Ontario Highway 537
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]] Secondary Highway 537, commonly referred to as HighwayScript error: No such module "String".537, is a provincially maintained secondary highway in the Canadian province of Ontario. The highway is Script error: No such module "convert". in length, connecting Highway 69 near Wanup with Finni Road. It once continued Script error: No such module "convert". further to intersect Highway 17 in Wahnapitae, but was truncated in 1998; this portion of the route is now designated as Greater Sudbury Municipal Road 537. HighwayScript error: No such module "String".537 is now the only secondary highway in the province located within a jurisdiction that also maintains its own county/regional road network.
Route description
HighwayScript error: No such module "String".537 is a Script error: No such module "convert". cut-off route between HighwayScript error: No such module "String".69 and HighwayScript error: No such module "String".17 southeast of Sudbury.[1] It is also the main access road to the communities of Wanup and St. Cloud. The two-laned highway is paved for its entire length, as well as for the Script error: No such module "convert". that continues as Municipal RoadScript error: No such module "String".537.[2][3]
The route begins at Estaire Road (unsigned Highway 7279) within Greater Sudbury near an interchange with HighwayScript error: No such module "String".69 (slated to become a northerly extension of Highway 400) and travels Script error: No such module "convert". east, past the interchange and through forest, to the community of Wanup, where it intersects the Old Wanup Road.[2] Prior to 2009, the highway began at HighwayScript error: No such module "String".69, which at that time followed Estaire Road, immediately north of the Wanapitei River. It then proceeded north for Script error: No such module "convert". alongside the river to the intersection with the current route in Wanup.[4]
From Wanup, the highway travels eastward and northward towards HighwayScript error: No such module "String".17, travelling through sparsely populated forest along the way. It crosses the Wanapitei River at the community of St. Cloud. Provincial maintenance of the route ends just north of a small development at Finni Road, where the road continues as Sudbury Municipal RoadScript error: No such module "String".537 north into Wahnapitae, ending at HighwayScript error: No such module "String".17 within the community.[4][2][3]
According to the Ministry of Transportation (MTO), on an average day, approximately 3,150Script error: No such module "String".vehicles travel HighwayScript error: No such module "String".537 between the Wanapitei River and Finni Road, while approximately 570Script error: No such module "String".vehicles travel the highway between Estaire Road and the Wanapitei River. These represent the heaviest and least travelled sections of the route.[4]
History
HighwayScript error: No such module "String".537 was first assumed by the Department of Highways (DHO), predecessor to the modern MTO, in 1956, along with several dozen other secondary highways. It may have been provincially maintained as a development road prior to that.[5][6] The Wanup–Wanapitei Road was assumed by the DHO on MayScript error: No such module "String".9, 1956, connecting HighwayScript error: No such module "String".69 with HighwayScript error: No such module "String".17.[7] It was an unpaved gravel road at the time,[8] and remained as such until the mid-1980s; it was paved in 1984 or 1985.[9][10]
As part of a series of budget cuts initiated by premier Mike Harris under his Common Sense Revolution platform in 1995, numerous highways deemed to no longer be of significance to the provincial network were decommissioned and responsibility for the routes transferred to a lower level of government, a process referred to as downloading. The Script error: No such module "convert". section of HighwayScript error: No such module "String".537 within Nickel Centre was transferred to the Regional Municipality of Sudbury on JanuaryScript error: No such module "String".1, 1998.[11] The remainder of the highway was in the unincorporated townships of Dill, Cleland, and Dryden, and had no lower government to take over maintenance of the Highway 537 route until the area was amalgamated with the region to form Greater Sudbury on JanuaryScript error: No such module "String".1, 2001.[12][13] Following the amalgamation a further Script error: No such module "convert". of the route, between the former Cleland–Dryden Township boundary and the former Dryden–Nickel Centre boundary, was transferred to Greater Sudbury, but the remainder of the route still retains its provincial highway designation.[4]
As part of the plan to extend Highway 400 north to Sudbury along the HighwayScript error: No such module "String".69 corridor, a new four lane freeway was constructed between Estaire and south of Sudbury. Work began in 2005, and resulted in the construction of a new alignment of HighwayScript error: No such module "String".537 west from Wanup to what was then HighwayScript error: No such module "String".69 (Estaire Road), with an interchange at the new freeway. Both were completed and opened to traffic on NovemberScript error: No such module "String".12, 2009.[14][15] Highway 537 was rerouted along the new alignment, while the former routing south from Wanup was renamed Old Wanup Road. It remains part of the provincial highway system under the unsigned 7000-series designation of HighwayScript error: No such module "String".7042. This increased the length of HighwayScript error: No such module "String".537 by Script error: No such module "convert"..[4]
The Jumbo Creek crossing along Highway 537 experienced annual flooding that resulted in closure of the road and lengthy detours. At the behest of Sudbury councillor Deb McIntosh, Minister of Transportation Steven Del Duca committed to the rehabilitation project on June 15, 2015. The project to raise the roadway through the creek floodplain was tendered in 2018, and proceeded over the course of the summer of 2019 and 2020.[16] It was completed on October 5, 2020.[17]
Major intersections
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References
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External links
Template:Ontario Provincial Highways Template:Roads in Greater Sudbury