Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Highway 41 west – Wakaw, Saskatoon: South end of Hwy 3 concurrency: 445.4: 276.8: Highway 3 west (Saskatchewan Avenue) / Broadway Avenue – Prince Albert: CanAm Highway north end; north end of Hwy 3 concurrency: Kinistino No. 459 462.8: 287.6: Highway 778 west – Kinistino: Willow Creek No. 458 470.7: 292.5: Fairy Glen access road 477.3: 296.6
The following is a list of rural municipality highways in the Canadian province of Saskatchewan between the numbers 700 and 799. The 700-series highways run west and east and, generally, the last two digits increase from south to north. Many of these highways are gravel from some of their length.
This was after long anticipation of the feature in the country. Street View cars had been spotted as early as 2007. [2] On December 2, 2009, nine more Canadian cities were added, from east to west St. John's, Sherbrooke, Sudbury, London, Winnipeg, Saskatoon, Edmonton, and Victoria. [3]
The Old Bone Trail was the name of the red river cart trail between Saskatoon and Rosetown. [19] The Saskatchewan Highway Act was established in 1922, in compliance with the 1919 Canadian highway act. At the initial stages of the Saskatchewan Highway Act, 10 miles (16 km) of provincial highways were gravel and the rest were earth roads.
Highway 9 is a highway in south-central Alberta, Canada, which together with Saskatchewan Highway 7 connects Calgary to Saskatoon, Saskatchewan via Drumheller.It is designated as a core route of the National Highway System, forming a portion of an interprovincial corridor. [2]
Inside Saskatoon's eastern city limits, Highway 41 begins at Highway 5. At Km 2.9, Highway 41 heads north-east and crosses Llewellin Road, exiting Saskatoon's city limits. The Agra Road intersection is at Km 4.2. Continuing north-east, Highway 41 meets with Bettken Road at Km 9.8. The intersection with Highway 27 is at Aberdeen.
It begins at Highway 14 (a.k.a. 22nd Street West) inside Saskatoon (the junction, along with a stretch of Highway 684 extending northward beyond 33rd Street West, was annexed in the early 2000s, and it ends at Highway 305, 3 km (1.9 mi) south of Dalmeny). Long known as Dalmeny Road, in 2012 the section of Highway 684 within Saskatoon's city ...
Highway 394, also known as Patience Lake Road, is an unsigned provincial highway in the Canadian province of Saskatchewan. It starts near an intersection between Highway 16 and Zimmerman Road (Range Road 3044) near Saskatoon, and goes eastward to Highway 316 north of Clavet. [2] It is about 10.5 kilometres (6.5 mi) long. [1]