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It is also known as the Banff-Windermere Parkway south of the Trans-Canada Highway and the Icefields Parkway north of the Trans-Canada Highway. It travels through Banff National Park and Jasper National Park and is maintained by Parks Canada for its entire length. [ 1 ]
Between 1964 and 1972, a completely new route from Calgary to Canmore was built. The route included new overpasses, bridges, the Canmore Bypass, and a 4-lane divided highway. In 1976, Parks Canada began twinning Highway 1 through Banff National Park, with the highway twinned to Banff by 1985 and to Castle Junction by 1997. [12]
Highway 16 (TCH) at Jasper • Banff–Windermere Highway • Icefields Parkway 1959: current Highway 93A: 24: 15 Highway 93 at Athabasca Falls: Highway 93 east of Marmot Basin — — Highway 93A: 1.7: 1.1 Highway 93 south Jasper: Highway 16 (TCH) at Jasper — — SPF: 7.1: 4.4 Edmonton city limits: Highway 216 in Sherwood Park: Sherwood Park ...
Maligne Lake Road – Jasper Park Lodge, Maligne Lake: I.D. No. 12 (Jasper National Park) 46.6: 29.0: Crosses Athabasca River: Pocahontas: 69.4: 43.1: Miette Hot Springs Road – Miette Hot Springs 76.4: 47.5: East gate of Jasper National Park: Yellowhead County 96.6: 60.0: Highway 40 north (Big Horn Highway) – Grande Cache, Grande Prairie ...
The Lake Louise to Banff section of the Banff National Park 1A route is also known as the Bow Valley Parkway. [2] It begins at Highway 1 at Lake Louise, generally paralleling it until it meets Highway 1 again approximately 6 km (3.7 mi) west of Banff.
The original alignment of Highway 22 started at Highway 2 (Macleod Trail) south of Calgary and travelled west to Priddis, where it turned south to Turner Valley and terminated at Highway 7 in Black Diamond. [5] In the 1970s, the province of Alberta began upgrading a series of roads to form a north–south, all-weather highway west of Highway 2.