitoba announced that construction of a new interchange would begin in the summer of 2008 at the intersection of Highway 16 the Yellowhead Highway and the Trans Canada Highway mainline route located a short distance west of Portage la Prairie 7 As of 2020 the option for a new interchange was replaced by a study to instead construct a roundabout at this intersection 8 Speed limits Edit nbsp Westbound driving from Kenora Ontario to Winnipeg near Lorette East of Winnipeg On February 27 2008 the Manitoba Highway Traffic Board approved a request by the Government of Manitoba to raise the speed limit on the Trans Canada Highway in Manitoba to 110 km h along the section between the Saskatchewan Manitoba provincial boundary and Winnipeg 9 The speed limit was officially raised on July 1 2009 though it was only raised on one portion of the highway between the Saskatchewan provincial boundary to Virden 10 On June 2 2015 the speed limit between Virden and Headingley increased to 110 km h except at Brandon Carberry Portage la Prairie and Elie where speed is reduced due to major intersections at those locations 11 The portion of the highway from Winnipeg to the Ontario provincial boundary remains at 100 km h Saskatchewan provincial boundary to Headingley 110 km h 70 mph Virden 80 km h 50 mph Brandon 80 km h 50 mph Carberry 100 km h 60 mph Portage la Prairie Freeway 100 km h 60 mph Elie 80 km h 50 mph Headingley 70 km h 45 mph Winnipeg bypass Perimeter Hwy PTH 100 100 km h 60 mph Winnipeg city routePortage Ave 60 km h 35 mph 50 km h 30 mph in downtown Broadway 50 km h 30 mph Queen Elizabeth Way S Main Street 60 km h 35 mph St Mary s Rd 60 km h 35 mph St Anne s Rd 60 km h 35 mph Fermor Ave To Autumnwood Dr Lakewood Blvd 70 km h 45 mph Fermor Ave To Lagimodiere Blvd 80 km h 50 mph Fermor Ave To Perimeter Hwy 90 km h 55 mph Eastern Manitoba 100 km h 60 mph All at grade intersections with traffic lights 80 km h 50 mph Major intersections EditDivisionLocationkm 1 miExitDestinationsNotesWallace Woodworth 0 00 0 nbsp Hwy 1 TCH west ReginaContinuation into SaskatchewanKirkella5 53 4 nbsp PTH 41 north St Lazare nbsp PR 542 south KolaElkhorn17 110 6 nbsp PR 256 Cavendish Street Willen Cromer Elkhorn18 511 5Richhill Avenue E Road 66 NFormer PR 441 eastHargrave31 219 4Road 159 WFormer PR 252 south 34 821 6 nbsp PTH 83 north BirtleWest end of PTH 83 concurrency 41 625 8 nbsp PTH 83 south Melita nbsp PR 259 east KentonEast end of PTH 83 concurrencyTown of Virden44 527 7King Street E Commonwealth DriveWallace Woodworth 46 629 0 nbsp PR 257 west KolaSifton 62 839 0 nbsp PR 254 south Oak Lake BeachWest end of PR 254 concurrencyOak Lake68 042 3 nbsp PR 254 northEast end of PR 254 concurrencySifton Whitehead municipality lineGriswold81 750 8 nbsp PTH 21 Shoal Lake Sioux Valley HartneyWhiteheadAlexander94 959 0 nbsp PR 250 north RiversWest end of PR 250 concurrency 98 461 1 nbsp PR 250 south SourisEast end of PR 250 concurrencyKemnay106 866 4 nbsp PTH 1A TCH east City Route BrandonLow bridge east of Kemnay eastbound vehicles higher than 3 7m 12 ft advised to stay on TCH 110 868 8Crosses the Assiniboine River 111 569 3 nbsp PR 459 east Grand Valley BrandonInterchangeElton Cornwallis 115 171 5 nbsp PR 270 north Rapid City RiversCity of Brandon121 375 4 nbsp PTH 10 south 18th Street Brandon BoissevainWest end of PTH 10 concurrency123 076 4 nbsp PTH 1A TCH west City Route 1st Street Brandon nbsp PTH 10 north John Bracken Highway DauphinEast end of PTH 10 concurrencyElton Cornwallis 127 879 4 nbsp PTH 110 south Boissevain 131 181 5 nbsp PR 468 Justice ChaterElton 140 087 0 nbsp PR 340 south DouglasNorth Cypress Langford 148 292 1 nbsp PR 464 north Brookdale 149 693 0 nbsp PR 351 east 164 6102 3 nbsp PTH 5 Parks Route Neepawa CarberryFormer PR 258 site of the 2023 Carberry highway collisionNorth Cypress Langford North Norfolk municipality line 182 7113 5 nbsp PR 351 west MelbourneNorth NorfolkSidney184 3114 5 nbsp PR 352 Firdale SidneyAustin196 4122 0 nbsp PTH 34 Gladstone HollandMacGregor210 0130 5 nbsp PR 350 Katrime Lavenham MacGregorBagot219 8136 6 nbsp PR 242 Westbourne Treherne BagotPortage la Prairie 231 3143 7 nbsp nbsp PTH 16 TCH west YH Neepawa Saskatoon nbsp PR 305 south St ClaudeWest end of Yellowhead Highway concurrency 237 5147 6Crosses the Portage Diversion Assiniboine River Floodway 238 9148 4 nbsp PTH 1A TCH east City Route Portage la PrairieInterchangeCity of Portage la Prairie246 6153 2 nbsp PR 240 Southport St ClaudeInterchangePortage la Prairie 250 7155 8 nbsp PTH 1A TCH west City Route Portage la PrairieInterchange no eastbound exit 251 9156 5 nbsp PTH 26 east Chemin Assiniboine Trail Poplar PointFormer PTH 1 amp 4 east 260 0161 6Crosses the Assiniboine River 266 7165 7 nbsp PTH 13 south Oakville Carman nbsp PR 430 north St Ambroise 275 2171 0Road 19 WestFormer PR 331 westCartier 278 6173 1Benard RoadFormer PR 426 northElie285 4177 3 nbsp PR 248 St Eustache Elie 294 1182 7 nbsp PR 332 south Dacotah Starbuck 301 5187 3 nbsp PR 424Former PR 241Cartier St Francois Xavier municipality line 303 1188 3Crosses the Assiniboine RiverSt Francois Xavier 303 9188 8 nbsp PTH 26 west Chemin Assiniboine Trail St Francois XavierFormer PTH 1 amp 4 westHeadingley311 0193 2Dodds RoadFormer west end of PR 334 concurrency311 4193 5 nbsp PR 334 southFormer east end of PR 334 concurrency PR 334 s northern terminus is now here City of Winnipeg317 0197 0318 nbsp nbsp nbsp Perimeter Highway PTH 100 east PTH 101 north Route 85 begins KenoraInterchange signed as exits 318A east and 318B north PTH 100 PTH 101 exit 42 west end of Route 85 Portage Avenue concurrency321 7199 9 nbsp Moray Street Route 96 south 326 0202 6 nbsp nbsp Route 90 Century Street AirportInterchange to PTH 7 north326 5202 9Empress Street Polo ParkInterchange eastbound access to Route 90 north329 0204 4 nbsp nbsp Portage Avenue Route 85 east YH BroadwayPTH 1 turns onto Broadway east end of Yellowhead Highway Route 85 concurrency329 3 329 5204 6 204 7 nbsp Maryland Street Route 70 south nbsp Sherbrook Street Route 70 north One way pair330 1205 1 nbsp Osborne Street Route 62 Manitoba Legislative Building330 9 331 0205 6 205 7 nbsp Donald Street Route 42 south nbsp Smith Street Route 42 north One way pair to PTH 75 south331 3205 9 nbsp Main Street Route 52 north PTH 1 turns onto Main Street west end of Route 52 concurrency to PTH 9 north331 7206 1Main Street Bridge crosses the Assiniboine River331 9206 2River Avenue via Stradbrook Avenue No westbound access332 1206 4Norwood Bridge crosses the Red River332 3206 5 nbsp Marion Street Route 115 east No eastbound access to PTH 15 east334 7208 0 nbsp nbsp St Anne s Road Route 150 begins St Mary s Road Route 52 south PTH 1 turns on St Annes s Road east end of Route 52 concurrency west end of Route 150 concurrency Route 150 northern terminus335 9208 7 nbsp nbsp Fermor Avenue Route 135 west St Anne s Road Route 150 south PTH 1 turns onto Fermor Avenue east end of Route 150 concurrency west end of Route 135 concurrency337 2209 5 nbsp Archibald Street Route 30 north 337 9210 0 nbsp nbsp PTH 59 Lagimodiere Boulevard Route 20 339 5211 0 nbsp Route 135 endsWinnipeg City Limits east end of Route 135 concurrencySpringfield 342 5212 8 Plessis Road northInterchange 347 0215 6348 nbsp nbsp Perimeter Highway PTH 100 west PTH 101 north BrandonInterchange signed as exits 348A west and 348B north 347 6216 0Crosses the Red River FloodwayDeacon s Corner349 5217 2 nbsp PR 207 LoretteTache 357 4222 1 nbsp PR 206 north Dugald OakbankWest end of PR 206 concurrency 359 4223 3 nbsp PR 206 south LandmarkEast end of PR 206 concurrency 363 3225 7 nbsp PR 501 east Rosewood Road 367 3228 2 nbsp To PR 207 Dawson Road DufresneSte Anne 374 2232 5375 nbsp PTH 12 MOM s Way Beausejour Steinbach Ste AnneInterchange signed as exits 375A south and 375B north 382 5237 7 nbsp PR 207 west Dawson Road Richer389 0241 7 nbsp PR 302 Ross RicherReynolds 415 5258 2Spruce SidingFormer PR 506 east 429 0266 6 nbsp PTH 11 north Lac du Bonnet Hadashville 431 1267 9 nbsp PR 503 east Old Dawson Trail Prawda437 2271 7 nbsp PR 506 north 451 0280 2 nbsp PR 308 south East BraintreeNo 1 468 3291 0Enters Whiteshell Provincial ParkFalcon Lake473 6294 3 nbsp PR 301 east Falcon LakeInterchange 484 7301 2 nbsp PTH 44 west West Hawk LakeInterchange former PTH 1 amp 4 west 488 8303 7 nbsp nbsp Highway 17 east TCH KenoraContinuation into Ontario1 000 mi 1 609 km 1 000 km 0 621 mi Concurrency terminus Incomplete access Route transitionSee also Edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Manitoba Highway 1 KML file edit help Template Attached KML Manitoba Highway 1KML is from WikidataReferences Edit a b Google January 25 2018 PTH 1 in Manitoba Map Google Maps Google Retrieved January 25 2018 Exits 318 348 amp 375 verification needed A C Emmett and the Development of Manitoba s Highways The Government of Manitoba Retrieved 2008 02 03 Official map of Western Canada 1946 The H M Gousha Company Archived from the original on 2007 09 27 Retrieved 2008 02 03 Route map of central and west North America 1938 R V Droz Archived from the original on 2009 10 27 Retrieved 2008 02 03 The Atlas of Canada Major Roads 1955 The Atlas of Canada Archived from the original on 2012 02 29 Retrieved 2008 02 03 Province of Manitoba News Releases Budget 2008 Charts Steady Course Selinger gov mb ca Archived from the original on 2016 03 03 Retrieved 2017 09 04 PROVINCE ANNOUNCES IMPROVEMENTS TO INTERSECTION OF TRANS CANADA HIGHWAY AND PTH 16 gov mb ca Retrieved 2020 07 16 Manitoba to raise speed limit Archived from the original on 2015 09 24 Retrieved 2008 05 15 Province of Manitoba News Releases Speed Limit To Increase On Certain Sections Of Twinned Highway gov mb ca Archived from the original on 2016 03 03 Retrieved 2017 09 04 TransCanada speed limit in Manitoba increases to 110 km h on June 2 cbc ca 23 April 2015 External links EditOfficial Name and Location Declaration of Provincial Trunk Highways Regulation The Highways and Transportation Act Provincial Government of Manitoba Official Highway Map Published and maintained by the Department of Infrastructure Provincial Government of Manitoba see Legend and Maps 1 2 amp 3 Google Maps Search Provincial Trunk Highway 1Preceded by nbsp SK Highway 1 Trans Canada Highway nbsp Provincial Trunk Highway 1 Succeeded by nbsp nbsp ON Highway 17Preceded by nbsp Highway 16Preceded by nbsp Highway 100 Succeeded by nbsp Highway 100Preceded by nbsp nbsp Highway 16 Yellowhead Highway nbsp nbsp Provincial Trunk Highway 1 Succeeded by nbsp nbsp Route 85 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Manitoba Highway 1 amp oldid 1179048109, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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