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road/highway [community] State Notes Structure or notable feature Coordinates Little Gold Creek: Hwy 9 (Top of the World Highway) Yukon: Poker Creek: PKC: AK-5 (Top of the World Highway) Alaska Canada: Friday before Victoria Day to Sept 15 (9:00–19:00 YT); U.S.: Memorial Day to Labor Day (8:00–18:00 AKT); depending on weather & road conditions.
The first was a north–south highway in southern Alberta, Canada that existed between the 1950s and 1979. It now forms the southernmost portion of Highway 41. [2] The current Alberta highway 48 connects to Northwest Territories Highway 5 at the Northwest Territories border in Fort Smith NWT to Fort Fitzgerald and Hay Camp Road. The road was ...
Highway 93 at the B.C. border at Vermilion Pass: Highway 16 (TCH) at Jasper • Banff–Windermere Highway • Icefields Parkway 1959: current Highway 93A: 24: 15 Highway 93 at Athabasca Falls: Highway 93 east of Marmot Basin — — Highway 93A: 1.7: 1.1 Highway 93 south Jasper: Highway 16 (TCH) at Jasper — — SPF: 7.1: 4.4 Edmonton city limits
I-15 on the American side joins Alberta Highway 4 on the Canadian side. Similarly, BNSF Railway and Canadian Pacific Railway (CP) connect. A primary conduit for cross border trade estimated at CA$6 billion, it is the busiest crossing for both the province of Alberta and state of Montana, and among the busiest west of the Great Lakes. [2]
By 1928, the year a gravel road stretched from Edmonton to the United States border, Alberta's provincial highway network comprised 2,310 km (1,440 mi). [9] Prior to 1973, the expanding highway system comprised one-digit and two-digit highways, with some numbers having letter suffixes (e.g., Highway 1X, Highway 26A). [10]
Highway 501 east / Highway 785 north (Macleod Street) South end of Hwy 501 concurrency: 70.6: 43.9: Highway 501 west / Hewetson Avenue – Beaver Mines, Castle Mountain: Roundabout; north end of Hwy 501 concurrency: Pincher Station: 73.5: 45.7: Highway 3 (Crowsnest Highway) – Crowsnest Pass, Fort Macleod, Lethbridge: Interchange proposed; [5 ...
The Chief Mountain Border Crossing connects the town of Babb, Montana, with Pincher Creek, Alberta, on the Canada–US border. Montana Highway 17 on the American side joins Alberta Highway 6 on the Canadian side, creating the only road border crossing within the Waterton-Glacier International Peace Park .
Much of Highway 2 is a core route in the National Highway System of Canada: between Fort Macleod and Edmonton and between Donnelly and Grimshaw. The speed limit along most parts of the highway between Fort Macleod and Morinville is 110 km/h (68 mph), and in urban areas, such as through Claresholm, Nanton, Calgary and Edmonton, it ranges from 50 km/h (31 mph) to 110 km/h (68 mph).