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The Kichi Sipi Bridge is a 260-metre (850 ft) long, four-span bridge that crosses a deep channel of the Nelson River south of Cross Lake in Manitoba, providing the only all-weather road link between north-eastern Manitoba and the rest of Canada (and North America). It is the second longest road bridge in Manitoba.
Manitoba Transportation and Infrastructure (French: Transportation Infrastructure Manitoba) is the provincial government department responsible for managing infrastructure in Manitoba. It is in charge of "the development of transportation policy and legislation, and [of] the management of the province’s vast infrastructure network." [2]
Official Name and Location - Declaration of Provincial Roads 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 Map#3) Google Maps Search - Provincial Road 500
In the United States, an oversize load is a vehicle and/or load that is wider than 8 ft 6 in (2.59 m). Each individual state has different requirements regarding height and length (most states are 13 ft 6 in or 4.11 m tall), and a driver must purchase a permit for each state he/she will be traveling through.
Provincial Road 374 (PR 374) is a 39-kilometre-long (24 mi) provincial highway in northeastern Manitoba. A spur of PR 373 southeast of Jenpeg, PR 374 runs to Cross Lake, which connects to local streets and the Cross Lake First Nation. The route also crosses over the Kichi Sipi Bridge, which spans over the Nelson River since September 2004.
Buildings used as the main camp for the North American Boundary Commission in 1872, and then used by the North-West Mounted Police in preparing for the "March West" in 1875; representative of Canada's assertion of sovereignty over Manitoba and the North-West Territories in the 1870s Fort Garry Hotel [21] 1913 (completed) 1981 Winnipeg
PTH 68 starts at PTH 5 east of Ste. Rose Du Lac and terminates at PTH 8 11 kilometres (6.8 miles) south of Riverton. Between the eastern junction with PTH 6 at Eriksdale and its western terminus, the highway is part of the Northern Woods and Water Route. The most notable portion of PTH 68 is the bridge over Lake Manitoba at The Narrows. [1] [2] [3]
Provincial Road 229 (PR 229) is an 81.3-kilometre-long (50.5 mi) east–west highway in the Interlake Region of Manitoba, connecting the communities of Lundar and Oak Point with Inwood, Komarno, and Winnipeg Beach.