Ontario Highway 7
Highway 7 | ||||
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Location of Highway 7 in Southern Ontario. Current route Former route |
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Route information | ||||
Length: | 535.7 km[1] (332.9 mi) | |||
Existed: | 1920 – present | |||
Section 1 | ||||
West end: | Highway 4 – Elginfield | |||
Major junctions: |
Highway 8 – Kitchener Highway 6 – Guelph |
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East end: | Halton–Peel boundary (near Norval) | |||
Section 2 | ||||
West end: | Regional Road 48 (Donald Cousens Parkway) | |||
Major junctions: |
Highway 115 – Peterborough Highway 62 – Madoc Highway 37 – Actinolite Highway 41 – Kaladar Highway 15 – Carleton Place |
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East end: | Highway 417 – Kanata | |||
Location | ||||
Major cities: | Kitchener–Waterloo, Stratford, Guelph, Brampton, Vaughan, Pickering, Peterborough, Ottawa | |||
Towns: | St. Mary's, Halton Hills (Acton, Georgetown, Norval), Markham, Whitby, Pt. Perry, Lindsay, Perth, Carleton Place | |||
Highway system | ||||
Ontario provincial highways
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King's Highway 7, commonly referred to as Highway 7 and historically as the Northern Highway, is a provincially maintained highway in the Canadian province of Ontario. At its peak, Highway 7 measured 716 km (445 mi) in length, stretching from Highway 40 east of Sarnia in Southwestern Ontario to Highway 17 west of Ottawa in Eastern Ontario.
Highway 7 was first designated in 1920 between Sarnia and Guelph. It was extended to Brampton the following year. Between 1927 and 1932, the highway more than doubled in length as it was gradually extended eastward to Perth, where Highway 15 continued to Ottawa. In the early 1960s, that section of Highway 15 was renumbered as Highway 7.
In 1997 and 1998, the Ontario Ministry of Transportation downloaded significant portions of the highway to regional and municipal governments. Because of this, there are now two separated sections of Highway 7.
Contents |
[edit] Route description
[edit] Western segment
The western segment of Highway 7 travels from Elginfield in Middlesex County in the southwest to the Halton - Peel border at Norval near Brampton. This covers a distance of 152.6 km. This highway is a freeway for a 23.4 km stretch from Waterloo Regional Road 51 south of Baden to Highway 85 in Kitchener; this is part of the Conestoga Parkway. Plans to build a freeway bypass of Highway 7 from Kitchener to Guelph are currently in development. With only two travel lanes, the section between Kitchener and Guelph is one of the most congested in the province.
At one point Highway 7 ran as far west as Sarnia, being the main route to the Blue Water Bridge. Upon entering Sarnia, there is a plethora of motels and restaurants, the Sarnia Airport, and attractions such as the bingo hall, Hiawatha Racetrack and Waterpark, giving that stretch the nickname "Golden Mile". At Highway 40, Highway 7 ended and the short freeway Highway 402 continued westwards to the Bluewater Bridge at the border. Since 1982, the extension of Highway 402 to London has meant that most traffic bypasses Highway 7, due to Highway 402's larger volume capabilities and higher allowable speeds. Consequently, most of the Golden Mile motels have gone into decline. Nonetheless, Highway 7 remained provincially maintained until that segment was downloaded on January 1, 1998 and is now known as Lambton County Road 22 and London Line.
The western segment was separated from the rest of Highway 7 on April 1, 1997, when the stretch from Brampton to Markham was downloaded due to the opening of Highway 407. Part of that segment through Richmond Hill was relocated on a new alignment (as a 6 lane at-grade expressway) in 1987 in order to make way for Highway 407; the former routing incorporated Langstaff Road.
Within Peel Region, Highway 410 and Highway 7 ran concurrently north-south between Bovaird Drive and Queen Street East prior to the downloading. The Queen Street East portion of the road was numbered Peel Regional Road 21 on July 10, 1997,[2] but renumbered as Peel Regional Road 107 on March 26, 1998.[3]
A subsequent western segment of Highway 7 within Brampton known locally today as Bovaird Drive West and Bovaird Drive East was transferred to the Region of Peel on July 12, 2002 and subsequently numbered Regional Road 107 to maintain its consistency as being known as the former Highway 7.[4] despite the segment of Bovaird Drive East east of Highway 410 maintaining its designation as Regional Road 10.
Highway 7 through York Region, despite no longer being a provincial highway, is still officially named Highway 7 and received the number York Regional Road 7, displacing Islington Avenue which was redesignated York Regional Road 17. In 2005, Highway 7 was made the second main arterial for York Region's VIVA rapid transit service (after Yonge Street). Parts of the Markham portion were once called Wellington Street, but only a stub of the old road exists today east of Markham Road.
[edit] Eastern segment
The eastern segment of Highway 7 runs from Donald Cousens Parkway (York Regional Road 48) in Markham to Highway 417 in Ottawa, a length of 384 km.
At its junction with Highway 12 at Brooklin, Highway 7 assumes a north-south routing and is concurrent with Highway 12 to Sunderland. The section from Highway 12 north of Sunderland to its eastern terminus is designated as part of the Trans-Canada Highway.
The Durham Region section from the York-Durham Line (Regional Road 30) to Sideline 16 at Brougham (the eastern terminus of Highway 407 was scheduled to be downloaded to Durham Region in 2006, but these plans were cancelled.
Between 1997 and 2003, the eastern segment of Highway 7 was split into two parts by a downloaded section between highways 7A and 28/115. This discontinuity was eliminated in 2003 by renumbering the portion of Highway 7A east of its former concurrency with Highway 115 as Highway 7, and signing Highway 7 concurrently with Highway 115 from the former Highway 7A junction easterly to the end of the Peterborough bypass.
The former eastern segment of Highway 7, which was separated from the central segment by only 6 km, had a total length of 242.8 km. It began at Highway 115 in Peterborough, and ran to Highway 417 near Kanata, which is now part of the city of Ottawa. This highway was a freeway for its first 6.5 km, from Highway 115 to Lansdowne Street East (once Highway 7B) in Peterborough. Its entire length was part of the Trans-Canada Highway.
In 2003, these two segments were connected by a renumbering around Peterborough, which created a new concurrency with Highway 115 and renumbered 7A to 7 in southwest Peterborough in order to connect them. The same year, construction started on a 21-km four-phase project between Highway 417 in Ottawa and Carleton Place to convert Highway 7 to a four-lane, controlled access highway. Construction was initially promised to be complete by 2006. In late 2010 the 4-lane Highway 7 opened between Highway 417 and Ashton Station Road. The remaining short section from there to McNeely Avenue in Carleton Place is scheduled for completion by the fall of 2011.
The eastern section from Peterborough to Perth was built in the 1930s during the Great Depression, as a public works employment project. The road used an abandoned CP Rail corridor that was built in the 1880s, and used hand-power to dig and build the road whenever possible.
[edit] History
The route which would later become Highway 7 was first assumed by the Department of Highways on February 26, 1920. This route connected Sarnia to Guelph.[5] On April 27, 1921, the route was extended east to the Wellington–Halton boundary. Several days later, on May 4, the highway was extended further east to Hurontario Street in Brampton.[6] The Great Northern Highway, as it was known at the time, was numbered as Highway 7 during the summer of 1925.[7] Assumptions on June 22 and July 2, 1927 extended Highway 7 from Brampton to Peterborough. A portion of the original route of Highway 12 between Sunderland and Lindsay was renumbered in this process and a concurrency established between Brooklin and Sunderland.[8]
In the early 1930s it was decided that Highway 7 would serve as an alternative route between Toronto and Ottawa; at that time the only alternative was Highway 2 and Highway 16. The first step in this undertaking was extending Highway 7 to Madoc along existing settler routes. This section was assumed on September 17, 1930.[9] On November 18, 1931, construction was accelerated between Madoc and Perth as a major depression-relief project when eight contracts were set to build the new route. Over 2700 men blasted rock, dredged muskeg and endured a constant barrage of blood-sucking insects in order to construct this new link. The majority of it followed along an abandoned Grand Trunk Railroad right-of-way which had been cleared in 1881, deviating at times to provide a better alignment, avoid large muskeg or to lessen excavation work.[10] On February 10 and February 17, the route, still incomplete, was surveyed and assumed as an extension of Highway 7. The new highway was opened to traffic in August, 1932.[11]
Between the 1930s and 1960s, Highway 7 connected Sarnia with Perth; Highway 15 continued from Perth to Ottawa. By the mid-1950s, the well established highway network had changed travel characteristics, and the numbering of Highway 15 between Perth and Ottawa was confusing motorists. The Ottawa Board of Trade petitioned the Department of Highways to renumber several highways surrounding the city.[12] The department performed a series of renumberings similar to these recommendations following the extension of Highway 43|Highway 43 on September 8, 1961. Highway 15 was rerouted between Smiths Falls and Carleton Place to travel concurrently with Highway 29; Highway 7 was extended along the former routing from Perth to Carleton Place and signed concurrently with Highway 15 eastward to Ottawa.[13] This brought the highway to its peak length of 700 kilometres (430 mi).
[edit] Downloads
In the late 1990s and early 2000s, the Ministry of Transportation (MTO) downloaded several sections of Highway 7 to the regional or county governments that those sections lied within. There are three separate issues that led to these downloads.
As part of budget cuts instituted by the Mike Harris government, many highways deemed to serve a local or regional function were downloaded to local jurisdiction. The sections of Highway 7 west of London were transferred to Lambton County and Middlesex County, largely supplanted by the construction of nearby Highway 402 in the late 1970s. On April 1, 1997, the section from Sarnia to Thedford was transferred to Lambton County.[14] The section from Thedford to Elginfield was transferred to Lambton and Middlesex counties on January 1, 1998.[15]
As the construction of Highway 407 progressed across the northern end of the Greater Toronto Area, the MTO transferred sections of Highway 7 to the regions of Peel and York. On April 1, 1997, the section between Highway 410 and Highway 404 was transferred to the regions of Peel and York;[14] the section from Highway 404 to McCowan Road was transferred to York Region on April 1, 1999. Several months later, on September 1, a short section between McCowan Road and Markham Road was transferred. Finally, on January 25, 2007, the section between Markham Road and 185 m (607 ft) east of Donald Cousens Parkway, where the highway narrows to two lanes today, was transferred.
In the Peterborough area, Highway 7 was rerouted from travelling through the city to bypassing it along Highway 115. This situation took over six years to set in place. On April 1, 1997, the sections of Highway 7 entering the western edge of Peterborough along North Monaghan Parkway and Sir Sanford Fleming Drive were transferred to the county and city, creating a gap between Springville and the Peterborough Bypass. This situation was rectified on May 1, 2003, when the section of Highway 7A that until then was a continuation of the road south from Springville to Highway 115 was renumbered as Highway 7. The concurrency with Highway 115 was extended southwest to remove the discontinuity entirely.[16]
[edit] Recent work
On August 22, 2006, work officially began on a project to expand Highway 7 between Ottawa and Carleton Place into a freeway through a process known as twinning, in which a second carriageway is built parallel to an existing road and grade-separated interchanges constructed.[17] Plans for this expansion were first conceptualized in 1979 when a planning study was undertaken. However, budgetary constraints forced an early end to this study in 1981. In 1988, the project was reinstated. A study released that year recommended that Highway 7 be widened to five lanes with a centre turning lane south of Carleton Place as an interim measure; this was carried out in 1993.[18] Full planning on the four-laning of the route began in 1993.[19]
In mid-2005, the Government of Ontario announced the project to the public. The work was carried out over three contracts: from Highway 417 to Jinkinson Road, from Jinkinson Road to Ashton Station Road, and from Ashton Station Road to Highway 15. In July 2007, a C$45 million contract was awarded to R.W. Tomlinson for the first phase of the route.[20][21] Bot Construction was awarded the $73.2 million contract for the second phase, which included two interchanges, four overpasses and service roads, in early 2008.[22] The first phase was opened to traffic on July 31, 2008[23] Towards the end of 2009, the $25.8 million contract for the third phase was awarded to Aecon Group.[24] The second phase was completed in the third quarter of 2010, bypassing south of the former route at Ashton Station Road and merging to two lanes east of Cemetery Sideroad. The third phase is expected to be completed by the end of this year.[citation needed]
[edit] Future
On March 23, 2007, the Government of Ontario announced an Environmental Impact Assessment for a four lane controlled-access highway between Kitchener, and Guelph, as traffic on Highway 401 is growing steadily and approaching capacity, along with the current two-lane alignment of Highway 7. This would connect to the Conestoga Parkway via an expansion of the existing Wellington Road interchange, the new junction would be a four level interchange; the government's eventual plan is to have a Highway 7 freeway running from Stratford to Guelph.[citation needed] The eastern end of the proposed Highway 7 freeway would terminate at the Hanlon Parkway (Highway 6), which is also scheduled for upgrades to a full freeway.[25]
Work to widen Highway 7 to four lanes from Brock Road in Pickering to Highway 12 in Whitby is underway and should be completed sometime in 2012.[citation needed]
In early 2011, Ontario Infrastructure Minister Bob Chiarelli hinted at possible plans to extend the four-laning of Highway 7 west from Carleton Place to Perth.[26]
[edit] Major intersections
The following table lists the major junctions along Highway 7, as noted by the Ministry of Transportation of Ontario.[1] In addition, it includes some minor junctions. Highway 7 is maintained under a Connecting Link agreement within Stratford, Guelph, Acton, Georgetown, Omemee, Havelock and Marmora.[27]
Division | Location | km[1] | Destinations | Notes | |||
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Middlesex |
Elginfield | 0.0 | Highway 4 – London, Clinton | ||||
1.2 | Highway 23 north – Mitchell | ||||||
Middlesex Centre–Lucan Biddulph | 10.1 | County Road 50 north (Prospect Hill Road) | |||||
Perth–Middlesex |
Perth South–Thames Centre | 12.4 | North Thames River crossing | ||||
17.6 | County Road 123 north – St. Marys | ||||||
Perth South–Zorra | 24.0 | County Road 118 north County Road 119 south – Thamesford |
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Perth |
Stratford | 36.0 | Perth 29th Line | Beginning of Stratford connecting link agreement | |||
40.0 | Highway 8 west – Goderich | Western end of Highway 8 concurrency | |||||
43.3 | End of Stratford connecting link agreement | ||||||
Shakespeare | 52.0 | County Road 107 | Formerly Highway 59 | ||||
New Hamburg | 60.2 | Regional Road 1 | New Hamburg Bypass | ||||
63.5 | Regional Road 4 west (Peel Street) | ||||||
Wilmot | 64.4 | Regional Road 4 east (Bleams Road) | |||||
65.8 | Regional Road 5 north (Natziger Road) | ||||||
Controlled-access highway begins 1.4 km (0.87 mi) east of Natziger Road |
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Waterloo |
Wilmot | 68.0 | Regional Road 51 (Foundry Street) – Wilmot Centre | ||||
73.1 | Regional Road 12 (Queen Street (south) / Notre Dame Drive (north)) – Petersburg | ||||||
76.9 | Regional Road 70 (Trussler Road) – Mannheim | ||||||
Kitchener | |||||||
80.0 | Regional Road 58 (Fischer Hallman Road) | ||||||
82.4 | Regional Road 28 (Homer Watson Boulevard) | Eastbound entrance via Ottawa Street South | |||||
83.7 | Courtland Avenue | ||||||
85.1 | Highway 8 east (Freeport Diversion) | End of Highway 8 concurrency; no access from Highway 7 to King Street | |||||
86.4 | Ottawa Street North | ||||||
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Waterloo |
Kitchener | 88.3 | Highway 85 (Conestoga Parkway) – St. Jacobs | Westbound entrance via Edna Street, eastbound exit via Bruce Street; beginning of Kitchener connecting link agreement | |||
94.0 | Woolwich Street | End of Kitchener connecting link agreement | |||||
Guelph |
103.0 | Imperial Road | Beginning of Guelph Connecting Link agreement | ||||
105.9 | Highway 6 north (Woodlawn Road) | Northern terminus of Hanlon Parkway; beginning of Highway 6 concurrency | |||||
109.6 | Highway 6 south (Hanlon Parkway) County Road 124 south (Wellington Street West) – Cambridge |
End of Highway 6 concurrency; Highway 7 exits Hanlon Parkway onto Wellington Street; beginning of former Highway 24 concurrency | |||||
112.1 | Wyndham Street South County Road 124 north (Wellington Street East) – Erin |
Highway 7 turns off Wellington Street onto Wyndham Street South; end of former Highway 24 concurrency | |||||
116.8 | End of Guelph Connecting Link agreement | ||||||
Wellington | Guelph-Eramosa | ||||||
120.0 | County Road 29 (Eramosa Road) – Eramosa | ||||||
Rockwood | 124.1 | County Road 27 (Gowan Road) | |||||
125.2 | County Road 50 | ||||||
Crewsons Corners | 131.3 | Milton – Halton Hills Townline | |||||
Halton |
Acton | 134.4 | Regional Road 25 north | Beginning of former Highway 25 concurrency; beginning of Acton Connecting Link agreement | |||
134.9 | Regional Road 25 south – Milton | End of former Highway 25 concurrency | |||||
136.4 | Churchill Road | End of Acton Connecting Link agreement | |||||
Halton Hills | 142.1 | Regional Road 3 north | |||||
Georgetown | 145.6 | Regional Road 3 south (Trafalgar Road) – Oakville | |||||
147.0 | Regional Road 32 (Wildwood Road) | Beginning of Georgetown Connecting Link agreement | |||||
152.0 | Hall Road | End of Georgetown Connecting Link agreement | |||||
Norval | 153.6 | Regional Road 19 (Winston Churchill Road) – Cheltenham | |||||
154.1 | Halton–Peel regional boundary; end of western segment; road continues east as Peel Regional Road 107 | ||||||
Highway 7 is discontinuous for 62.6 kilometres (38.9 mi) between Brampton and Markham | |||||||
York |
Markham | 216.7 | Beginning of eastern segment lies 185 metres (607 ft) east of Donald Cousens Parkway; road continues west as York Regional Road 7 | ||||
219.6 | Regional Road 30 (York–Durham Line) | ||||||
Durham | Pickering | ||||||
226.5 | Regional Road 1 (Brock Road) – Brougham, Uxbridge | ||||||
227.3 | Highway 407 west – Markham | Highway 7 traffic must turn to remain on the route; eastern terminus of Highway 407 | |||||
Brooklin | 239.1 | Highway 12 south (Baldwin Street) – Whitby | Beginning of Highway 12 concurrency; road continues east as Regional Road 3 (Winchester Road East) | ||||
Whitby | 243.2 | Regional Road 26 south (Thickson Road) | |||||
Scugog | 253.3 | Highway 7A east – Peterborough, Port Perry Regional Road 21 west (Goodwood Road) |
Highway 7A provides a shorter route to Peterborough via Highway 115 | ||||
256.2 | Regional Road 8 (Reach Street) – Uxbridge, Port Perry | ||||||
260.4 | Durham Regional Highway 47 west – Uxbridge, Stouffville | ||||||
Saintfield | 266.2 | Regional Road 6 east (Saintfield Road) – Seagrave | |||||
Sunderland | 275.4 | Regional Road 10 west (River Street) | |||||
Brock | 278.2 | Highway 12 north – Orillia, Beaverton | End of Highway 12 concurrency; beginning of Trans Canada Highway designation | ||||
Manilla | 285.2 | City Road 2 (Simcoe Street) | |
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Kawartha Lakes | |||||||
288.3 | City Road 46 north – Woodville Fingerboard Road south |
Formerly Highway 46 | |||||
294.5 | City Road 6 (Eldon Road) – Little Britain, Kirkfield | Community of Oakwood | |||||
303.2 | Highway 35 / Highway 7B – Fenelon Falls, Minden | Lindsay Bypass; Highway 35 concurrency | |||||
307.3 | City Road 4 (Angeline Street) – Little Britain | ||||||
308.7 | Highway 35 south – Newcastle | ||||||
310.2 | City Road 36 north – Bobcaygeon | Formerly Highway 36 | |||||
323.4– 326.1 |
Omemee Connecting Link agreement | ||||||
334.8 | County Road 1 (Lindsay Road) | |
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Peterborough | Fowlers Corners | ||||||
Cavan–Monaghan | 342.2 | County Road 5 (Lansdowne Street) | |||||
343.6 | County Road 15 east (Monaghan Parkway) | ||||||
347.2 | Highway 115 south County Road 28 – Port Hope |
Highway 7 enters onto freeway; Exit 45; beginning of Highway 115 concurrency | |||||
351.2 | County Road 11 (Airport Road) | To Peterborough Airport | |||||
Peterborough |
353.6 | The Parkway Sir Sandford Fleming Drive |
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356.9 | Bensfort Road | Access to and from westbound Highway 7/115 via Kennedy Road; no access to eastbound Highway 7/115 | |||||
358.5 | Ashburnham Drive | Access to and from eastbound Highway 7/115 via Neal Drive | |||||
359.9 | Lansdowne Street East County Road 30 north (Television Road) |
End of freeway and Highway 115 concurrency; signalized intersection; Highway 7 turns east onto Lansdowne Street | |||||
Peterborough |
Otonabee–South Monaghan | 367.2 | Highway 28 north – Lakefield, Bancroft | ||||
377.0 | County Road 38 | ||||||
Norwood | 386.8 | County Road 45 | |||||
Havelock | 395.9 | Canadian Pacific Railway crossing | Beginning of Havelock Connecting Link agreement | ||||
397.7 | Mary Street | End of Havelock Connecting Link agreement | |||||
Hastings |
Marmora | 414.0 | Crowe River bridge; beginning of Marmora Connecting Link agreement | ||||
415.3 | Maloney Street | End of Marmora Connecting Link agreement | |||||
Madoc | 431.6 | Highway 62 – Belleville, Bancroft | |||||
Actinolite | 445.1 | Highway 37 south – Belleville, Tweed | |||||
Lennox and Addington |
Kaladar | 467.1 | Highway 41 north – Denbigh County Road 41 south |
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Frontenac |
Central Frontenac | 507.2 | County Road 509 north | Formerly Highway 509 | |||
508.5 | County Road 38 – Kingston, Sharbot Lake | Formerly Highway 38 | |||||
Lanark |
Maberly | 519.8 | Road 36 (Bolingbroke Road south / Elphin Road north) | ||||
Perth | 542.5 | Road 511 north – Lanark | |||||
543.2 | Road 43 south (Wilson Street) | Formerly Highway 43 | |||||
Lanark Highlands | 564.0 | Road 15 north (Ferguson Falls Road) | |||||
Beckwith | 573.0 | Road 29 (Townline Road) | |||||
Carleton Place | 576.8 | Highway 15 south – Smiths Falls, Kingston | |||||
577.4 | McNeely Avenue | ||||||
Beckwith |
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584.4 | Ashton Station Road | |
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Ottawa | |||||||
588.2 | Dwyer Hill Road | ||||||
595.8 | Regional Road 36 (Hazeldean Road) | ||||||
598.3 | Highway 417 – Arnprior, Ottawa | ||||||
1.000 mi = 1.609 km; 1.000 km = 0.621 mi Closed/former • Unopened |
[edit] References
- ^ a b Ministry of Transportation of Ontario (2004). "Annual Average Daily Traffic (AADT) counts". http://www.raqsb.mto.gov.on.ca/techpubs/TrafficVolumes.nsf/tvweb?OpenForm&Seq=5. Retrieved February 26, 2010.
- ^ PW-A3
- ^ http://www.peelregion.ca/council/bylaws/1990s/1998/by26-1998.htm
- ^ [1]
- ^ Shragge, John; Bagnato, Sharon (1984). From Footpaths to Freeways. Ontario Ministry of Transportation and Communications, Historical Committee. pp. 74–75. ISBN 0-7743-9388-2.
- ^ Annual Report (Report). Department of Highways. March 31, 1922. p. 23.
- ^ "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..."
- ^ Annual Report (Report). Department of Highways. March 31, 1928. pp. 60–61.
- ^ Annual Report (Report). Department of Highways. March 31, 1932. pp. 76–77.
- ^ Annual Report (Report). Department of Highways. March 31, 1932. pp. 16–18.
- ^ Annual Report (Report). Department of Highways. March 31, 1933. pp. 14–16, 47.
- ^ "Ask Sweeping Road Scheme". The Ottawa Citizen 113 (159): pp. 1, 7. January 6, 1956. http://news.google.com/newspapers?id=eNgxAAAAIBAJ&sjid=1eMFAAAAIBAJ&dq=superhighway&pg=4866%2C686813. Retrieved December 15, 2011.
- ^ Information Section (September 8, 1961) (Press release). Department of Highways.
- ^ a b Highway Transfers List (Report). Ministry of Transportation of Ontario. April 1, 1997. pp. 3, 4, 6–8.
- ^ Highway Transfers List - “Who Does What” (Report). Ministry of Transportation of Ontario. June 20, 2001. pp. 8–9.
- ^ "Signs of the Times". Milestones (Ontario Good Roads Association) 2 (1). February 2002. http://www.ogra.org/lib/db2file.asp?fileid=1780. Retrieved January 2, 2012.
- ^ "What is Involved in Constructing a Four Lane Highway?". Ministry of Transportation of Ontario. http://www.mto.gov.on.ca/english/traveller/highway69/construction.shtml. Retrieved October 12, 2011.
- ^ http://www.ottawa.ca/calendar/ottawa/archives/rmoc/Transportation/18Jun97/Hway7fnl.pdf
- ^ http://www.ottawa.ca/calendar/ottawa/citycouncil/trc/2008/09-03/03%20-%20ACS2008-PWS-INF-0010.htm
- ^ http://www.canada.com/ottawacitizen/news/city/story.html?id=b6bc02e0-24fe-4627-af50-7e66551cc28e
- ^ http://www.obj.ca/Other/Archives/2006-08-22/article-2157289/Work-begins-to-widen-Highway-7-west-of-Ottawa/1
- ^ http://www.obj.ca/Other/Archives/2008-04-18/article-2234433/Province-spending-$73M-on-second-phase-of-Highway-7-expansion/1
- ^ http://www.newswire.ca/en/story/209955/highway-7-widening-opens
- ^ http://www.cnw.ca/fr/story/535541/aecon-awarded-25-million-mto-contract-to-expand-highway-7
- ^ Government of Ontario, courtesy of Newswire.ca
- ^ Highway 7 Expansion to Perth Could Be in New 10-year plan
- ^ Contract Management and Operations Branch (2011). Connecting Links (Report). Ministry of Transportation of Ontario. pp. 2, 3, 5.
[edit] External links
Wikimedia Commons has media related to: Highway 7 (Ontario) |
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- Ontario provincial highways
- Trans-Canada Highway
- Carleton Place, Ontario
- Kawartha Lakes
- Kitchener, Ontario
- Pickering, Ontario
- Roads in Brampton
- Roads in Markham, Ontario
- Roads in Ottawa
- Stratford, Ontario
- Waterloo, Ontario
- Transportation in Guelph
- Transportation in Peterborough, Ontario
- Transportation in Vaughan
- Whitby, Ontario
- Transportation in Perth County, Ontario