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The present alignment of Highway 46 used to be the original alignment of Highway 1, [2] but was reverted to a gravel grid road when the Trans-Canada Highway was realigned entering Regina along Victoria Avenue in the 1950s. [3] [4] In the early 1980s, Highway 46 was assigned to the route [5] and was subsequently paved from Regina to Pilot Butte. [6]
Albert Street is an arterial road in Regina, Saskatchewan.It is one of the main roads in and out of the downtown area of the city. [1] It is named in honour of Prince Albert, the husband and consort of Queen Victoria, and intersects Victoria Avenue (named after Queen Victoria) in centre of the city.
Ring Road is a partial ring road or beltway that forms a partial circle around Regina, bypasses the city on the north, east, and south sides, with Lewvan Drive and Pasqua Street N functioning as the de facto western leg. East of Pasqua Street, Ring Road continues west as 9th Avenue N, an arterial road. Ring Road has a speed limit of 100 km/h ...
Regina was established as the territorial seat of government in 1882 when Edgar Dewdney, the lieutenant-governor of the North-West Territories, insisted on the site over the better developed Battleford, Troy and Fort Qu'Appelle (the latter some 48 km (30 mi) to the east, one on rolling plains and the other in the Qu'Appelle Valley between two lakes).
Victoria Avenue used to synonymous with the Trans-Canada Highway in Regina, as it continued east as the Trans-Canada Highway towards Winnipeg.The Trans-Canada Highway was signed from the east to Ring Road, where the city route continued west into downtown Regina, then south on Albert Street; the Trans-Canada Highway Bypass followed Ring Road south and continued west.
Sherwood McCarthy, Prairie View, Normanview and McNab serve Regina's north of the rail line and west of Albert Street. North of the rail line and east of Albert Street is served by Uplands community association as well as the North East Community Association.
The Regina Bypass is a four-lane twinned highway connector road in Regina, Saskatchewan. The 44.3-kilometre (27.5 mi) route connects Highway 1 (the Trans-Canada Highway) with Highway 11, forming a partial ring road around the city of Regina. Phase one, east of Regina from Balgonie to Highway 33, finished on-schedule in October 2017. [2]
The increasingly tony Warehouse District being historically a non-residential sector and not part of North Central, is an exception to the generally depressed economic circumstances of the region immediately north of the CPR tracks and is appropriately hived off from the map. The largest of Regina's inner city neighbourhoods, it was originally ...