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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 highway were gravel and the rest were earth roads. The road allowances were laid out as a part of the Dominion Land survey system for homesteading.
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1926 highway map; 1946 Gousha (); 1955; 1955 Canadian road map; 1967 and 1989 commercial maps; 1920s numbers; Search directions to and from on google maps or mapquest to find route and junctions and distances
Highway 4: 652.2: 405.3 US 191 at United States border at Monchy: Hwy 224 / Hwy 904 at Meadow Lake Provincial Park: c. 1940: current Passes through Swift Current, Rosetown, North Battleford, and Meadow Lake. Highway 4: 650: 400 Alberta border near Walsh, AB: Manitoba border near Fleming — c. 1940: Replaced by Hwy 1. [5] [6] Highway 5: 380.2: ...
The highway extends north 22.9 kilometres (14.2 mi) to the Highway 55 intersection. At Km 2.0, Highway 694 intersects with a range road which provides access to Ordale west of the highway. The highway turns sharply to the west at Km 13.2. It continues bearing west until Km 15.3 at which point it returns to the northerly direction.
Yellowhead Highway or Saskatchewan Highway 16 connects the four western provinces in an east and west travel route north of the Saskatchewan Highway 1. CanAm Highway [ 11 ] travels in a north–south direction comprising Saskatchewan Highways SK 35 , Sk 39 , Sk 6 , Sk 3 , Sk 2 [ 12 ] as well as U.S. Route 85 . [ 13 ]
Phase one, east of Regina from Balgonie to Highway 33, finished on-schedule in October 2017. [2] The second phase of the bypass opened to traffic on October 29, 2019. [ 3 ] The project, slated to cost $1.8 billion overall, was the largest single infrastructure project in the history of Saskatchewan. [ 4 ]