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The image shows the wide median that the Province of New Brunswick generally employs on its divided highways. This portion of highway was completed about 1970. Route 15 only extended from Shediac to Strait Shores until the early 1970s, when the Shediac Four-Lane Highway (the first rural expressway in New Brunswick) was built from Dieppe to Shediac.
Founded in 1955 in a small village outside Moncton, Armour has grown to become one of the leading transport companies in Canada. The company has several divisions, Armour Transport is the brand used for transporting goods within Eastern Canada, whereas the companies long haul operations are done under the Pole Star, Triple B, and Hillman's brands.
Route 128 is a provincial highway in the Canadian province of New Brunswick.The highway starts in Lutes Mountain as Homestead Road at Route 126.The road travels in a horseshoe pattern through two small communities before ending in the city of Moncton at an interchange with Route 15 (Wheeler Boulevard).
Route 2 is a major provincial highway in the Canadian province of New Brunswick, carrying the main route of the Trans-Canada Highway in the province. The highway connects with Autoroute 85 at the border with Quebec, Highway 104 at the border with Nova Scotia, as well as with traffic from Interstate 95 in the U.S. state of Maine via the short Route 95 connector.
On October 10, 2012, street view images in many parts of Canada were updated and some new images of parks, trails, university campuses, and zoos were added. [5] Google Trike in Cambridge Bay, Nunavut, August 23, 2012. On March 19, 2013, the Nunavut city of Iqaluit was imaged. Rather than shipping a car or using a trike, the city was imaged ...
Route 126 is a North/South provincial highway in the Canadian province of New Brunswick. The road runs from Route 117 intersection in Miramichi. The road has a length of approximately 121 kilometres, and services small, otherwise isolated rural communities. In these areas, the highway is often unofficially referred to as "Main Street."
Transit operations were sold to the City of Moncton under the Codiac Transit Commission on 1 August 1980. [6] Moncton Transit Limited continued to operate charter buses as Tours to Remember and school buses as Metro School Bus. They lost the school bus contract for New Brunswick School District 2 in June 2002, and ceased operations in December ...
Maintained by New Brunswick Department of Transportation: Length: 43.985 km [1] (27.331 mi) Existed: 1965–present: Major junctions; South end: Route 134 in Moncton: Route 2 (TCH) in Moncton Route 11 in Saint-Gregoire: North end: Route 134 in Saint-François-de-Kent: Location; Country: Canada: Province: New Brunswick: Major cities