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King's Highway 7, commonly referred to as Highway 7 (abbreviated as Hwy 7) and historically as the Northern Highway, is a provincially maintained highway in the Canadian province of Ontario. At its peak, Highway 7 measured 716 km (445 mi) in length, stretching from Highway 40 east of Sarnia in Southwestern Ontario to Highway 17 west of Ottawa ...
When Ontario signed the Trans-Canada Highway Agreement on April 25, 1950, it had already chosen a Central Ontario routing via Highway 7, Highway 12, Highway 103 and Highway 69; [101] Highway 17 through the Ottawa Valley was announced as a provincially-funded secondary route of the Trans-Canada the following day. [102]
Ontario Highway 77 – Originally ran from Highway 3 in New Glasgow to Rodney. Deleted in 1957. Ontario Highway 100 – Originally ran from Thamesford to St. Mary's; became part of Highway 19 in 1962. Ontario Highway 102 – Was originally assigned to Canada's first divided highway, now known as Cootes Drive. It bypassed western Hamilton, from ...
7.7 4.8 Highway 592 Highway 520 – Burk's Falls Parry Sound Armour Highway 7189 Eastport Drive 2 1.2 QEW Lakeshore Road Hamilton, Halton Hamilton, Burlington Burlington Skyway detour Highway 7191 Caledonia Bridge 0.2 0.1 Haldimand Caledonia Former Highway 6 route, bridge over Grand River Highway 7195 Centre Street 0.6 0.4 former Highway 7
King's Highway 7A, commonly referred to as Highway 7A, is a provincially maintained highway in the Canadian province of Ontario that serves as a bypass of Highway 7.The highway begins in the community of Manchester, where Highway 7 is concurrent with Highway 12, and travels east through Port Perry, Nestleton Station, Bethany and Cavan, ending at Highway 115 southwest of Peterborough.
The hamlet, centred on lots 10 and 11, concession 10. Today the area is made up of existing and newer homes along Highway 7. Locust Hill only became a place of significance with the arrival of the Ontario and Quebec Railway in the 1884, linking Toronto with Peterborough.
Highway 7B is the designation for seven former business routes of Highway 7 in the Canadian province of Ontario.All but one was the original route of Highway 7 (or what became Highway 7) through the town or city that it served, and was subsequently given the 7B designation when a newer bypass route was constructed to reduce traffic pressure on the urban street network.
The name Conestoga Parkway is not a formal designation, but rather a local name applied to the divided expressway portions of Highway 7, Highway 8 and Highway 85 through Kitchener and Waterloo. The Ministry of Transportation of Ontario (MTO), which built and maintains the route, refers to it as the Kitchener–Waterloo Expressway.