Manitoba Highway 75

Highway 75 shield

Highway 75
Lord Selkirk Highway
Route information
Maintained by Manitoba Infrastructure and Transportation
Length: 101 km (63 mi)
Existed: 1949[1] – present
Major junctions
South end: I-29 / US 81 at the Pembina–Emerson Border Crossing
  PTH 14 between Letellier and St. Jean Baptiste
PTH 23 in Morris
North end: PTH 100 / Route 42 in Winnipeg
Location
Major cities: Winnipeg
Towns: Emerson, Morris
Highway system

Manitoba provincial highways

PTH 68PTH 77

Provincial Trunk Highway 75 (PTH 75, also officially known as the Lord Selkirk Highway) is the main highway from Winnipeg, Manitoba, to the Canada–U.S. border, where it connects with Interstate 29.

Route description

The highway, which is part of Canada's National Highway System, begins at the Canada-United States border at Emerson and runs approximately 101 kilometers (63 miles) north, along on the west side of the Red River, to Winnipeg. There it connects with Pembina Highway, which forms the southern portion of Winnipeg Route 42.[2][3] PTH 75 is also part of an International Mid-Continent Trade Corridor, a network of highways and rail lines that connects cities in central regions of North America.

The entire route is a 4-lane divided highway, but access is not fully controlled. Proposals do exist to upgrade the highway to an expressway or freeway standard with bypasses at Morris and St. Norbert. PTH 75 consisted of two lanes south of Morris until approximately 1992 when the current four-lane divided highway between Morris and United States border was built.

History

PTH 75 at Emerson, current and original configurations

The PTH 75 route originated as a trail used by early settlers to travel between the Selkirk Settlement and Fort Pembina. The provincial government officially designated the road as the Lord Selkirk Highway in 1962 to commemorate this.[4]

Prior to the numbering system, PTH 75 was the northern leg of the Jefferson Highway, also known as the Palm to Pine Highway since it ended in New Orleans.

When Manitoba introduced the numbering system for highways in 1920, PTH 75 was originally numbered as Highway 14.[5] In 1949, the government re-designated it to match U.S. Route 75 as, at that time, the Manitoba highway crossed the Red River at Emerson and connected with the U.S. 75 at the Noyes, Minnesota border crossing on the east side of the Red River.[1] Today, PTH 14 runs west from PTH 75 to PTH 3 near Winkler.

The Canadian government closed the Emerson East border crossing in 2003 to consolidate resources; the American port of entry at Noyes followed soon after. Motorists wishing to travel US 75 must now take Interstate 29 south to North Dakota Highway 59 at Pembina, North Dakota, then east to Minnesota State Highway 171, which connects to U.S. 75. In 2012, the provincial government officially re-routed PTH 75 to extend all the way to the Pembina-Emerson Border Crossing, which eliminated PTH 29. The former PTH 75 route through Emerson is now part of Provincial Road 200.[6]

Planning is currently underway to redesign the PTH 75 approach to the Emerson border crossing, in order to accommodate future expansion at the port of entry.[7]

Speed limits

On February 27, 2008 the Manitoba Highway Traffic Board approved a request by the Government of Manitoba to raise the speed limit on Highway 75 in Manitoba to 110 km/h (70 mph) on most sections between Winnipeg and the US border.[8] The speed limit change took effect on July 1, 2009, where the speed limit was raised to 110 km/h only from St. Jean Baptiste to the Canada-U.S. border. The rest of the highway is still not set to the new speed and remains at 100 km/h (60 mph), though this might change in the future.[9]

Flooding issues

PTH 75's proximity to the flood-prone Red River causes closures of the highway during spring flooding. The town of Morris is one of the most problematic areas, as the town is forced to close off the dikes surrounding the town, thereby cutting off PTH 75. These closures have a significant impact on the trucking industry, as PTH 75 is the primary transportation route between Winnipeg and the United States. The Manitoba Trucking Association estimates the closing of the highway costs the industry $1.5 million CAD per week. The closures also have a significant impact on Morris businesses that depend on travelers passing through town.[10][11] There are several solutions being considered to fix the ongoing problem, including the building of new bridges and raising of roadways along PTH 75, and the construction of a bypass for PTH 75 around Morris.[12][13]

Major intersections

This is the travel route for Provincial Trunk Highway 75 (PTH 75) from south to north:

DivisionLocationkmmiExitDestinationsNotes
Emerson – FranklinEmerson00.0Canada – United States border at Pembina–Emerson Border Crossing
I-29 / US 81 continues into North Dakota towards Grand Forks
10.62 PR 200 north EmersonFormerly PTH 75 to US 75
21.2 PR 243 west Gretna
Montcalm159.3 PR 421 west – Sommerfeld
Letellier1912 PR 201 – St. Joseph, Letellier, Dominion City
2616 PTH 14 west Winkler, Altona
St. Jean Baptiste3522 PR 246 north St. Jean Baptiste
MorrisMorris4528 PTH 23 east (Montreal Avenue)Southern end of PTH 23 concurrency
4629 PTH 23 west (Boyne Avenue)Northern end of PTH 23 concurrency
4830 PR 330 north Domain
5937 PR 205 Rosenort, Aubigny, St. Pierre-Jolys
RitchotSte. Agathe7345 PR 305 Brunkild, Ste. Agathe, Niverville
Glenlea8251Glenlea RoadFormerly PR 420 north
8754 PR 210 east St. Adolphe, NivervilleFormerly PR 429 east
Howden9257 PR 247 west La Salle
City of Winnipeg9861Turnbull DriveSouthern end of Route 42 concurrency
1016394 PTH 100 (Perimeter Highway / Trans-Canada Highway) Brandon, KenoraInterchange; northern end of Route 42 concurrency; signed as exits 94A (east) and 94B (west); PTH 100 exit 18
Pembina Highway (Route 42) continues towards Downtown Winnipeg
1.000 mi = 1.609 km; 1.000 km = 0.621 mi

See also

References

Route map: Google

KML is from Wikidata
  1. 1 2 "Winnipeg-Emerson Highway to Become #75" (PDF). Province of Manitoba archives. 14 March 1949. Retrieved 4 November 2014.
  2. "The National Highway System (NHS) Map". tc.gc.ca.
  3. "Modern, Developed Infrastructure". gov.mb.ca.
  4. Anne Matheson Henderson. "Manitoba Pageant: The Lord Selkirk Settlement at Red River, Part 3". mhs.mb.ca.
  5. "Roads and Highways". The Canadian Encyclopedia. Retrieved November 10, 2014.
  6. Highway 75 at Canhighways.com
  7. "Border Highway Redesign Displayed At Emerson Open House". PembinaValleyOnline.com. 6 March 2015.
  8. Manitoba to raise speed limit
  9. "Province of Manitoba - News Releases - Speed Limit To Increase On Certain Sections Of Twinned Highway". gov.mb.ca.
  10. "Hwy. 75 reopens, truckers happy". Winnipeg Free Press. 17 May 2011. Retrieved 21 August 2012.
  11. "Red River flooding closes key Manitoba highway". Reuters. 18 April 2011. Retrieved 21 August 2012.
  12. "Hwy 75 Flood Plans Expected". Steinbach Online. Retrieved 21 August 2012.
  13. "Highway 75 revisited: Four ideas to keep road open". Winnipeg Free Press. 9 April 2009. Retrieved 21 August 2012.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.