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Route 111 was first designated in 1965, following the routing of former Route 29. Until the construction of the Saint John Airport connector in 1991, Route 111 continued along the Loch Lomond Road into Saint John's city centre, and it has also been extended in Sussex Corner to reach the former Trans-Canada Highway, now part of Route 1.
Provincial highways in New Brunswick; Former routes; ... Route 1 in Sussex [7] Route 11: 440.4 273.7 Route 2 (TCH) / Route 15 near Shediac: R-132 near Matapédia [8]
The road is approximately 40 kilometres, and services small, otherwise isolated, rural communities. In these areas, the highway is often unofficially referred to as "Main Street." The road parallels Route 1 and follows the Kennebecasis River. The highway starts in Hampton as Hall Road, then Main Street. It is also called Main Street in Sussex.
Maintained by New Brunswick Department of Transportation: Length: 137.63 km [1] (85.52 mi) Existed: 1965–present: Major junctions; West end: Route 111 and Route 1 in Sussex Corner: East end: Route 106 in Moncton: Location; Country: Canada: Province: New Brunswick: Major cities: Alma, Riverside-Albert, Hillsborough, Riverview: Highway system
Route 96 (unsigned) – Royree Road (2 km west of New Brunswick Route 720) – Route 3 in St. Stephen, New Brunswick (via St. Stephen Drive; now entirely absorbed by Route 1) Route 106 (1965–1968)— Hartland – Perth-Andover (Now part of Routes 103 and 130)
Until 2001 this was the end of the highway, but with the opening of a new 4-lane section of the Trans-Canada Highway , it now follows the old alignment of that highway from Youngs Cove to a junction with Route 1 in Sussex. While passing through Minto, Route 10 forms Pleasant Drive, and in Chipman, it forms parts of Bridge Street and Main Street.
Route 11 in Jacquet River, approximately halfway between Bathurst and Campbellton. Route 11 is a provincial highway in northeastern New Brunswick, Canada.The 440-kilometre (270 mi) road runs from Moncton to the Quebec border, near Campbellton, at the Matapédia Bridge, following the province's eastern and northern coastlines.
Sussex is home to the Sussex Drive-In, a single screen drive-in theatre, which has been in operation since 1967. [14] The Sussex Drive-In has a 24m high screen and 300 car capacity. It is opened seasonally in the summer. Southern New Brunswick's only alpine ski hill, Poley Mountain, in the Caledonia Highlands is located southeast of the town.