Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Highway 5A is Highway 5's pre-1986 alignment south of Kamloops. Unlike the main route, a section of BC Highway 5 known as the Coquihalla, which is a twinned highway consisting of at least 4 lanes at any given point, the 182 km (113 mi) long Highway 5A is only two lanes, with one four lane section between Highway 5 and Highway 97C (known as the Okanagan Connector), lasting along BC Highway 5A ...
The Coquihalla Highway then enters the city of Merritt, which is accessed by two interchanges, both of which also provide access to Highway 5A, Highway 97C, and Highway 8. This diagram illustrates the wrong-way concurrency between Highways 5 and 97 through Kamloops. [4] The section of highway, between Merritt and Kamloops, is 72 km (45 mi) long.
Buffalo Bill Cody Scenic Byway is in the U.S. state of Wyoming and spans most of the distance from Cody, Wyoming to Yellowstone National Park. The 27.5-mile (44.3 km) scenic highway follows the north fork of the Shoshone River through the Wapiti Valley to Sylvan Pass and the eastern entrance to Yellowstone.
Hwy 18 / Youbou Road at Lake Cowichan: South Shore Road — — Highway 963:0361: 5.60: 3.48 Cowichan Bay Road southeast of Duncan: Maple Bay Road east of Duncan: Tzouhalem Road — — Highway 963:0365: 4.19: 2.60 Chemainus Road (unsigned Hwy 1A) in North Cowichan: Salt Spring Island ferry terminal at Crofton (North Cowichan) Crofton Road ...
The town is sited on and straddles a gap that is the continental divide and the Stewart-Cassiar Highway (also known as BC Hwy 37) passes through the town as well, thus also crossing the divide at that point. Pacific or Arctic Ocean drainage.
US 287 was originally designated as Montana State Highway 287 (MT 287). The Montana State Highway Commission first assigned the MT 287 designation in 1958 to a cross-state route from Yellowstone National Park at West Yellowstone to the Canada–United States border at the Piegan–Carway Border Crossing between Babb and Cardston, Alberta.
Merritt is a city in the Nicola Valley of the south-central Interior of British Columbia, Canada.It is 270 km (170 mi) northeast of Vancouver.Situated at the confluence of the Nicola and Coldwater rivers, it is the first major community encountered after travelling along Phase One of the Coquihalla Highway and acts as the gateway to all other major highways to the B.C. Interior.
The Highway 5 in British Columbia used to be designated as part of the Yellowhead Highway only between Tête Jaune Cache and Kamloops, with Highway 5 south of Kamloops being signed with the standard BC highway shield. [7] In the 2000s, route markers along the Coquihalla Highway were changed to reflect Yellowhead Highway 5.