Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Between the two communities, is a new section of highway, opened in the early 2000s bypassing Dawsonville, and adhering to modern highway standards. After roughly 19 kilometres, Route 17 crosses the Upsalquitch River , and passes through Robinsonville , before climbing Upsalquitch Hill.
This is a list of numbered provincial highways in the Canadian province of New Brunswick. These provincial highways are maintained by the Department of Transportation and Infrastructure in New Brunswick. For a list of formerly-numbered highways, see List of former New Brunswick provincial highways.
Route 2 is a major provincial highway in the Canadian province of New Brunswick, carrying the main route of the Trans-Canada Highway in the province. The highway connects with Autoroute 85 at the border with Quebec, Highway 104 at the border with Nova Scotia, as well as with traffic from Interstate 95 in the U.S. state of Maine via the short Route 95 connector.
View of Cobequid Pass, toll section of Highway 104 through Colchester County. Highway 104 outside Westville, Nova Scotia (Exit 21). The highway's present alignment measures 319 kilometres (198 mi) long, of which the western 180 km (110 mi) between the inter-provincial border with New Brunswick at Fort Lawrence through to Sutherlands River is a 4-lane divided freeway.
Replaced by Route 325 [4] and rendered partly obsolete by Highway 103. Trunk 4: 414.6: 257.6 Hwy 104 (TCH) near Thomson Station: Trunk 28 in Glace Bay — — Passes through Truro, New Glasgow, Antigonish, and Sydney. Largely unsigned near Truro, possibly to lure traffic onto the superseding highway. Trunk 5: 165: 103 Trunk 4 / Trunk 19 in Port ...
The route connects Amherst in Cumberland County, near the interprovincial boundary with New Brunswick, with Scot's Bay in Kings County, Nova Scotia. [ 2 ] [ 3 ] A spur of Glooscap Trail follows Trunk 2 in Truro , through the Shubenacadie Valley , to Enfield at the boundary with Halifax Regional Municipality .
Provincial highways in New Brunswick; Former routes; ← Route 113: → Route 115: Route 114 is a 137.6 km (85.5 mi) Canadian secondary highway in southeastern New ...
Route 1 is a highway in the southern part of the Canadian province of New Brunswick.It begins west of the Canada–United States border at St. Stephen, and runs east for 239.11 kilometres (148.58 mi) to Route 2 at River Glade.