Highway 420 (Ontario)
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Highway 420, Regional Road 420 |
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Length: | 3.8 km[1] (2.4 mi) | ||||||||||||
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Formed: | 1972[citation needed] | ||||||||||||
West end: | QEW in Niagara Falls | ||||||||||||
Major junctions: |
RR 102 in Niagara Falls (east end of Hwy 420) | ||||||||||||
East end: | Rainbow Bridge to Niagara Falls, New York (to US 62) |
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Highway 420 is a 400-series highway in Ontario, Canada. It is a spur route from the Queen Elizabeth Way (QEW) to the tourist district of Niagara Falls.
At 3.8 km (2.4 miles) in length, Highway 420 is Ontario's shortest 400-series Highway, running from Montrose Road in Niagara Falls to Stanley Avenue in the city's tourist district. Highway 420 east of Stanley Avenue becomes Roberts Street and Newman Hill leading to the Rainbow Bridge and Niagara Falls, New York. This portion used to be designated a part of Highway 420 until 2000, when it was handed over to the City of Niagara Falls and the Regional Municipality of Niagara, although the section from Falls Avenue to the Rainbow Bridge is still maintained by the province. Roberts Street and Newman Hill is now designated as Regional Road 420 and has been signed as such by the region.
The easternmost section was one of only two sections of 400-series highways at the time that was not a full freeway (the other being on Highway 406); it was an urban arterial road with at-grade intersections. It is unlikely that the easternmost section will be upgraded to a freeway, as the Rainbow bridge does not allow truck traffic and the route funnels into surface streets once across the border instead of connecting to an Interstate highway. Despite not being freeway, it has been upgraded to an expressway-standard route. All non-motor vehicle and pedestrian traffic is banned from using the roadway, and all access to the route (with the exception of two businesses) has been removed, with one major intersection remaining at McDonald Avenue. These upgrades, along with the reconstruction of the Victoria Avenue interchange, were performed by the Ministry of Transportation prior to its downloading to the Niagara Region.
Highway 420 was originally part of the QEW. In 1972, the new QEW extension to Fort Erie, Ontario opened, bypassing the old section which was redesignated as 420. The renamed Highway 420 had been extensively reconstructed around this time, with the conventional mercury truss lights, and a new high-capacity four-level interchange with the QEW, a rarity outside of the Greater Toronto Area. In 2001-2004, Highway 420 underwent another multiyear upgrade, which involved installation of a new lighting system, a new raised median barrier, and the replacement of several substandard overpasses.
Despite its 3.8 km length, the QEW-420 interchange allows for westward expansion and there are plans to extend Highway 420 west to the Thorold Tunnel, where it could assume the routing of the freeway portion of Highway 58 and connect with Highway 406 at the Thorold/St. Catharines boundary. The ultimate length would be about 14 km (8.7 miles) with a gap of about 6.5 km (4 miles) that would need to be constructed.
At one point, Highway 420 was considered as the eastern terminus of the proposed Mid-Peninsula Bypass due to the existing QEW-420 interchange, however this was dropped in favour of the alternate routing which runs directly to Fort Erie.
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[edit] Volume information (2005)
- Highest Volume: 34,400 AADT from Drummond Road to Dorchester Road
- Lowest Volume: 18,500 AADT from Rainbow Bridge to Victoria Avenue
[edit] Exit list
The entire length is in Niagara Falls.
km | Destinations | Notes |
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0 | QEW – Hamilton, Toronto, Fort Erie | Westbound exit and eastbound entrance |
1 | Dorchester Road | Westbound exit and eastbound entrance |
2 | Drummond Road | |
3 | RR 102 (Stanley Avenue) | At-grade; east end of Hwy 420 and west end of RR 420 |
[edit] Highway 420 in cannabis culture
Due to its association with the number 420 in cannabis culture, Highway 420 is also the location for the annual Cannabis Conference and Protest, usually taking place sometime around April 20th (i.e. 4/20). The event includes guest speakers, discussion panels, raffles, prizes and, most obviously, a cannabis march. The march begins near the Niagara Falls, continues down the famous Clifton Hill and ends, inevitably, at Highway 420.
[edit] References
[edit] External links
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