Ontario Highway 69
Template:Good article Template:Short description Script error: No such module "Infobox".Template:Template otherScript error: No such module "Infobox road/errors".Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters".[[Category:Infobox road instances Template:Infobox road/meta/mask/category]] King's Highway 69, commonly referred to as Highway 69, is a provincially maintained north–south highway in the central portion of the Canadian province of Ontario. In conjunction with Highway 400, it links Toronto with the city of Greater Sudbury at Highway 17, via Parry Sound. It is part of the Trans-Canada Highway and the National Highway System. From its southern terminus of Highway 559 at Carling, HighwayScript error: No such module "String".69 begins as HighwayScript error: No such module "String".400 narrows from a four-laned freeway to a two lane highway. It travels northerly for approximately Script error: No such module "convert". to south of the French River before widening back to a divided four lane freeway for approximately Script error: No such module "convert". into Sudbury. The final Script error: No such module "convert". of the route, connecting to HighwayScript error: No such module "String".17, is a five lane arterial road that will be converted to freeway as the final phase of the four-laning.
HighwayScript error: No such module "String".69 was first designated in 1936 when the Department of Highways (DHO) assumed the Rama Road between Atherley and Washago. This short route was extended the following year when the DHO merged with the Department of Northern Development and expanded the King's Highway network north of the Severn River. By the beginning of World War II, the route reached as far north as Britt; a separate segment connected the town of Burwash with Sudbury. However, the rationing of labour and materials due to the war effort resulted in these two sections remaining separated until the mid-1950s. In 1976, several reroutings and renumbering took place in the Muskoka area. As a result, the portion of HighwayScript error: No such module "String".69 between Brechin and Foot's Bay was renumbered as Highway 169, while the entirety of Highway 103 between Coldwater and Foot's Bay was renumbered as HighwayScript error: No such module "String".69.
Between 1956 and 1979, HighwayScript error: No such module "String".69 extended through and north of Sudbury. Until some point between 1974 and 1977, it reached as far north as Capreol, after which it was truncated at Hanmer. By 1980, the northern terminus had shifted to the Southwest Bypass, onto which HighwayScript error: No such module "String".17 was rerouted in 1995. Throughout the 1990s and 2000s, HighwayScript error: No such module "String".400 was gradually pushed north to its current terminus by twinning HighwayScript error: No such module "String".69, gradually truncating its length. A commitment to complete four-laning to Sudbury has been made by all three major provincial political parties in Ontario since 1991, but as of 2022 there remains Script error: No such module "convert". of two lane highway still to be constructed. Various former alignments of HighwayScript error: No such module "String".69 remain in use as directional carriageways of HighwayScript error: No such module "String".400 or as local roads. The highway forms part of the Georgian Bay Route of the Trans-Canada Highway, which continues south along HighwayScript error: No such module "String".400.
Route description
HighwayScript error: No such module "String".69 is a major highway serving the recreational areas surrounding Georgian Bay and the Thirty Thousand Islands, as well as providing the westernmost fixed connection between southern and northern Ontario; the highway occupies the northern portion of a corridor that connects Toronto to Sudbury, with HighwayScript error: No such module "String".400 occupying the southern portion. While Highway 6 is located further west, it requires the use of a ferry service between the Bruce Peninsula and Manitoulin Island.[1][2]
Between Nobel and Sudbury, there are no large communities, although numerous small communities lie adjacent to the route, including the Shawanaga First Nation, Pointe au Baril, Magnetawan First Nation, Byng Inlet, Britt, Bigwood, Delamere and the Henvey Inlet First Nation.[3] As of 2023 the highway begins Script error: No such module "convert". north of HighwayScript error: No such module "String".559 (ExitScript error: No such module "String".241) in Carling, where the divided four lane HighwayScript error: No such module "String".400 narrows into the two-laned HighwayScript error: No such module "String".69 (that will serve as the future southbound lanes).[4][5][6] Construction is scheduled to begin in the mid-2020s to extend HighwayScript error: No such module "String".400 northward by Script error: No such module "convert". from HighwayScript error: No such module "String".559 to Shebooshekong Road near the Shawanaga First Nation.[5]
HighwayScript error: No such module "String".69 travels in a predominantly north-northeast direction, well inland of Georgian Bay. The Canadian Shield dominates the topography, resulting in numerous transverse marshes and rock outcroppings that bisect the highway, with dense forests in between;[6][7] services are limited and distant.[3][6] Exiting Carling Township, the highway enters The Archipelago, where it scrapes the northeastern edge of the Shawanaga First Nation. It provides access to Pointe au Baril and Pointe au Baril Station before intersecting the southern end of HighwayScript error: No such module "String".529, a former alignment of the highway.[8][9] It enters Unorganized Centre Parry Sound District, a sparsely-inhabited agglomeration of townships, where it provides access to Britt and Britt Station, as well as the northern end of HighwayScript error: No such module "String".529.[3][6]
Progressing north, HighwayScript error: No such module "String".69 enters Sudbury District at the community of Key River. It passes through Cranberry, intersecting Highway 522. HighwayScript error: No such module "String".69 widens to a four lane freeway north of HighwayScript error: No such module "String".522 before briefly curving northward. It crosses the French River near Wanikewin and encounters an interchange with HighwayScript error: No such module "String".607 near Bigwood. It remains a divided four-laned freeway the remainder of its journey into Sudbury, passing by the communities of Rutter, Burwash, Estaire, and Wanup before merging into a four-lane arterial road immediately southeast of HighwayScript error: No such module "String".17 at the Southeast Bypass. The highway ends at the interchange with Highway 17; past this point, the roadway continues into Sudbury as Municipal Road 46 (Regent Street).[3][6]
History
HighwayScript error: No such module "String".69 has undergone several major changes during its existence, so much so that the first section designated has not been a King's Highway for 60Script error: No such module "String".years and lay approximately Script error: No such module "convert". from the current highway. In other places, a minor two-lane gravel highway has gradually been upgraded to a four-lane freeway. On AugustScript error: No such module "String".5, 1936, the DHO assumed the Rama Road, connecting Highway 12 at Atherley with Highway 11 at Washago.[10] On MarchScript error: No such module "String".31, 1937, the Department of Northern Development (DND) was merged into the DHO, allowing the latter to extend the provincial highway network north of the Severn River.[11] Subsequently, through August 1937, HighwayScript error: No such module "String".69 was extended Script error: No such module "convert". north to the Naiscoot River, midway between Pointe au Baril and Britt.[12][13] This extension followed DND trunk routes to Nobel, where a munitions and aircraft factory would soon provide an instrumental role in the war effort. In the north, the road connecting Sudbury and Burwash was also assumed as HighwayScript error: No such module "String".69 on AugustScript error: No such module "String".11.[12] It was intended to connect these two segments over the next several years; however, the outbreak of World War II in September 1939 halted all non-essential construction due to the short supply of labour and materials.[14] Although an extension from the Naiscoot River to Britt would open by 1940.[15][16]
Once the war ended, construction resumed to bridge the Script error: No such module "convert". gap between the two sections of Highway 69.[17] French River and Alban would be linked to the provincial highway network via Britt by 1952. This allowed motorists to take a far more direct route between Severn River and Sudbury, by taking advantage of a detour via Highway 535 and HighwayScript error: No such module "String".64, through the small communities of Hagar and Noëlville.[18] That same year also saw the rerouting of the southern end of the highway; the southern end was moved east from Atherley to Brechin and the Rama Road decommissioned as a provincial highway. The new routing was longer but gave the southern end of the highway a more significant purpose than as a bypass of HighwayScript error: No such module "String".11. The Rama Road has since been known as Simcoe County RoadScript error: No such module "String".44.[19][20]
The biggest gap that remained on HighwayScript error: No such module "String".69 was between Alban and Burwash, but this was eliminated from 1952 to 1955,[21][22] providing a third link from Southern Ontario to Northern Ontario (the other two being HighwayScript error: No such module "String".11 and HighwayScript error: No such module "String".17). Until HighwayScript error: No such module "String".69 was completed between Parry Sound and Sudbury, drivers travelling between Southern Ontario and Sudbury or Sault Ste. Marie had to travel along a circuitous routing via HighwayScript error: No such module "String".11 to North Bay, and thence along HighwayScript error: No such module "String".17 to Sudbury and beyond to Sault Ste. Marie.[20] In 1956, HighwayScript error: No such module "String".69 was extended north of Sudbury to Capreol, bringing its length to Script error: No such module "convert"..[23]
The year 1976 saw big changes for HighwayScript error: No such module "String".69. The portion of highway south of MacTier was shifted onto the routing of former HighwayScript error: No such module "String".103, completely absorbing that roadway into its length. The former routing was renamed HighwayScript error: No such module "String".169. It was at this time that HighwayScript error: No such module "String".69 was at its longest, from HighwayScript error: No such module "String".12 and HighwayScript error: No such module "String".400 at Waubaushene north to Sudbury.[24] Until the mid-1970s, HighwayScript error: No such module "String".69 continued through Sudbury along Regent Street, Paris Street and Notre Dame Avenue, and into the suburban towns of Valley East and Capreol. At some point between 1974 and 1977, it was truncated at Hanmer.[25][26] By 1980, the northern terminus had shifted to the Southwest Bypass.[27][28] While this route is no longer part of the provincial highway, and is officially designated as a series of Sudbury Municipal Roads, it is still often referred to locally as "HighwayScript error: No such module "String".69 North".[29]
Four-laning
Although planning for an eventual four-lane highway started in 1969, the commitment to expand the entirety of HighwayScript error: No such module "String".69 to a full freeway was first made in 1991 by the New Democrat government of Bob Rae.[31] The first work on the southernmost portion of the highway had already begun in 1990, with the construction of the southbound structures over Matchedash Bay and the Canadian National Railway crossing north of HighwayScript error: No such module "String".12. Both were complete by the end of 1990. During 1991, construction began on the interchanges at Quarry Road and Port Severn Road, new service roads between those interchanges and the southbound structure over the Trent–Severn Waterway. In 1988, the Ministry of Transportation of Ontario completed a study of the HighwayScript error: No such module "String".69 corridor between Muskoka RoadScript error: No such module "String".5 in Port Severn and Tower Road southwest of MacTier, a distance of approximately Script error: No such module "convert".. This work was carried out through the 1990s as one large project, reaching as far as south of Go Home Lake Road (Muskoka District RoadsScript error: No such module "String".32/38) by mid-to-late 1997.[32][33][34] It was extended Script error: No such module "convert". farther to south of the Musquash River in October 1999.[35] The HighwayScript error: No such module "String".400 designation was moved north, and HighwayScript error: No such module "String".69 equally shortened, after each project.[36][37]
Engineering was underway on the first Script error: No such module "convert". south of Sudbury. However, that project was shelved by the Progressive Conservative (PC) government of Mike Harris shortly after the 1995 provincial election.[38] Despite this, construction of the segment from Highway 141 to the Seguin River, proceeded in November 1999, and the MacTier bypass south of HighwayScript error: No such module "String".141 to the Moon River in February 2000. The majority of these three projects were built on a new alignment, with the former route of HighwayScript error: No such module "String".69 becoming Lake Joseph Road and Oastler Park Road.[39] Lake Joseph Road is maintained by the MTO as an unsigned highway. The portion south of HighwayScript error: No such module "String".141 designated as HighwayScript error: No such module "String".7289, and the northern portion as HighwayScript error: No such module "String".7290.[4] The Parry Sound Bypass, from Badger Road to the Seguin River, opened on NovemberScript error: No such module "String".1, 2001;[30] the section from HighwayScript error: No such module "String".141 to Badger Road opened in October 2002;[35] and the MacTier Bypass opened on OctoberScript error: No such module "String".7, 2003.[40]
The HighwayScript error: No such module "String".400 designation was extended northward from the Musquash River to the Seguin River following the opening of the MacTier Bypass, but the HighwayScript error: No such module "String".69 designation remained in place as a concurrency. This was due a Script error: No such module "convert". two lane gap between the Musquash and Moon Rivers, passing through the Wahta Mohawks territory, that came to be known as the Wahta Gap.[41][42] The Territorial Reserve did not oppose the construction; however, the land was unobtainable due to a technicality requiring a minimum voter turnout of 65 percent.[43] The land claim was settled by a vote held on OctoberScript error: No such module "String".25, 2003.[44] Following ratification, construction began in December 2004,[35] and opened JulyScript error: No such module "String".15, 2008.[45] Following its completion, HighwayScript error: No such module "String".69 was truncated at what is now the south junction of Lake Joseph Road (ExitScript error: No such module "String".189) near MacTier, an overall reduction of over Script error: No such module "convert". since prior to 1989.[36]
The City of Sudbury continued to lobby for the expansion of the highway, calling attention especially to an ongoing series of fatal car accidents at the intersection of Highway 637, where a sharp S-curve along HighwayScript error: No such module "String".69 rendered the approaching intersection effectively invisible to northbound traffic. Assisted by Rick Bartolucci, the Liberal MPP for Sudbury, the CRASH 69 (Community Rallying Against Substandard HighwayScript error: No such module "String".69) committee of Sudbury residents campaigned throughout the late 1990s and early 2000s to have the project reinstated.[31][46]
Premier Harris' successor (and former MPP for Parry Sound—Muskoka), Ernie Eves, announced the resumption of construction between Parry Sound and Sudbury in 2002; however, the PCs did not commit to four-laning the entire route.[31] The Liberal government of Dalton McGuinty came to power following the 2003 election with a promise to have a commitment in place within sixScript error: No such module "String".months.[47] Construction began on a Script error: No such module "convert". segment south of Sudbury to Estaire in January 2005, with route planning studies now completed for the remaining two-lane sections.[48][49] In June of that year, construction began on a Script error: No such module "convert". extension of four-laning from Parry Sound to north of Nobel.[35] Later in 2005, the provincial government announced that four-laning between Parry Sound and Sudbury would be completed by 2017.[50]
The first project completed north of Parry Sound was the section between Sudbury and Estaire, which opened on NovemberScript error: No such module "String".12, 2009.[51] The section from south of the Seguin River in Parry Sound to north of Highway 559, bypassing Nobel, opened on OctoberScript error: No such module "String".26, 2010.[52] The former alignment in Sudbury is now known as Estaire Road,[53] while the former route through Nobel is now Nobel Road.[54] In 2008, work began to realign the S-curve at HighwayScript error: No such module "String".637; two lanes opened to traffic on JulyScript error: No such module "String".27, 2010,[55] while the completed four-lane route, with an interchange at HighwayScript error: No such module "String".637, opened to traffic on AugustScript error: No such module "String".8, 2012.[56] The former alignment now has the name Murdock River Road, and serves as a local road accessible only from HighwayScript error: No such module "String".637.[57] In the summer of 2012, the HighwayScript error: No such module "String".69 designation was shortened by Script error: No such module "convert"., between MacTier and 1Script error: No such module "String".kilometre north of HighwayScript error: No such module "String".559, resulting in its current length.[4][58][59]
HighwayScript error: No such module "String".69 passes through significant tracts of wilderness and forested land, and consequently has seen a rate of animal collisions well above the provincial norm. Several segments of the four-laned route will include special grade-separated wildlife crossings, the first of which was completed in March 2012.[60] In the summer of 2012, work began to four lane a Script error: No such module "convert". segment between north of Highway 64 and the Murdock River,[61] as well as on a Script error: No such module "convert". segment between Highway 607 and north of HighwayScript error: No such module "String".64.[62] The first project was opened SeptemberScript error: No such module "String".11, 2015,[63] while the segment from north of HighwayScript error: No such module "String".607 to north of HighwayScript error: No such module "String".64, including an interchange at the latter, was opened by the beginning of August 2016.[64] The most recently completed section as of 2023 was a Script error: No such module "convert". segment from north of HighwayScript error: No such module "String".522 to north of HighwayScript error: No such module "String".607 that opened on DecemberScript error: No such module "String".23, 2021.[65]
Future
Although the original plan called for the four-laning of the highway to be complete by 2017, the timeline was pushed back due to delays in environmental assessments and land negotiations with First Nations bands impacted by the construction.[66] In the early 2010s, a widespread perception that the project appeared to be falling behind schedule was frequently discussed in Sudbury's media and by candidates in municipal and provincial elections,[67] but the Ministry of Transportation continued to assert that the project was on track for completion in 2017. In March 2015, the ministry officially acknowledged that the 2017 timeline would not be met, and indicated that the new target date was between 2019 and 2021.[66] In 2017, however, although the ministry made no formal announcement, its annual Northern Highways Report listed a completion date within that period only for the section already under construction between the French River and north of Highway 522 at Grundy Lake Provincial Park.[68] This section opened in December 2021, several months ahead of the originally foreseen completion date of 2022.[69]
The remaining route between Nobel and Grundy Lake is listed as "beyond 2021", as of July 2021.[70] A Script error: No such module "convert". section, from north of the Magnetawan River to Grundy Lake, is funded but has no announced construction timeline.[71]
Major intersections
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References
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External links
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- Highway 69 at OntHighways.com
- Highway 69 Four-Laning Detail Design
- Highway 69 Expansion - engineering and design projects
Template:Interprovincial highway
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Template:Ontario Provincial Highways
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