The Queensway

For other uses, see Queensway (disambiguation).


The Queensway
Queensway
Peel Regional Road 20
Route information
Maintained by City of Toronto
Region of Peel
City of Mississauga
Existed: 1950's – present
Major junctions
West end: Glengarry Road
  Mavis Road
Hurontario Street
Cawthra Road
Dixie Road
 Highway 427
Kipling Avenue
Islington Avenue
Royal York Road
South Kingsway
East end: Roncesvalles Avenue / King Street (Continues east as Queen Street)
Highway system

Roads in Ontario

Nearby arterial roads
 Dundas Street;
Bloor Street
The Queensway
Queen Elizabeth Way;
Gardiner Expressway 

The Queensway is a major street in the municipalities of Toronto and Mississauga, Ontario, Canada. It is the western extension of Queen Street West, after it crosses King Street and Roncesvalles Avenue in Toronto. The Queensway is a divided roadway from just east of Parkside Drive westerly to just beyond South Kingsway, with ramps and centre median dedicated to the streetcar service. The road continues undivided west from the Humber River west to Highway 427 as a four or six-lane thoroughfare.

The Toronto section of the road ends at the Etobicoke Creek, but continues as just Queensway (Peel Regional Road 20) in Mississauga, ending at Glengarry Road just west of Mavis Road, with the portion west of Mavis being maintained by the city. There is a road allowance with hydro lines, cutting into the Mississauga Golf and Country Club on the shores of the Credit River. In the 1990s, the name Queensway was eliminated on the roads on this allowance west of the river. The street gives its name to Etobicoke's The Queensway neighbourhood

Naming

East of Dixie Road, The Queensway runs with a hydro corridor in its median.

Motorists may notice variation in name of the road as seen on overhead signs marking the exit to The Queensway from Highway 427 southbound. Older signs refer to it as "Queensway Avenue" while newer signs refer to it as "The Queensway". It is unclear as to why the older signs use an incorrect name (although - it may in fact be the newer ones which have the name incorrect). However, it may be informative to note that the extension of "The Queensway" in Mississauga to the west is referred to as "Queensway" (Queensway East east of Hurontario and Queensway West west of Hurontario). "Queensway Avenue" may have also been used to presumably to avoid confusion with adjacent exit signs for the QEW. After provincial downloading in 1998, there was no longer any need for 'Queensway Avenue' once the eastern QEW was redesignated as the Gardiner Expressway.

From 1953 to 1954 the Queensway was signed briefly as Ontario Highway 108 when it was under the then Department of Highways from Highway 27 (Highway 427) and the eastern end of the Queen Elizabeth Way.

History

What would become the Queensway in Mississauga was created in as 1st Concession Road South (or first concession road south of Dundas Street) in 1806 as a dirt trail and then gravel road in 1836.[1]

A Peel Regional Road 20 sign on Mississauga's portion of the route.

The section between Roncesvalles and the Humber River was built in the 1950s, in conjunction with the construction of the Gardiner Expressway. The Queensway was built before the Gardiner to provide an east-west route for traffic while Lake Shore Boulevard was rerouted to accommodate the Gardiner. The project cost $4.9 million.[2] The section from the Humber River west predates the High Park section and was previously known as Stock's Side Road, and then Queen Street. It formerly connected to Lake Shore Boulevard (then known as Lake Shore Road) at the Humber River, but that connection was severed with the building of the Queen Elizabeth Way.

To build the Parkside Drive to Ellis Drive section, Metro government bought 18 acres (7.3 ha) of High Park from the city. This was in contravention of stipulations by original High Park owner John Howard that the lands be used for parkland only. Metro officials searched for descendants of Howard to obtain their consent.[2]

The Queensway became the new location for the streetcar service along the lake shore in the area and a separate right-of-way was part of the design from Parkside Drive to the Humber. The right-of-way on the Queensway opened to streetcar service on July 21, 1957. It is the route used by the 501 Queen and 508 Lake Shore.

During the post-2000 period, the Queensway has been subject to new condominium development, particularly in the vicinity of the Humber River. An attraction to this development is the proximity to downtown streetcar service. The streetcar right-of-way has been proposed as a future subway corridor, parallel to the existing Bloor subway line, should transit ridership increase dramatically in the future. More immediately, there has been a move to consider creation of an extended right of way streetcar system on the portion of Queensway west of the Humber Loop transit terminus, offering direct access to downtown.

The right-of-way was rebuilt, starting in the summer of 2005, after a period of prolonged deterioration. The traffic lanes were also rebuilt. The eastbound lanes were finished early in 2006, while completion of the westbound lanes was realized in early 2007.

Nearby landmarks

From east to west:

Toronto

Mississauga

References

  1. http://www.pollard.ca/genealogy/0001text.txt
  2. 1 2 "Award Expressway Contract Today for Queen St. Bridge Over Humber". The Globe and Mail. March 22, 1955. p. 1.
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