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This is a list of all city routes in Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada. Even-numbered routes run north-south with numbers increasing from east to west and odd-numbered routes run east-west with numbers increasing from north to south.
Route 25 is a city route in the Canadian city of Winnipeg, Manitoba.It follows Inkster Boulevard from Route 90 (Brookside Boulevard) to Route 180 (McPhillips Street).West of Route 90, Inkster Boulevard becomes PTH 190 (CentrePort Canada Way) as it leaves Winnipeg and enters the Rural Municipality of Rosser. [2]
The route serves both the North End and St. Vital areas of Winnipeg, and forms the westernmost boundary of the downtown core. Osborne Street , between the Assiniboine and Red Rivers , is a major shopping district, especially in the area between Roslyn Road and Corydon Avenue , known as Osborne Village .
Originally, PTH 9 followed what is now Routes 42 (then known as Route 40) and 57 through Winnipeg. Outside the Perimeter, the route followed Provincial Road 204 to Lockport, where it joined its present alignment. [4] Today's PTH 9 between Winnipeg and Lockport was previously part of PTH 1 prior to 1958, [5] and part of PTH 4 between 1958 and ...
British Columbia Electric Railway streetcar no. 229, operating on route 5 Robson, 1948. This is a list of street railways in Canada by province. Prince Edward Island, Northwest Territories and Nunavut are the only places in Canada to not have had any tram (streetcar) system. The list includes all streetcar systems, past and present.
Route 52 is a major north-south arterial route in Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada. It comprises all of Main Street, Queen Elizabeth Way, and St. Mary's Road. It comprises all of Main Street, Queen Elizabeth Way, and St. Mary's Road.
The origin of the route stems from its use as a part of an old Red River ox cart trail. [4] [5]The (red river) carts left deep ruts in the soft prairie turf, so deep that the wagons tended to spread out, the right wheel of one cart travelling in the wake of the left wheel of the cart ahead; thus, the prairie trails could be as much as twenty carts wide, a phenomenon that helps explain the many ...