Alberta Highway 40
Highway 40 | ||||
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Bighorn Highway, Kananaskis Trail, Forestry Trunk Road | ||||
Route information | ||||
Maintained by Alberta Transportation | ||||
Crowsnest Pass segment | ||||
Length: | 3.8 km (2.4 mi) | |||
South end: | Hwy 3 in Coleman | |||
North end: | Forestry Trunk Road north of Coleman | |||
Kananaskis Trail segment | ||||
Length: | 104 km (65 mi) | |||
South end: | Hwy 541 at Highwood House | |||
North end: | Hwy 1 (TCH) south of Seebe | |||
Forestry Trunk Road segment | ||||
Length: | 46 km (29 mi) | |||
South end: | Hwy 1A east of Ghost Lake | |||
North end: | Hwy 579 north of Waiparous | |||
Northern segment | ||||
Length: | 434 km (270 mi) | |||
South end: | Hwy 734 south of Coalspur | |||
Major junctions: |
Hwy 47 at Coalspur Hwy 16 (TCH) at Hinton | |||
North end: | Hwy 43 in Grande Prairie | |||
Location | ||||
Specialized and rural municipalities: | Crowsnest Pass, M.D. of Ranchland No. 66, Kananaskis I.D., M.D. of Bighorn No. 8, Rocky View County, Yellowhead County, M.D. Greenview No. 16, County of Grande Prairie No. 1 | |||
Major cities: | Grande Prairie | |||
Towns: | Hinton, Grande Cache | |||
Highway system | ||||
Provincial highways in Alberta
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Alberta Provincial Highway No. 40 is a south-north highway located in western Alberta, Canada.[1] It is also named Bighorn Highway and Kananaskis Trail in Kananaskis Country. Its segmented sections extend from Coleman in the Municipality of Crowsnest Pass northward to the City of Grande Prairie and is currently divided into four sections.[2]
Route description
The southern most section is gravel; it runs for 3.9 km (2.4 mi) through the Municipality of Crowsnest Pass, where it then becomes the Forestry Trunk Road to Highway 541, which has a combined length of 102 km (63 mi).
The second section of Highway 40 is Kananaskis Trail, which is paved and runs through Kananaskis Country for 104 km (65 mi) from Highway 541, over Highwood Pass, and through Peter Lougheed Provincial Park and Spray Valley Provincial Park. The highway passes Kananaskis Village before terminating at the Trans-Canada Highway (Highway 1).[3]
The third section is gravel and is part of the Forestry Trunk Road, which runs 46 km (29 mi) from Highway 1A to Highway 579. The highway continues as the Forestry Trunk Road and Highway 734 for approximately 293 km (182 mi), through the Rocky Mountains Forest Reserve. The intention is that one day the entire road will be a continuous paved highway. In the past, other gravel sections were named Highway 940, the 900 series in Alberta is used as temporary names. There is no signed connection between the Kananaskis Trail section and the Forestry Trunk Road section; however, it is connect by using Highway 1, Highway 1X, and Highway 1A between Seebe and Ghost Lake.
The fourth section is 434 km (270 mi) and runs from the Lovett River in Yellowhead County to the City of Grande Prairie. The 61 km (38 mi) section south of Cadomin is gravel while the remainder is paved. The highway shares 2 km (1.2 mi) concurrency with the Yellowhead Highway (Highway 16), before continuing north and passing through the Town of Grande Cache en route to Grande Prairie.[4]
If the segments of the Forestry Trunk Road and Highway 40 were connected, the total length would be approximately 1,027 km (638 mi) and would be the second longest highway in Alberta.
Major intersections
Starting from the south end of Highway 40:
Gallery
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Highway 40 crossing Wapiti River south of Grande Prairie
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Highway 40 in Grande Cache
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Bighorn Highway, westbound, east of Grande Cache
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Highway 734 through the Foothills, southbound, north of Nordegg
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Kananaskis Trail, southbound through the Canadian Rockies in Kananaskis Country
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Kananaskis Trail at Highwood Pass
References
- ↑ Provincial Highways Designation Order, Alberta Transportation, p. 7
- 1 2 3 "2015 Provincial Highway 1-216 Progress Chart" (PDF). Alberta Transportation. March 2015. Archived (PDF) from the original on April 10, 2016. Retrieved October 12, 2016.
- ↑ Google (November 4, 2016). "Central Alberta section of Highway 40 in Alberta" (Map). Google Maps. Google. Retrieved November 4, 2016.
- ↑ Google (November 4, 2016). "Northern section of Highway 40 in Alberta" (Map). Google Maps. Google. Retrieved November 4, 2016.
- ↑ "Provincial Highways: 500 - 986 Progress Chart" (PDF). Alberta Transportation. March 2015. Retrieved July 19, 2016.
- ↑ "City of Grande Prairie Growth Study" (PDF). City of Grande Prairie. Lovatt Planning Consultants Inc. January 2008. p. 7. Retrieved July 19, 2016.