Icefields Parkway

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93
Icefield Parkways
Athabasca Glacier on the Columbia Icefield. The Parkway is in the foreground. The glacier used to extend to about the road, and is disappearing at a rate of about 1 cm a day.
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Athabasca Glacier on the Columbia Icefield. The Parkway is in the foreground. The glacier used to extend to about the road, and is disappearing at a rate of about 1 cm a day.

The Icefields Parkway (French Promenade des Glaciers), also known as Alberta Highway 93, is a scenic road in Alberta, Canada. It parallels the Continental Divide, traversing the rugged landscape of the Canadian Rockies. It is within Banff National Park and Jasper National Park, linking Lake Louise and Jasper.

The parkway, 230 kilometres (143 miles) in length, was completed in 1940; it is named for the features such as the Columbia Icefield which are visible while traveling the parkway.

The parkway is very busy in the summer months of July and August with peak traffic flow of 100,000 vehicles per month. The parkway is primarily a two lane highway with occasional passing lanes. The highway is well engineered to minimize grades and hairpin turns but drivers must also be on the lookout for wildlife, touring cyclists, and vehicles stopped on the shoulder.

Going northwest from Lake Louise, the Icefields Parkway passes the following points of interest:

A national parks permit is required to travel on the Icefields Parkway; stations near Lake Louise and Jasper enforce the law. Commercial trucks are prohibited from using the parkway. The maximum speed limit is 90 km/h (55 mph) although the limit is reduced at Saskatchewan Crossing and the Columbia Icefield area. In winter, chains or all-season radial tires are required by law and road closures are not uncommon.

Campgrounds spot the length of the Parkway, and offer basic amenities such as water and firewood. These are typically available for a low daily rental fee.

The Parkway is easily bikable between Banff and Jasper over a three to five day period, and self-supported riders are quite common in the summer. Bicycle tour operators also commonly use the Parkway route, although often extend the ride to five days in order to leave time to drive back to the starting point.

Limited services are available at Saskatchewan Crossing and the Icefield Centre and then only from April to October. Gasoline is only available at Saskatchewan Crossing.

[edit] Highway 93A

93A
Highway 93A

Just south of Jasper, a short spur of the parkway branches off as Alberta provincial highway 93A, providing access to businesses on the south side of Jasper and an alternate route into the town itself. Another 93A spur is located farther along the parkway itself, providing alternate access to viewpoints and other attractions within Jasper National Park.

1 1A 1X 2 2A 3 3A 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 11A 12 13 13A 14 15 16 16A 17 18 19
20 20A 21 22 22X 23 24 25 26 27 28 28A 30 31 32 33 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 41A 42 43 44
45 47 49 50 52 53 54 55 56 58 59 60 61 62 63 64 64A 66 68 69 72 88 93 93A 100 201 216


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