New Brunswick Route 115

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New Brunswick Route 115
Length: 43.985 km[1] (27.3 mi)
Formed: 1965
South end: Route 134 in Moncton
Major
junctions:
Route 2 (TCH) in Moncton
Route 11 in Saint-Gregoire
North end: Route 134 in Saint-François-de-Kent
Major cities: Irishtown, Notre-Dame, Saint-Antoine

New Brunswick Route 115 is a highway in New Brunswick, Canada; running from a junction with Route 134 in the Lewisville neighbourhood of Moncton to Route 134 in Saint-François-de-Kent (near Bouctouche, a distance of 44 kilometres.

In Moncton, Route 115 follows Elmwood Drive, a suburban arterial running due north from the city through the neighbourhood of Sunny Brae. The route continues north to the community of Irishtown, then northeast to Notre-Dame. From Notre-Dame, Route 115 turns north to the village of Saint-Antoine, New Brunswick, then follows the south bank of the Little Bouctouche River to Saint-François-de-Kent.

Route 115 came into existence in 1965 as a renumbering of Route 31, during a mass redesignation of provincial highways. Until the late 1970s, Route 115 was routed from Notre-Dame eastward along present-day Route 535 to its former northern terminus in Cocagne.