List of former provincial highways in Ontario

The Canadian province of Ontario has an extensive network of Primary (King's), Secondary, and Tertiary Highways, with county-level and city-level roads linking between them. Over the years, however, Ontario has turned back numerous highways to municipal government bodies, renumbered them, or upgraded them to 400-series highways.

In 1997 and 1998, many sections of the provincial highway network were downloaded to local municipalities (such as cities, counties or regional municipalities) by the Ontario Ministry of Transportation as a cost-saving measure. While highways were occasionally transferred to local governments in the past, the 1997-1998 downloads represented the most significant changes to Ontario's highway network. Many highways were completely devolved, while of others only short sections remain under provincial jurisdiction (Highway 2, once stretching across Southern Ontario, now is only a few kilometres long). Below is a partial list of partially or wholly devolved highways since 1997.

This transport-related list is incomplete; you can help by expanding it.

Primary highways

Additional highways and bypass routes devolved: 2B, 2S, 3B, 4A, 5A, 7B, 8A, 11B, 12B, 13, 15A, 16, 17A, 17B, 24A, 35B, 40B, 48B, 401A.

Secondary highways

Recycling

Highway numbers have even been "recycled" (used more than once on a provincial highway), however the use tends to be as far as possible from the original routing, and generally a few decades' time separate each numbering, to minimize confusion.

King's Highways

Secondary highways

Highway stubs

This section will list all highways that have lost segments of their routings, are in at least two parts (or in the case of Highway 7 for a while, three parts), or have been truncated short of their original termini. Examples of this are Highway 3, Highway 4 and Highway 7. Other highways that have ended in a T-junction with other provincial highways have sometimes been extended or truncated by a few miles in favor of a realignment onto 400-series highways; or freeways upgrades without 400-series designations.

References

    External links