Robie Street is a north-south artery, street and provincial road that runs for 7 kilometres within the Halifax Peninsula area of the Halifax Regional Municipality, from Memorial Drive in the North End Halifax, to Gorsebrook Avenue in the South End. The street in most places is 4 lanes wide with a centre median from Gorsebrook Ave to Cunard Street. From Cunard to Almon Streets, it is a 2-lane street. Public resistance prevented expansion to 4 lanes; it remains a major bottleneck for traffic in the afternoon going to the Macdonald Bridge via North Street.
From Livingstone Street to Memorial Drive it is a 2 lane street. From Almon Street to the MacKay Bridge Ramps it is 4 lanes undivided. Massachusetts Avenue (effective May 21, 2007, formerly and still commonly referred to as Robie Street Extension) connects Robie Street from Livingstone Street to the MacKay Bridge. On the Halifax Peninsula street grid system the civic numbers range from 820 to 3899.[1]
The street was named for Simon Bradstreet Robie (1770-1858), a prominent Nova Scotia judge and politician.[2] There also streets named after Judge Robie in Truro and Amherst, Nova Scotia.
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