Ontario Highway 15

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Jump to: navigation, search

Highway 15 shield

Highway 15
Route information
Length: 115.4 km[2] (71.7 mi)
Existed: October 13, 1920[1] – present
Major junctions
South end:  Highway 401 – Kingston
North end:  Highway 7 – Carleton Place
Location
Major cities: Kingston
Towns: Smiths Falls, Carleton Place
Highway system

Ontario provincial highways
List • 400-series • Former

Current highways
←  Highway 12   Highway 16  →
Former highways
←  Highway 14    

King's Highway 15, commonly referred to as Highway 15, is a provincially maintained highway in the Canadian province of Ontario. It currently travels north from an interchange with Highway 401 in Kingston to Highway 7 in Carleton Place, but once continued east from there into Ottawa until that section became part of Highway 7. The length of Highway 15 is 113.4 kilometres (70.5 mi).

Contents

[edit] Route description

Highway 15 travels through the following municipalities: Kingston, Joyceville, Seeleys Bay, Elgin, Crosby, Portland, Lombardy, Beckwith, Smiths Falls, Franktown, Black's Corners and Carleton Place.

Highway 15 travels through the following counties: Frontenac, Leeds/Grenville and Lanark.

[edit] History

Highway 15 near its southern terminus in Barriefield, circa 1920. This portion was bypassed in 1969 and is now known simply as Main Street.

Highway 15 was one of the original highways created by the Department of Public Highways, the early predecessor to the Ministry of Transportation of Ontario (MTO). On October 13, 1920, several dirt roads through Leeds and Grenville County and Lanark County were designated as part of the expanding provincial highway network begun a year earlier. The route began in the community of Seeley's Bay and travelled along the current routing of the highway to Smiths Falls. It then turned northwest towards Perth. At Perth, the route turned northeast towards Carleton Place and followed roughly the same alignment as Highway 7 does today. The highway passed through that town and winded towards Ottawa, entering it along Richmond Road and ending in downtown at Highway 17.[1] The following year, the highway was extended south from Seeley's Bay into Kingston to end at Highway 2.[3]

The route was initially unnumbered, but was designated as Highway 15 during the summer of 1925.[4] By that point, the southern terminus was at the present junction of James Street (then Highway 2) and Main Street in Barriefield, north of Fort Henry; the northern terminus was at Carling Avenue (then Highway 17) and Richmond Road.


While the southern section has changed little, Highway 15 has followed several different routings through Lanark County in its history. Originally, there were no Highway 7 markers east of Perth. The existing roads were present, but under a different numbering so what was numbered Highway 15 (originally) would correspond to the following modern designations:

  • From Highway 2 Kingston to Smiths Falls, the road uses the current Highway 15 (and Kingston Road 15) route
  • From Smiths Falls to Perth, the road followed a route which would later become Highway 43 (now Lanark County Road 43)
  • From Perth to Carleton Place and Ottawa, the road corresponds to what is now Highway 7, ending at Highway 17

While a more direct highway route from Smiths Falls to Carleton Place (without a detour westward to Perth) was part of the Ontario highway system, it was numbered as an extension of Highway 29, the current road (Leeds-Grenville road 29) from Brockville to Smiths Falls.

In 1961, the "Highway 7" designator was extended to the entire length of the Peterborough-Perth to Carleton Place/Ottawa highway, removing the "Highway 15" marker from any road through Perth. The '15' designation was moved to the road from Smiths Falls direct to Carleton Place, where it appeared alongside the 'Highway 29' designation (as a concurrency). This left a short road between Smiths Falls and Perth, which would be renumbered as Highway 43 (now Lanark County Road 43).

Beyond Carleton Place, Highway 29 continued north to Arnprior, while the road from Carleton Place to Ottawa was marked concurrently as both Highway 7 and 15.

In 1969, a bypass of Barriefield was built, redirecting both Highway 15 and Highway 2 around the historic village.[5]

The next change took place in 1983, when Highway 29 was truncated to Smiths Falls, leaving Highway 15 as the only number on the road from Kingston - Smiths Falls - Carleton Place - Arnprior. The road from Carleton Place to Ottawa would be designated solely as Highway 7 (eliminating both the 15/29 and 15/7 concurrencies).

Prior to 1998, the road's southern terminus was at Highway 2, east of downtown Kingston (at CFB Kingston), while the northern terminus reached Arnprior. Today, the Carleton Place to Arnprior segment is Lanark County Road 29, which matches the route's original (pre-1983) MTO route number.

[edit] Exit list

The following table lists the major junctions along Highway 15, as noted by the Ministry of Transportation of Ontario.[2] 

Division Location km[2] Mile Destinations Notes
Kingston
−6.4 −4.0  Highway 2
0.0 0.0  Highway 401 Exit 623
1.4 0.9 County Road 21 (Kingston Mills Road)
13.6 8.5 County Road 13 (Sandhill Road)
Leeds and Grenville
Leeds and the Thousand Islands 30.8 19.1 County Road 32 Former Highway 32
31.9 19.8 County Road 33 (Lyndhurst Road)
Crosby 51.7 32.1 County Road 42 – Newboro Former Highway 42
Rideau Lakes 66.7 41.4 County Road 5
Lombardy 76.1 47.3 County Road 1
Lanark
Smiths Falls 84.4–
89.1
52.4–
55.4
Smiths Falls Connecting Link Agreement
Franktown 104.7 65.1 Road 10
Carleton Place 115.4 71.7  Highway 7 – Peterborough, Perth Beginning of former Highway 7 concurrency
116.0 72.1  Highway 7 east – Ottawa End of former Highway 7 concurrency
Ottawa
  154.9 96.3  Highway 17 – Ottawa, Pembroke Decommissioned January 1, 1998; redesignated as Lanark County / Ottawa Regional Road 29
Renfrew
Arnprior 156.7 97.4 Arnprior town limits Decommissioned April 1, 1997
1.000 km = 0.621 mi; 1.000 mi = 1.609 km
     Closed/former     Unopened

[edit] References

  1. ^ a b Annual Report (Report). Department of Public Highways. December 1, 1920. pp. 40, 42. 
  2. ^ a b Ministry of Transportation of Ontario (2008). "Annual Average Daily Traffic (AADT) counts". http://www.raqsb.mto.gov.on.ca/techpubs/TrafficVolumes.nsf/tvweb?OpenForm&Seq=5. Retrieved February 4, 2012. 
  3. ^ Annual Report (Report). Department of Public Highways. December 1, 1921. pp. 28. 
  4. ^ "Provincial Highways Now Being Numbered". The Canadian Engineer (Monetary Times Print) 49 (8): 246. August 25, 1925. "Numbering of the various provincial highways in Ontario has been commenced by the Department of Public Highways. Resident engineers are now receiving metal numbers to be placed on poles along the provincial highways. These numbers will also be placed on poles throughout cities, towns and villages, and motorists should then have no trouble in finding their way in and out of urban municipalities. Road designations from "2" to "17" have already been alloted..." 
  5. ^ "The Creation of Barriefield Village". The Barriefield Village Association. http://barriefieldvillage.com/documents/The%20creation%20of%20Barriefield.pdf. Retrieved June 27, 2012. 

[edit] External links

Personal tools
Namespaces

Variants
Actions
Navigation
Interaction
Toolbox
Print/export