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This article lists all existing numbered highways in British Columbia, Canada. Motto: Splendor Sine Occasu (Latin: Splendour without diminishment) Official languages none stated in law; English is de facto Capital Victoria Largest city Vancouver Lieutenant-Governor Iona Campagnolo Premier Gordon Campbell (BC Liberal) Parliamentary representation - House seat - Senate seats 36 6 Area Total ⢠Land ⢠Water (% of total) Ranked 5th 944,735...
Route list
- British Columbia provincial highway 1, Trans-Canada Highway
- British Columbia provincial highway 1A, Fraser Highway and Chemainus Road
- British Columbia provincial highway 2, Tupper Highway
- British Columbia provincial highway 3, Crowsnest Highway, Southern Transprovincial
- British Columbia provincial highway 3A, Kaleden Highway (Keremeos-Penticton) and Castlegar-Creston Highway
- British Columbia provincial highway 3B, Nancy Greene Lake-Rossland-Meadows Highway
- British Columbia provincial highway 4, Pacific Rim Highway
- British Columbia provincial highway 4A, Old Alberni Highway
- British Columbia provincial highway 5, Coquihalla Highway and Southern Yellowhead Highways
- British Columbia provincial highway 5A, Princeton-Kamloops Highway via Aspen Grove. Originally Hwy 5 until the building of the Coquihalla
- British Columbia provincial highway 6, Nelson-Nelway Highway and Monashee Highway
- British Columbia provincial highway 7, Lougheed Highway
- British Columbia provincial highway 7A, Barnet Highway (includes St. John's Street in downtown Port Moody and all of Hastings Street to Granville Street); "the Barnet" refers to the stretch from Port Moody to where Hastings begins in North Burnaby.
- British Columbia provincial highway 7B, Mary Hill Bypass
- British Columbia provincial highway 8, Nicola Highway
- British Columbia provincial highway 9, Agassiz-Rosedale Highway
- British Columbia provincial highway 10, Ladner Trunk Road in Delta, 56th Ave in Surrey, known as "No. 10" throughout.
- British Columbia provincial highway 11, Abbotsford-Mission Highway (from the Sumas-Huntingdon border crossing to the jct with Hwy 7 at the north off-ramps from the Mission Bridge)
- British Columbia provincial highway 12, Lillooet-Lytton Highway (formerly 12A until the extension of Hwy 99 from Pemberton; the Lillooet-Cache Creek section of Hwy 99 was formerly Hwy 12B)
- British Columbia provincial highway 13, Aldergrove-Bellingham Highway
- British Columbia provincial highway 14, Sooke Road (to Jordan River and Port Renfrew)
- British Columbia provincial highway 15, Pacific Highway - 176th St in Surrey (border crossing at the south end of this route is known as "the Truck Crossing" or "the Pacific Crossing")
- British Columbia provincial highway 16, Yellowhead Highway
- British Columbia provincial highway 17, Patricia Bay and Tsawwassen Highways
- British Columbia provincial highway 17A, West Saanich Road
- British Columbia provincial highway 18, Cowichan Valley Highway
- British Columbia provincial highway 19, Island Highway
- British Columbia provincial highway 19A, Oceanside Route (the old Island Highway)
- British Columbia provincial highway 20, Chilcotin Highway
- British Columbia provincial highway 21, Creston-Rykerts Highway
- British Columbia provincial highway 22, Paterson-Rossland-Castlegar Highway
- British Columbia provincial highway 22A, Waneta Highway
- British Columbia provincial highway 23, Nakusp-Mica Creek Highway
- British Columbia provincial highway 24, Little Fort Highway
- British Columbia provincial highway 26, Barkerville Highway
- British Columbia provincial highway 27, Stuart Lake Highway
- British Columbia provincial highway 28, Gold River Highway
- British Columbia provincial highway 29, Hudson's Hope Highway
- British Columbia provincial highway 30, Port Alice Highway
- British Columbia provincial highway 31, Selkirk Highway
- British Columbia provincial highway 31A, Kaslo-New Denver Highway
- British Columbia provincial highway 33, Rock Creek-Kelowna Highway
- British Columbia provincial highway 35, North Francois Highway
- British Columbia provincial highway 37, Cassiar Highway aka Stewart-Cassiar Highway or just "the Stewart-Cassiar"; extends through to join Alaska Highway near Lower Post BC, on edge of YT
- British Columbia provincial highway 37A, Stewart Highway
- British Columbia provincial highway 39, MacKenzie Highway
- British Columbia provincial highway 40, Gold Bridge-Lillooet; originally the Bridge River Road plus the Moha Road and the connection between them via the Bridge River Canyon.
- British Columbia provincial highway 41, Danville Highway
- British Columbia provincial highway 43, Elk Valley Highway
- British Columbia provincial highway 49, Dawson Creek-Spirit River Highway
- British Columbia provincial highway 51, (Telegraph Creek)
- British Columbia provincial highway 52, Heritage Highway
- British Columbia provincial highway 59, (Nazko)
- British Columbia provincial highway 77, Liard Highway (Alaska Highway aka Alcan Highway)
- British Columbia provincial highway 91, Annacis Highway and Richmond Freeway aka Richmond Connector
- British Columbia provincial highway 91A, Queensborough Connector
- British Columbia provincial highway 93, Kootenay Highway, counterpart of US 93
- British Columbia provincial highway 95, Columbia Highway, counterpart of US 95
- British Columbia provincial highway 95A, Kimberley Highway
- British Columbia provincial highway 97, Okanagan, Cariboo, John Hart, and Alaska Highways, counterpart of US 97
- British Columbia provincial highway 97A, Vernon-Sicamous Highway
- British Columbia provincial highway 97B, Grindrod-Salmon Arm Highway
- British Columbia provincial highway 97C, Okanagan Connector (freeway)
- British Columbia provincial highway 97D, Meadow Creek
- British Columbia provincial highway 99, Vancouver-Blaine Highway, Sea to Sky Highway, and Duffy Lake Road, counterpart of US 99 (Interstate 5)
- British Columbia provincial highway 99A, King George Highway
- British Columbia provincial highway 101, Sunshine Coast Highway, indirect counterpart of US 101
- British Columbia provincial highway 103
- British Columbia provincial highway 118, Central Babine Lake
- British Columbia provincial highway 395, Christina Lake-Laurier Highway, counterpart of US 395
The following routes are also part of British Columbia's highway system, but they are currently un-numbered: British Columbia provincial highway 1 is the B.C. section of the Trans-Canada Highway. ...
Example of Trans-Canada Highway marker shield. ...
There are many roads in the southwestern part of British Columbia that are designated as British Columbia provincial highway 1A. These roads are sections of the original 1941 route of Highway 1 before its various re_alignments, and are used today as service routes and frontage roads. ...
British Columbia provincial highway 2, known locally as the Tupper Highway, is one of the two short connections from Dawson Creek to the border between B.C. and Alberta. ...
Crowsnest Highway marker shields. ...
Crowsnest Highway marker shields. ...
Two segments of highway in the southern part of British Columbia are designated as British Columbia provincial highway 3A. Kootenays - Castlegar-Nelson-Creston Highway This was the first segment of highway in British Columbia to receive the 3A designation. ...
British Columbia provincial highway 3B, opened in 1967, is an alternate loop to the Crowsnest Highway between Nancy Greene Lake and an area called Meadows, just west of Erie on the Crowsnest. ...
British Columbia provincial highway 4, known locally as the Alberni Highway and the Pacific Rim Highway, is the longest east-west main vehicle route on Vancouver Island, with a total length of 163 km. ...
British Columbia provincial highway 4, known locally as the Alberni Highway and the Pacific Rim Highway, is the longest east-west main vehicle route on Vancouver Island, with a total length of 163 km. ...
British Columbia provincial highway 5, known locally as the Southern Yellowhead Highway, is a north-south route in the southern part of the province. ...
British Columbia provincial highway 5A, the Princeton-Kamloops Highway, is Highway 5s pre_1986 alignment. ...
British Columbia provincial highway 6 is a two-lane east-west highway passing between the Kootenay and Okanagan regions. ...
British Columbia provincial highway 7, known as the Lougheed Highway, is an alternative route to Highway 1 through the Lower Mainland. ...
British Columbia provincial highway 7A, known locally as the Barnet Highway, is Highway 7s original 1941 route between the harbour in Vancouver and Port Moody. ...
British Columbia provincial highway 7B, the Mary Hill Bypass, is a 9 km-long riverside east-west link between the cities of Coquitlam to the west and Port Coquitlam to the east. ...
British Columbia provincial highway 8, known as the Nicola Highway, is an alternate route to Highway 97C between Highway 1 and the Coquihalla Highway. ...
British Columbia provincial highway 9, the Agassiz Highway, is a north-south route in the eastern part of the Fraser Valley. ...
British Columbia provincial highway 10, known locally as the Ladner-Langley Highway, is a minor east-west route through the southern portion of the Greater Vancouver Regional District. ...
British Columbia provincial highway 11, known locally as the Abbotsford-Mission Highway, is a 17 km-long mostly two-lane north-south highway that literally cuts the Fraser Valley in half. ...
British Columbia provincial highway 12, opened in 1953, is a connection from the Trans-Canada Highway to the town of Lillooet. ...
British Columbia provincial highway 13 is a simple 12 km-long two-lane route through the eastern part of Langley. ...
British Columbia provincial highway 14 is the southernmost numbered route in the province. ...
British Columbia provincial highway 15, known locally as the Pacific Highway, is a 20-km long north-south highway in the City of Surrey. ...
British Columbia provincial highway 16 is the B.C. section of the Yellowhead Highway. ...
The Yellowhead Highway is a major east-west highway connecting the four western Canadian provinces of British Columbia, Alberta, Saskatchewan, and Manitoba. ...
British Columbia provincial highway 17 is actually two separate highways, one on Vancouver Island, the other on the Lower Mainland. ...
British Columbia provincial highway 17A, known locally as West Saanich Road, is an alternate route through the Saanich peninsula. ...
British Columbia provincial highway 18 is a short, 29 km-long main vehicle route on Vancouver Island, connecting the city of Duncan on the Trans-Canada Highway with the community of Youbou, on the north shore of Cowichan Lake. ...
British Columbia provincial highway 19, known locally as the Island Highway, is the main north-south thoroughfare on Vancouver Island north of Nanaimo. ...
British Columbia provincial highway 19A, known locally as the Oceanside Route, is composed of the original 1953 alignments of Highway 19 within Nanaimo and between Craigs Crossing and Campbell River. ...
British Columbia provincial highway 20, known as the Chilcotin Highway or the Freedom Highway, is an east-west highway in a region of the province known as the Interior Plateau. ...
British Columbia provincial highway 21 is a cross-border spur in the Kootenay region of the province. ...
British Columbia provincial highway 22 is a north-south highway that provides quick access from the city of Canada-U.S. border. ...
British Columbia provincial highway 22A is a cross-border spur in the Okanagan region of the province. ...
British Columbia provincial highway 23 is a north-south highway that straddles the Trans-Canada Highway in the provinces high country region. ...
British Columbia provincial highway 24, the Little Fort Highway or the Interlakes highway, is a 97 km-long east-west connection between the Cariboo Highway, just south of 100 Mile House, and the Southern Yellowhead Highway at Little Fort. ...
British Columbia provincial highway 26 is a minor east-west highway in central B.C. First opened in 1967, it provides access to the community of Wells and the famous gold rush town of Barkerville at the foot of the Cariboo Mountains, respectively 75 and 82 km east of the...
British Columbia provincial highway 27, the Stuart Lake Highway, is a 23 km-long spur of the Yellowhead Highway in the north central part of the province. ...
British Columbia provincial highway 28 is an east-west highway on the northern part of Vancouver Island. ...
British Columbia provincial highway 29, known locally as Don Philips Way, is a shortcut route from the John Hart Highway to the Alaska Highway. ...
British Columbia provincial highway 31 is a minor north-south highway through the Selkirk Mountains. ...
British Columbia provincial highway 31 is a minor north-south highway through the Selkirk Mountains. ...
British Columbia provincial highway 33 is a minor two-lane highway in the Okanagan region of the province. ...
British Columbia provincial highway 35, the North Francois Highway, is a 23 km-long minor spur of the Yellowhead Highway. ...
British Columbia provincial highway 37, the Cassiar Highway, is the northwesternmost highway in the province, and it is very scenic, passing through some of the most isolated areas of B.C. The highway first gained its 37 designation in 1975, and at that time, its southern terminus was at the...
British Columbia provincial highway 37, the Cassiar Highway, is the northwesternmost highway in the province, and it is very scenic, passing through some of the most isolated areas of B.C. The highway first gained its 37 designation in 1975, and at that time, its southern terminus was at the...
British Columbia provincial highway 39 is a very minor 29 km-long spur from the John Hart Highway northwest to the town of Mackenzie, on the shore of the southern arm of Williston Lake. ...
The Bridge River is, or was, a major tributary of British Columbias Fraser River, entering that stream about six miles upstream from the town of Lillooet. ...
British Columbia provincial highway 41 is a very short cross-border spur in the Okanagan area of the province. ...
British Columbia provincial highway 43, the Elk Valley Highway, is the easternmost spur off of the Crowsnest Highway in B.C. The highway, which is two lanes, starts in Sparwood, and travels 35 km north along the Elk River to the community of Elkford, where a connection to Elk Falls...
British Columbia provincial highway 49, known locally as the Spirit River Highway, is one of the two short connections from Dawson Creek to the border between B.C. and Alberta. ...
British Columbia provincial highway 52, known locally as the Heritage Highway, is a 243 km-long alternate loop route between Arras, on the John Hart Highway just west of Dawson Creek, and Tupper, on the B.C.-Alberta boundary, via the community of Tumbler Ridge, 98 km south of Arras...
British Columbia provincial highway 77, known as the Liard Highway, is the northeasternmost numbered highway in the province, and is the sole paved road connection between B.C. and the Northwest Territories. ...
The Alaska Highway, also Alaskan Highway, Alaska-Canadian Highway, Al-Can Highway, runs from Dawson Creek, British Columbia to Fairbanks, Alaska, via Whitehorse, Yukon. ...
British Columbia provincial highway 91 is an alternative freeway route to Highway 99 through Delta and Richmond. ...
British Columbia provincial highway 91A, known locally as the Queensborough Connector, is a 3 km-long spur off of Highway 91 into New Westminster. ...
British Columbia provincial highway 93, the Kootenay Highway, is a north-south route through the southeastern part of the province. ...
United States Highway 93 is a major north-south United States highway in the western U.S., extending between the Canadian border in Montana, where it connects with B.C. Highway 93, and Wickenburg, Arizona, a small town about 50 miles (80 km) northwest of Phoenix. ...
British Columbia provincial highway 95, the Columbia Highway, is a north-south highway in the southeastern corner of the province, opened in 1957. ...
US 95 is a north-south United States highway. ...
British Columbia provincial highway 95, the Columbia Highway, is a north-south highway in the southeastern corner of the province, opened in 1957. ...
British Columbia provincial highway 97 is the longest continuously-numbered route in the province, going for 2,081 km all the way from the Canada/U.S. border in the south to the British Columbia/Yukon border in the north. ...
United States Highway 97 is a major north-south United States highway in the western United States. ...
British Columbia provincial highway 97A is a 65-km spur route between the cities of Vernon, on Highway 97, and Sicamous, on Highway 1. ...
British Columbia provincial highway 97A is a 65-km spur route between the cities of Vernon, on Highway 97, and Sicamous, on Highway 1. ...
British Columbia provincial highway 97C, the Okanagan Connector, forms part of an important link between the Lower Mainland and the Okanagan valley around Kelowna. ...
British Columbia provincial highway 99 is the major nouth-south artery through the Greater Vancouver Regional District. ...
Detail from antique road map of US 99 through California. ...
Interstate 5 (abbreviated I-5) is the westernmost interstate highway in the United States. ...
British Columbia provincial highway 99A is the current designation of Highway 99s original 1942 alignment. ...
British Columbia provincial highway 101 is the main north-south thoroughfare on the Sunshine Coast. ...
U.S. Highway 101, or U.S. Route 101 (U.S. 101), is a north-south highway that is aligned along the Pacific West Coast of the United States. ...
British Columbia provincial highway 118, the Central Babine Lake Highway (signed as Topley Landing Road), is a 50 km-long minor spur of the Yellowhead Highway. ...
British Columbia provincial highway 395 is a very short cross-border spur in the Okanagan region of the province, just 4 km long. ...
United States Highway 395 is a scenic highway that starts in the Mojave Desert at Interstate 15 near Hesperia, runs along the east side of the Sierra Nevada in the Owens Valley, winds through Carson City, Reno, back into California, crosses through the Modoc Plateau, and into eastern Oregon, into...
- Atlin Highway
- Coalmont Road
- Head Bay Road
- Hemlock Valley Road
- Horsefly Road
- Likely Road
- Mount Washington Road
- Nisga'a Highway
- Port Mellon Highway
- Queen Charlotte City - Skidegate Road
- Westside Road (in Whistler the old road pre-Hwy 99 along the west side of Alta Lake; in the Fraser Canyon the not-highway road up the west side of the Fraser from Lytton to Lillooet)
- Glover Road (Langley City to Fort Langley)
- Pavilion Mountain Road (often just "Pavilion Mountain")
- Mission Mountain Road (often just "Mission Mountain")
- Jesmond Road
Yukon highways in British Columbia Highways 2 (Klondike Highway), 3 (Haines Highway), and 7 (Atlin Road) in the northwest corner of the province are part of the Yukon territorial highway system and are not listed here or designated as BC highways. The Klondike Highway is a highway that leads from Skagway, Alaska in the United States to Dawson City, Yukon in Canada. ...
The Haines Highway or Haines Cut-Off is a highway that connects Haines, Alaska, in the United States, with Haines Junction, Yukon, Canada, passing through the province of British Columbia. ...
The Atlin Road was built by the Royal Canadian Army in 1950-1951, connecting the village of Atlin, British Columbia, with the Tagish Highway just one mile west of the Alaska Highway at historic mile 866. ...
Although some editions of The Milepost identify the B.C. portion of the Haines Highway as Highway 4, this is not an official highway number for the route. The Milepost was the first travel-guide detailing the Alaska Highway and remains today the most extensive guide for travellers in Alaska, the Yukon, the Northwest Territories, and British Columbia. ...
Also, although the Alaska Highway crosses the border with the Yukon five times (historically, nine times), the highway route number changes just once, between Lower Post, B.C., and Watson Lake, Yukon. The Yukon section east of here is maintained by Public Works Canada as part of the B.C. portion of Highway 97, while the B.C. section west of here is maintained by the Yukon Government as part of Yukon Highway 1. Watson Lake, Yukon - Wikipedia /**/ @import /skins/monobook/IE50Fixes. ...
Defunct route numbers The first two freeways built in British Columbia were given 400-series numbers, much like the 400-Series Highways in Ontario. Highways 401 and 499 were renumbered 1 and 99 respectively in 1973. The 400-series Highway network in Southern Ontario. ...
Motto: Ut Incepit Fidelis Sic Permanet (Latin: Loyal she began, loyal she remains) Official languages English (French has some legal status, and is an official language of Canada, but is not fully co-official at the provincial level) Capital Toronto Largest city Toronto Lieutenant-Governor James K. Bartleman Premier Dalton...
See also // Introduction Alaskan Highways have two types: numbered and named. ...
The following is a list of highways seen here: List of Alberta provincial highways List of British Columbia provincial highways List of Manitoba provincial highways List of New Brunswick provincial highways List of Newfoundland and Labrador highways List of Northwest Territories territorial highways List of Northwestern Canada highways, Highways that...
Here are listings of Albertas primary and secondary highways: // Primary highways Trans-Canada Highway 1 (British Columbia border near Lake Louise to Saskatchewan border near Walsh) Alberta Highway 1A various sections Bow Valley Parkway (Lake Louise to Sawback) Bow Trail (Canmore to Calgary) Calgary to Chestermere Alberta Highway 1X...
The Liard Highway The following is a list of Northwest Territories highways. ...
External links |