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The partial cloverleaf interchange at Thunder Bay's Hodder Avenue is the only interchange in Northwestern Ontario. [1] [2] Highway 11 and 17 run concurrently from Nipigon down to Thunder Bay, a distance of approximately 90 kilometres (56 mi), where they swing west on the Shabaqua Highway, encountering Kakabeka Falls several
A map of Thunder Bay, Ontario showing municipal limits, built-up areas, parks, and transportation routes. Primary purpose as a locater map for Thunder Bay-related articles. English language. Source: Own work: Author: Vidioman
Map of existing and under-construction O-Train system. The O-Train is a light-rail transit (LRT) system in Ottawa, Ontario, Canada operated by OC Transpo consisting of three lines and 25 stations. The Confederation Line is fully grade-separated and consists of 13 stations including 4 underground stations.
Serves the community of Overbrook, just east of downtown Ottawa. Travels near Ottawa's baseball stadium RCGT Park, located on Coventry. As part of the New Ways to Bus network change, this route will be rerouted to run from St-Laurent to Billings Bridge, with service to Parliament removed. It will also replace route 5 service on Riverdale. 19
Highway 17B between Port Arthur and Fort William (which later amalgamated to become Thunder Bay) was created in 1968 when the Highway 11/17 concurrency was realigned to follow the Thunder Bay Expressway, and was cosigned with Highway 11B for its entire length. [27] [28] Highway 11B/17B started at Arthur Street and the Thunder Bay Expressway. It ...
In July 2008 the federal and provincial governments announced a $6.2 billion infrastructure program that makes the four-laning of Hwys. 11 and 17 near Kenora and Thunder Bay a priority. Engineering work on twinning 11/17 between Nipigon and Thunder Bay was to begin in 2008. [76]
Simultaneously, the Canadian Pacific Railway constructed a route across northern Ontario, connecting Thunder Bay with Ottawa by 1880. [67] The government largely subsidized these endeavours, and funding for road construction fell to the wayside, despite the pleas of townships, villages and settlers.
Thunder Bay has a central location within Canada, and is located in the middle of the Trans-Canada Highway system, crossed by railways, and is the location of the largest outbound port on the St. Lawrence Seaway System [1] and the fifth busiest airport in Ontario by aircraft movements.