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These Provincial Trunk Highways are numbered from 1 to 99 for mainline routes and 100 to 199 for loop/spur routes (only four currently exist). Provincial Trunk Highways 1 and 75, as well as the Perimeter Highway (PTH 100/PTH 101), are the most important and are divided highways for most of their length with some sections at expressway or freeway standards.
The "Manitoba Welcome/Bienvenue" sign, entering Manitoba from Saskatchewan at the provincial boundary on TCH 1. The first Provincial Trunk Highways in Manitoba were numbered in 1926. [3] The original Highway 1 was one of nine highways fanning out from Winnipeg, but was different in that it fanned out from the west and the east.
Provincial Road 417 (PR 417) is a 24.8-kilometre-long (15.4 mi) east-west spur of PTH 6 in the Rural Municipality of West Interlake, running westward from its intersection with PTH 68 in Eriksdale to the Lake Manitoba First Nation on the shores of southern Lake Manitoba, having a junction with PR 418 along the way. The entire length of PR 417 ...
This section serves Manitoba's second largest city, Brandon. As noted in the Portage la Prairie section, this was the original route for PTH 1 through Brandon prior to 1959. PTH 1A is known as 1st Street north-south and Victoria Avenue east-west inside the city limits, and maintains an east-west designation for the entire route.
The National Highway System (French: Réseau routier national) in Canada is a federal designation for a strategic transport network of highways and freeways. [1] The system includes but is not limited to the Trans-Canada Highway, [1] and currently consists of 38,098 kilometres (23,673 mi) of roadway designated under one of three classes: Core Routes, Feeder Routes, and Northern and Remote Routes.
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.
Prior to 1980, the southern terminus for PTH 5 was at PTH 16 (PTH 4 prior to 1977) in Neepawa, making the original length of the highway 246 kilometres (153 mi). [5]In 1980, the highway was extended to its current southbound terminus, replacing PR 258 between Neepawa and PTH 3 at Cartwright, via Glenboro and Carberry, and PTH 28 between the U.S. border and Cartwright.
Provincial Road 365 (PR 365) is a 29.7-kilometre-long (18.5 mi) east-west spur of PTH 10 (Northern Woods and Water Route), running deep into the heart of the Manitoba section of the Porcupine Provincial Forest to provide access to Bell Lake Provincial Park and North Steeprock Lake Provincial Park. It is a two-lane unpaved gravel road for its ...