Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
The cities of Mississauga and Brampton have determined that rapid transit along Hurontario is required due to the chronic overcrowding of Mississauga's (and the suburban Greater Toronto Area's) busiest bus routes, 2/17 Hurontario, which carry more than 25,000 passengers a day, combined with the numerous high-density development proposals along ...
Hurontario Street is a roadway running in Ontario, Canada between Lake Ontario at Mississauga and Lake Huron's Georgian Bay at Collingwood.Within Peel Region, it is a major urban thoroughfare within the cities of Mississauga and Brampton, which serves as the divide from which cross-streets are split into East and West, except at its foot in the historic Mississauga neighbourhood of Port Credit.
Looking north up Hurontario St. from Dundas St. Hurontario Street is Mississauga's main street. Runs north from Lakeshore Road (Lake Ontario) and continues all the way to Collingwood on Georgian Bay , hence the street's name. Formerly part of Highway 10 and still often colloquially labelled as such.
The Hurontario LRT is an under construction 18-kilometre (11 mi) light rail line that will operate along Hurontario Street into Brampton. [8] It will connect with Cooksville GO Station and Port Credit GO Station, and have stops with intersecting bus rapid transit corridors, including the Dundas Street BRT along Dundas Street, the planned 407 Transitway along Highway 407, and the Mississauga ...
Dundas Street, a four-lane street; and Hurontario Street, a six-lane street, are the main thoroughfares in Cooksville, and intersect at the heart of the neighbourhood. This intersection was the junction of former provincial Highway 5 and Highway 10, and is still often referred to by Mississaugans as "Five and Ten" in reference to those street's ...
Cooksville GO Station is a GO Transit train and bus station the Milton line in the community of Cooksville in Mississauga, Ontario, Canada. It is located at 3210 Hurontario Street, near Dundas and Hurontario Streets. The future Hurontario LRT will connect to this station. [1]
Historically, Highway 10 follows the 19th-century stagecoach route known as the Toronto–Sydenham Road (the southern half of which later became absorbed into Hurontario Street). It travelled north from Dundas Street (later Highway 5) in Cooksville through Brampton, Orangeville and Shelburne to Owen Sound. [5]
The MTO still maintains a 1.1-kilometre (0.68 mi) portion of Dundas Street at the Highway 407 interchange in Burlington, a 400-metre (440 yd) portion at the Highway 403 interchange on the Oakville–Mississauga boundary, and a 1.9-kilometre (1.2 mi) portion at the Highway 427 interchange in Toronto. [1]