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Note: Peel Regional Road 19 is also signed as Halton RR 25 on maps from the Region boundary to Terra Cotta (roughly 5 km). Burnhamthorpe Road: Halton Regional Road 25 Halton Regional Road 13 Oakville Continuation of street in Mississauga and Toronto. It was previously called Back Concession Road in Halton County before 1967. [1] 32nd Sideroad ...
Oakville is a town and lower-tier municipality in Halton Region, Ontario, Canada.It is located on Lake Ontario between Toronto and Hamilton.At its 2021 census the town had a population of 213,759, [3] with an estimated 233,700 people as of 2024, making it Ontario's largest town.
Bronte is the community that makes up much of the west end of Oakville, in Ontario, Canada. Twelve Mile Creek (known informally as Bronte Creek) flows through the middle of town and empties into Lake Ontario. Main roads include Bronte Road (north-south), Lakeshore Road West (east-west, parallel to Lake Ontario) and Rebecca Street (east-west ...
The MTO still maintains a 1.1-kilometre (0.68 mi) portion of Dundas Street at the Highway 407 interchange in Burlington, a 400-metre (440 yd) portion at the Highway 403 interchange on the Oakville–Mississauga boundary, and a 1.9-kilometre (1.2 mi) portion at the Highway 427 interchange in Toronto. [1]
Lakeshore Road (originally Lake Shore Road) is a historic roadway in the Canadian province of Ontario, running through the city of Burlington and the town of Oakville in Halton Region, as well as the city of Mississauga in Peel Region.
Aerial view of Winston Churchill Boulevard in Erin Mills, Mississauga. Winston Churchill Boulevard is a long north-south roadway that predominantly forms the western boundary of Peel Region with the eastern boundaries of Halton Region and Wellington County, in Ontario, Canada.
The history of Highway 25 dates back to 1925 when the Department of Public Highways, predecessor to the Ministry of Transportation of Ontario (MTO), assumed control of the Halton County road between Palermo (since amalgamated into a neighbourhood of Oakville) and Milton on April 14, 1925. [2]
King's Highway 2, commonly referred to as Highway 2, is the lowest-numbered provincially maintained highway in the Canadian province of Ontario, and was originally part of a series of identically numbered highways which started in Windsor, stretched through Quebec and New Brunswick, and ended in Halifax, Nova Scotia.