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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.
The Hurontario LRT (formerly the Hurontario–Main LRT) is a light rail line under construction in the cities of Mississauga and Brampton, Ontario, Canada.The line will run along Hurontario Street from Mississauga's Port Credit neighbourhood north to Steeles Avenue in Brampton. [1]
The following is a list of non-numbered and numbered (Peel Regional Roads) in Mississauga, Ontario.Map showing Mississauga's major streets and highways Graphic of a Mississauga traffic light-mounted street sign Some arterial roads in Mississauga are maintained by Peel Region and are numbered: A Peel Regional Road 20 sign on Queensway
Mississauga's largest public library, the Central Library, is located at 301 Burnhamthorpe Road West at the corner of Living Arts Drive. [21] The city's YMCA is located at 325 Burnhamthorpe West, across the street from the Central Library. [22] Living Arts Centre, a performing arts venue, opened in 1997. [23]
The first phase of this expansion to west of Hurontario Street, a distance of 2.8 km (1.7 mi), opened in 2013, [127] while the second phase to the Credit River was completed in 2020. [ 128 ] In 2019, an announcement was made for expanding the freeway from the Credit River to Regional Road 25 in Milton to a minimum of 10 lanes, including HOV lanes.
King's Highway 10, commonly referred to as Highway 10, is a provincially maintained highway in the Canadian province of Ontario.The highway connects the northern end of Highway 410 just north of Brampton with Owen Sound on the southern shores of Georgian Bay, passing through the towns of Orangeville and Shelburne as well as several smaller villages along the way.
Port Credit is a neighbourhood in the south-central part of the City of Mississauga, Ontario, Canada, located at the mouth of the Credit River on the north shore of Lake Ontario. Its main intersection is Hurontario Street and Lakeshore Road, about 0.6 kilometres (0.37 mi) east of the river. Until 1974, Port Credit was an incorporated town.
A heritage Mississauga sign on Hurontario Street north of the intersection claims it was the first Canadian location of winemaking in 1836. [4] Cooksville grew in size and influence until the Great Fire of 1852 razed much of it. [4] That year, the McClelland-Copeland General store opened and is now the areas longest surviving building. [5]