You forgot I75. It runs from Detroit to Miami
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In what way is it a national embarrassment? Freeways across expanses as vast and empty as northern Ontario are extremely rare, even in the United States. I don't think you're really considering the scale of what you're proposing. A freeway across Ontario would require about 1900 km of new or expanded highway though mostly rugged, sparsely populated wilderness. As a comparison, the entire length of the 401 isn't even half that. Hell, our entire 400 series network is barely that long (1972 km to be exact). Our first freeway was built in 1931, so it's taken 87 years to build that much. So essentially you're saying the fact that we haven't built in 15 years what previously took almost a century, through our most rugged and isolated region no less, is a national embarrassment. I think it's safe to say that I disagree.
The United States has something like 8 or 9 times our population and is the most extreme builder of freeways in the world. That's not a model we want to copy. Countries that are more comparable to Canada have no freeways crossing them. There are no freeways connecting the lengths of the Nordic countries. No freeways crossing the Outback or the Amazon or Siberia. The countries those regions are part of build freeways to connect cities in the most populated areas, corridors where the capacity that they offer is actually needed. There's nothing embarrassing about that.
What tends to be done on important highways in remote regions is selective widenings, 2+1 designs, frequent passing lanes, etc. That's the model we should be following for the remote parts of the Trans Canada Highway, not trying to copy what they have in the US.
Technically, the part west of Thunder Bay (Sistonens Corners to Shabaqua Corners) is also the one and only highway link*. I don't think there are any twinning plans for that portion.Agree. Many forget that the Interstate system was built with Department of Defence funding for national security reasons (troop movement) during the Cold War, not for any domestic transportation reasons. Before that, they had a fairly disjointed system of state highways, caused primarily because of the nature of their union (state autonomy). The two Ontario highways, 11 and 17, simply don't have the traffic volumes to justify twinning outside some localized areas.
Twinning the highway between Kenora and the Manitoba border has been on the books for a while. Although I don't know the actual traffic data, there is a fair bit of traffic between Kenora and Winnipeg in addition to commercial inter-provincial traffic. There is also a bit of a national economic security angle. The stretch between the border and Kenora (actually Longbow Lake just to the east) is the one and only highway link between east and west Canada. It is the same between Thunder Bay and Nipigon, which is in the process of being twinned.
You forgot I75. It runs from Detroit to Miami
Germany also has a population density that nowhere in Canada approaches except the greater Golden Horseshoe. In cases like that I agree, you can have amazing roads and rails. That's where RER comes in, as well as highway projects like the 407 and 427 extensions. But northern Ontario is nothing like Germany or the Golden Horseshoe. It has more in common with the more remote regions of northern Scandinavia, the South Island of New Zealand, or the aforementioned Australian Outback. Such a high standard of infrastructure just isn't possible. There are no freeways going from one end of those countries to the other, only in the more highly developed areas.In all fairness: the US has 7+ transcontinental railroads and 4 transcontinental freeways (I 10, I 40, I 80, I 90), and all are extremely well utilized. The difference is that the US has many little small cities throughout the country that don't really warrant a railway connection. The freeways allow for flexibility in transport which are important. Also, Germany has a much higher density of freeways crossing their country and still have an amazing rail system. You can have both.
We shouldn't be against building freeways between cities, they allow for flexibility. What we should be against is building freeways within cities, where commuting should be by higher order transit. That being said, Ontario doesn't need a full-fledged control access highway when Interstates 90 and 80 are just south and allow for faster travel times to western canada. What needs to be addressed is the fact that there is only one access between the west and east of Canada in ontario and if that access fails, the country is literally divided.
Twinning the highway between Kenora and the Manitoba border has been on the books for a while. Although I don't know the actual traffic data, there is a fair bit of traffic between Kenora and Winnipeg in addition to commercial inter-provincial traffic. There is also a bit of a national economic security angle. The stretch between the border and Kenora (actually Longbow Lake just to the east) is the one and only highway link between east and west Canada. It is the same between Thunder Bay and Nipigon, which is in the process of being twinned.
Agree. Many forget that the US Interstate system was built with Department of Defence funding for national security reasons (troop movement) during the Cold War, not for any domestic transportation reasons. Before that, they had a fairly disjointed system of state highways, caused primarily because of the nature of their union (state autonomy). The two Ontario highways, 11 and 17, simply don't have the traffic volumes to justify twinning outside some localized areas.
Twinning the highway between Kenora and the Manitoba border has been on the books for a while. Although I don't know the actual traffic data, there is a fair bit of traffic between Kenora and Winnipeg in addition to commercial inter-provincial traffic. There is also a bit of a national economic security angle. The stretch between the border and Kenora (actually Longbow Lake just to the east) is the one and only highway link between east and west Canada. It is the same between Thunder Bay and Nipigon, which is in the process of being twinned.
I used to drive Hwy 11 between Toronto and North Bay, and highway 17 between North Bay and Ottawa regularly. It made such a big difference when Hwy 11 was twinned -- as you say Highway 17 is long overdue.
That stretch actually has freeway like AADTs, so yes, it's needed. It sounds like the province is going to move on the next 30km or so to just past Renfrew soon - it is currently in detailed design.If there's any section of the TCH in Ontario that needs twinning, it's between Arnprior and Pembroke/Petawawa. The westward extension of 417 has been decades in the making, with it taking over a decade to go the 27km from Panmure Road to Sheel Dr. So by that pace, we should be in Pembroke by around 2050.
That stretch actually has freeway like AADTs, so yes, it's needed. It sounds like the province is going to move on the next 30km or so to just past Renfrew soon - it is currently in detailed design.
Past Petawawa 17 drops significantly in traffic levels, under 2,000 cars a day, picking up a bit again (not a lot) between North Bay and Sault Ste Marie (about 4,000 a day), then down to under 2,000 again out to Thunder Bay.
Generally the rule for a freeway is you need 10-15,000 cars a day to justify it. 17 From Petawawa to Arnprior varies between 8-12,000 cars right now.