Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The 5 km (3.1 mi) gap with no express/collector split between Highways 427 and 409 is a traffic bottleneck, since the space constraints of the existing flyovers of the at the 401-427 interchange also limit the width of the 401 in this section to eight lanes (widened from the original six). [11]
Ontario Highway 401 crash: 3 September 1999 Tilbury, Ontario: 8 Canada's deadliest multiple-vehicle collision resulted from dense fog conditions on a section of Ontario Highway 401 between Windsor and Tilbury. There were 87 vehicles involved in the pile-up in both directions of the divided highway, killing 8 people and injuring a further 45. [18]
The September 3, 1999, Ontario Highway 401 crash, was a multiple-vehicle collision that resulted from dense fog conditions on a section of Ontario Highway 401 between Windsor and Tilbury. There were 87 vehicles involved in the pile-up in both directions of the divided highway, killing eight people and injuring a further 45.
A large blaze at a storage facility in Pickering, east of Toronto, produced heavy plumes of smoke that drifted over Highway 401, forcing traffic to slow down due to reduced visibility, local media ...
Legislative Assembly of Ontario (1896). Appendix to the Report of the Ontario Bureau of Industries; Legislative Assembly of Ontario (1897). Report of the Provincial Instructor in Road-Making. Ontario Department of Agriculture; A.A.D.T. Traffic Volumes 1955–1969 And Traffic Collision Data 1967–1969. Ontario Department of Highways. 1970.
Highway 401 in London: 1953 [41] current Highway 403: 125.2: 77.8 Highway 401 near Woodstock Highway 401 / Highway 410 in Mississauga Chedoke Expressway, Alexander Graham Bell Parkway 1963 [42] current Highway 404: 50.1: 31.1 Highway 401 / DVP in Toronto: Woodbine Avenue in East Gwillimbury: 1977 [43] current Highway 405: 8.7: 5.4
Highway 401 is the longest freeway at 828.0 kilometres (514.5 mi), in addition to being the widest and busiest road in Canada. Highway 420 is the shortest of the routes at 3.3 kilometres (2.1 mi). [1] There are four examples of 400 series standard highways in Ontario that are not signed as such.
Highway 401: Maddaugh Road See Ontario Highway 6#Future. [18] Highway 7: Kitchener: Guelph: See Ontario Highway 7#Proposed Kitchener–Guelph freeway. [19] Highway 69: Highway 400: See Ontario Highway 69#Four-laning. [20] Highway 413 Highway 401 / 407 ETR Highway 400: Entire length.