Alberta Highway 13: Difference between revisions
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The section of Highway 13 from Wetaskiwin to Winfield was originally designated as [[Alberta Highway 19|Highway 19]], but was renumbered in the late 1960s.<ref name=1967_map>{{cite map | author = Travel Alberta | publisher = The Province of Alberta | year = 1967 | title = Alberta Official Road Map}}</ref><ref name=1970_map>{{cite map | author = Travel Alberta | publisher = The Province of Alberta | year = 1970 | title = Alberta Official Road Map}}</ref> Highway 13 was extended further west to Alder Flats in {{Circa|1979}} when [[Alberta Highway 612|Highway 612]] was renumbered, coinciding with the commissioning of Highway 22 north of [[Cremona, Alberta|Cremona]].<ref name=New22_79>{{cite map |author = Travel Alberta |publisher = The Province of Alberta |year = 1978-79 |title = Alberta Official Road Map|section=J-5}}</ref><ref name=New22_80>{{cite map |author = Travel Alberta |publisher = The Province of Alberta |year = 1980 |title = Alberta Official Road Map|section=J-5}}</ref> |
The section of Highway 13 from Wetaskiwin to Winfield was originally designated as [[Alberta Highway 19|Highway 19]], but was renumbered in the late 1960s.<ref name=1967_map>{{cite map | author = Travel Alberta | publisher = The Province of Alberta | year = 1967 | title = Alberta Official Road Map}}</ref><ref name=1970_map>{{cite map | author = Travel Alberta | publisher = The Province of Alberta | year = 1970 | title = Alberta Official Road Map}}</ref> Highway 13 was extended further west to Alder Flats in {{Circa|1979}} when [[Alberta Highway 612|Highway 612]] was renumbered, coinciding with the commissioning of Highway 22 north of [[Cremona, Alberta|Cremona]].<ref name=New22_79>{{cite map |author = Travel Alberta |publisher = The Province of Alberta |year = 1978-79 |title = Alberta Official Road Map|section=J-5}}</ref><ref name=New22_80>{{cite map |author = Travel Alberta |publisher = The Province of Alberta |year = 1980 |title = Alberta Official Road Map|section=J-5}}</ref> |
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== Major intersections == |
== Major intersections == |
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|km=109 |
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|road={{Jctname|state=AB|Hwy|2A|dir1=south|name1=56 Street|city1=Ponoka|city2=Red Deer}}<hr>{{Jctname|state=AB|Hwy|613|dir1=east|name1=40 Avenue}} |
|road={{Jctname|state=AB|Hwy|2A|dir1=south|name1=56 Street|city1=Ponoka|city2=Red Deer}}<hr/>{{Jctname|state=AB|Hwy|613|dir1=east|name1=40 Avenue}} |
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|notes=Hwy 13 branches north; |
|notes=Hwy 13 branches north;<br/>west end of Hwy 2A concurrency;<br/>former Hwy 13A east |
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|road={{Jct|state=AB|Hwy|2A|dir1=north|city1=Leduc|location2=[[Edmonton]]}} |
|road={{Jct|state=AB|Hwy|2A|dir1=north|city1=Leduc|location2=[[Edmonton]]}} |
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|notes=Hwy 13 branches east; |
|notes=Hwy 13 branches east;<br/>east end of Hwy 2A concurrency |
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{{ABint |
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|km=114 |
|km=114 |
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|road={{Jct|state=AB|Hwy|814|dir1=north|city1=Beaumont|road=47 Street}} |
|road={{Jct|state=AB|Hwy|814|dir1=north|city1=Beaumont|road=47 Street}} |
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|notes=Former Hwy 13A west |
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== Highway 13A == |
== Highway 13A == |
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[[File:Alberta Highway 13A MMO Beach.png|thumb|Highway 13A in Ma-Me-O Beach]] |
[[File:Alberta Highway 13A MMO Beach.png|thumb|Highway 13A in Ma-Me-O Beach]] |
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From {{cvt|2.0|km}} east of Westerose to {{cvt|5.6|km}} west of Falun, the first segment of Highway 13A travels {{cvt|7.4|km}} through [[Pigeon Lake 138A|Pigeon Lake Indian Reserve 138A]]. It provides access to the Summer Village of [[Ma-Me-O Beach, Alberta|Ma-Me-O Beach]] on the southern shore of [[Pigeon Lake (Alberta)|Pigeon Lake]]. This segment, which runs north of Highway 13, formed the original Highway 13 alignment prior to it being realigned to bypass the Indian reserve and summer village to the south in the 2000s. |
From {{cvt|2.0|km}} east of Westerose to {{cvt|5.6|km}} west of Falun, the first segment of Highway 13A travels {{cvt|7.4|km}} through [[Pigeon Lake 138A|Pigeon Lake Indian Reserve 138A]]. It provides access to the Summer Village of [[Ma-Me-O Beach, Alberta|Ma-Me-O Beach]] on the southern shore of [[Pigeon Lake (Alberta)|Pigeon Lake]]. This segment, which runs north of Highway 13, formed the original Highway 13 alignment prior to it being realigned to bypass the Indian reserve and summer village to the south in the 2000s. |
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;Camrose |
;Camrose |
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The second segment of Highway 13A is a southern bypass of Camrose and is {{cvt|8|km}} in length. Commissioned in 1989,<ref name=1989ABRoadMap>{{cite map | publisher=Alberta Culture and Tourism | title=Alberta Official Road Map | edition=1989 | section=Camrose}}</ref> the route follows 68 Street south from Highway 13 (48 Avenue) for {{cvt|2.4|km}} and then turns east and becoming Camrose Drive, reconnecting with Highway 13 on the eastern ends of Camrose.<ref name=overmap/> Highway 13A serves as the main [[dangerous goods]] route through Camrose, as dangerous good are prohibited on Highway 13 (48 Avenue) through the centre of the city, and is maintained by the City of Camrose.<ref>{{cite web|title=City of Camrose Map|url=http://www.camrose.ca/DocumentCenter/View/8718|website=City of Camrose|accessdate=15 July 2016}}</ref> |
The second segment of Highway 13A is a southern bypass of Camrose and is {{cvt|8|km}} in length. Commissioned in 1989,<ref name=1989ABRoadMap>{{cite map | publisher=Alberta Culture and Tourism | title=Alberta Official Road Map | edition=1989 | section=Camrose}}</ref> the route follows 68 Street south from Highway 13 (48 Avenue) for {{cvt|2.4|km}} and then turns east and becoming Camrose Drive, reconnecting with Highway 13 on the eastern ends of Camrose.<ref name=overmap/> Highway 13A serves as the main [[dangerous goods]] route through Camrose, as dangerous good are prohibited on Highway 13 (48 Avenue) through the centre of the city, and is maintained by the City of Camrose.<ref>{{cite web|title=City of Camrose Map|url=http://www.camrose.ca/DocumentCenter/View/8718|website=City of Camrose|accessdate=15 July 2016}}</ref> |
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;Wetaskiwin |
;Wetaskiwin |
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Highway 13A is a former alternate route of Highway 13 through Wetaskiwin. From the present Highway 13 (west) / Highway 2A intersection, Highway 13A used to proceed east along 40 Avenue for {{cvt|1.6|km}}, then turned north and followed 47 Street for {{cvt|3.2|km}} and reconnected with Highway 13 at the present-day Highway 13 / [[Alberta Highway 814|Highway 814]] intersection.<ref name=1982ABRoadMap>{{cite map | publisher=Alberta Culture and Tourism | title=Alberta Official Road Map | edition=1982 | section=Westaskiwin}}</ref> The route was decommissioned in mid-1980s.<ref name=1988ABRoadMap>{{cite map | publisher=Alberta Culture and Tourism | title=Alberta Official Road Map | edition=1988 | section=Westaskiwin}}</ref> |
Highway 13A is a former alternate route of Highway 13 through Wetaskiwin. From the present Highway 13 (west) / Highway 2A intersection, Highway 13A used to proceed east along 40 Avenue for {{cvt|1.6|km}}, then turned north and followed 47 Street for {{cvt|3.2|km}} and reconnected with Highway 13 at the present-day Highway 13 / [[Alberta Highway 814|Highway 814]] intersection.<ref name=1982ABRoadMap>{{cite map | publisher=Alberta Culture and Tourism | title=Alberta Official Road Map | edition=1982 | section=Westaskiwin}}</ref> The route was decommissioned in mid-1980s.<ref name=1988ABRoadMap>{{cite map | publisher=Alberta Culture and Tourism | title=Alberta Official Road Map | edition=1988 | section=Westaskiwin}}</ref> |
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== References == |
== References == |
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{{Reflist}} |
{{Reflist}} |
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Revision as of 03:36, 24 September 2017
Route information | ||||
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Maintained by Alberta Transportation, the City of Wetaskiwin, and the City of Camrose | ||||
Length | 366 km[1] (227 mi) | |||
Major junctions | ||||
West end | Range Road 74 near Alder Flats | |||
East end | Hwy 14 at Saskatchewan border near Hayter | |||
Location | ||||
Country | Canada | |||
Province | Alberta | |||
Specialized and rural municipalities | Wetaskiwin No. 10 County, Camrose County, Flagstaff County, Provost No. 52 M.D. | |||
Major cities | Wetaskiwin, Camrose | |||
Towns | Daysland, Killam, Sedgewick, Hardisty, Provost | |||
Villages | Bittern Lake, Bawlf, Lougheed, Amisk, Hughenden | |||
Highway system | ||||
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Alberta Provincial Highway No. 13, commonly referred to as Highway 13, is an east–west highway through central Alberta. It spans from Alder Flats, 7 km (4.3 mi) west of Highway 22, to the Alberta-Saskatchewan border.[2] East of the City of Wetaskiwin, it generally parallels a Canadian Pacific rail line.
Route description
From the west, Highway 13 begins at Alder Flats and then intersects Highway 22.[3] It continues east, passing south of Buck Lake and Winfield before crossing Highway 20.[1] The highway then passes south of Battle Lake, the headwaters of the Battle River, and then south of Pigeon Lake, passing through the hamlets of Westerose and Falun prior to intersecting Highway 2 (Queen Elizabeth II Highway), approximately 51 km (32 mi) south of Edmonton.[4][1]
East of Highway 2, Highway 13 enters Wetaskiwin as 40 Avenue and then turns north along Highway 2A (56 Street). At the north side of Wetaskiwin, the highway turns east and passes north of Gwynne and through Bittern Lake. After crossing Highway 21, it enters the City of Camrose as 48 Avenue.[4]
East of Camrose, Highway 13 generally travels in a southeast direction, passing by Ohaton, Bawlf, Daysland and Strome before intersecting with Highway 36 (Veterans Memorial Highway) in Killam. The highway continues southeast passing by Sedgewick, Lougheed, Hardisty, Amisk and Hughenden before intersecting with Highway 41 north of Czar. The highway travels by Metiskow, through Provost, and by Hayter. Upon entering Saskatchewan, Highway 13 continues as Highway 14 to Saskatoon.[4][1]
History
The section of Highway 13 from Wetaskiwin to Winfield was originally designated as Highway 19, but was renumbered in the late 1960s.[5][6] Highway 13 was extended further west to Alder Flats in c. 1979 when Highway 612 was renumbered, coinciding with the commissioning of Highway 22 north of Cremona.[7][8]
Major intersections
From west to east:[9]
Rural/specialized municipality | Location | km[1] | mi | Destinations | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
County of Wetaskiwin No. 10 | Alder Flats | 0 | 0.0 | ||
| 7 | 4.3 | Hwy 22 – Drayton Valley, Rocky Mountain House | ||
Buck Lake | 15 | 9.3 | Balsam Road / Maywood Road | ||
| 21 | 13 | Hwy 761 north | ||
Winfield | 39 | 24 | UAR 175 north | ||
| 40 | 25 | Hwy 20 – Breton, Rimbey, Sylvan Lake | ||
| 59 | 37 | Crosses Battle River | ||
| 64 | 40 | Hwy 771 – Pigeon Lake Provincial Park | ||
Westerose | 70 | 43 | Hwy 13A east – Ma-Me-O Beach | ||
| 75 | 47 | Hwy 13A west – Ma-Me-O Beach | ||
Falun | 82 | 51 | Hwy 795 – Calmar | ||
| 92 | 57 | Hwy 2 – Edmonton, Red Deer, Calgary | Interchange; Hwy 2 exit 295 | |
City of Wetaskiwin | 109 | 68 | 56 Street (Hwy 2A south) – Ponoka, Red Deer 40 Avenue (Hwy 613 east) | Hwy 13 branches north; west end of Hwy 2A concurrency; former Hwy 13A east | |
113 | 70 | Hwy 2A north – Leduc, Edmonton | Hwy 13 branches east; east end of Hwy 2A concurrency | ||
114 | 71 | Hwy 814 north – Beaumont | Former Hwy 13A west | ||
County of Wetaskiwin No. 10 | | 125 | 78 | Hwy 822 | |
Gwynne | 126 | 78 | UAR 189 south | ||
Camrose County | Bittern Lake | 136 | 85 | James Street | |
| 143 | 89 | Hwy 21 – Edmonton, Three Hills | Roundabout | |
City of Camrose | 150 | 93 | 68 Street (Hwy 13A east) | ||
152 | 94 | 51 Street (Hwy 833 north) – Miquelon Lake Provincial Park | |||
154 | 96 | Hwy 26 east – Viking | |||
156 | 97 | Hwy 13A west (Camrose Drive) | |||
Camrose County | | 161 | 100 | Hwy 56 south – Stettler Hwy 834 north – Tofield | |
Ohaton | 165 | 103 | Range Road 192 | ||
Bawlf | 180 | 110 | Hwy 854 – Ryley, Rosalind | ||
Flagstaff County | Daysland | 194 | 121 | Hwy 855 north – Holden | West end of Hwy 855 concurrency |
| 196 | 122 | Hwy 855 south – Heisler, Big Knife Provincial Park | East end of Hwy 855 concurrency | |
Strome | 209 | 130 | Lua error in Module:Jct at line 204: attempt to concatenate local 'link' (a nil value). | ||
Killam | 224 | 139 | Hwy 36 – Viking, Castor, Hanna | ||
Sedgewick | 196 | 122 | Hwy 869 north | ||
Lougheed | 246 | 153 | Hwy 870 north – Kinsella | ||
| 258 | 160 | Hwy 872 south – Coronation | ||
| 264 | 164 | Hwy 881 north – Hardisty, Irma | ||
| 266 | 165 | Crosses Battle River | ||
M.D. of Provost No. 52 | Amisk | 284 | 176 | Hwy 884 south – Veteran | |
Hughenden | 294 | 183 | Hwy 603 west | ||
| 305 | 190 | Hwy 41 – Czar, Consort, Wainwright | ||
| 320 | 200 | UAR 87 south – Metiskow | ||
| 333 | 207 | UAR 108 south – Cadogan | ||
Provost | 348 | 216 | Hwy 899 north – Ribstone Hwy 600 west – Cadogan | West end of Hwy 899 concurrency | |
349 | 217 | Hwy 899 south – Bodo | East end of Hwy 899 concurrency | ||
Hayter | 358 | 222 | road | ||
| 366 | 227 | Alberta – Saskatchewan border Continues as Hwy 14 east – Macklin, Saskatoon | ||
1.000 mi = 1.609 km; 1.000 km = 0.621 mi
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Highway 13A
Alberta Provincial Highway No. 13A is the designation of the following two current and one former alternate routes of Highway 13.[1]
- Ma-Me-O Beach
Location | Ma-Me-O Beach |
---|---|
Length | 7.4 km (4.6 mi) |
From 2.0 km (1.2 mi) east of Westerose to 5.6 km (3.5 mi) west of Falun, the first segment of Highway 13A travels 7.4 km (4.6 mi) through Pigeon Lake Indian Reserve 138A. It provides access to the Summer Village of Ma-Me-O Beach on the southern shore of Pigeon Lake. This segment, which runs north of Highway 13, formed the original Highway 13 alignment prior to it being realigned to bypass the Indian reserve and summer village to the south in the 2000s.
- Camrose
Location | Camrose |
---|---|
Length | 8.2 km (5.1 mi) |
The second segment of Highway 13A is a southern bypass of Camrose and is 8 km (5.0 mi) in length. Commissioned in 1989,[10] the route follows 68 Street south from Highway 13 (48 Avenue) for 2.4 km (1.5 mi) and then turns east and becoming Camrose Drive, reconnecting with Highway 13 on the eastern ends of Camrose.[1] Highway 13A serves as the main dangerous goods route through Camrose, as dangerous good are prohibited on Highway 13 (48 Avenue) through the centre of the city, and is maintained by the City of Camrose.[11]
- Wetaskiwin
Highway 13A is a former alternate route of Highway 13 through Wetaskiwin. From the present Highway 13 (west) / Highway 2A intersection, Highway 13A used to proceed east along 40 Avenue for 1.6 km (0.99 mi), then turned north and followed 47 Street for 3.2 km (2.0 mi) and reconnected with Highway 13 at the present-day Highway 13 / Highway 814 intersection.[12] The route was decommissioned in mid-1980s.[13]
References
- ^ a b c d e f g Google (December 1, 2016). "Highway 13 in central Alberta" (Map). Google Maps. Google. Retrieved December 1, 2016.
- ^ "2015 Provincial Highways 1 - 216 Series Progress Chart" (pdf). Alberta Transportation. March 2015. Retrieved March 23, 2016.
- ^ "2016 Provincial Highway 1-216 Progress Chart" (PDF). Alberta Transportation. March 2016. Archived from the original (PDF) on November 12, 2016. Retrieved November 12, 2016.
{{cite web}}
: Unknown parameter|deadurl=
ignored (|url-status=
suggested) (help) - ^ a b c Alberta Official Road Map (Map) (2016 ed.). Alberta Culture and Tourism. § J–5, J–6, J–7, K–7, K–8.
- ^ Travel Alberta (1967). Alberta Official Road Map (Map). The Province of Alberta.
- ^ Travel Alberta (1970). Alberta Official Road Map (Map). The Province of Alberta.
- ^ Travel Alberta (1978–79). Alberta Official Road Map (Map). The Province of Alberta. § J-5.
{{cite map}}
: CS1 maint: date format (link) - ^ Travel Alberta (1980). Alberta Official Road Map (Map). The Province of Alberta. § J-5.
- ^ Alberta Road Atlas (2005 ed.). Oshawa, ON: MapArt Publishing Corp. pp. 63, 64, 65, 66, and 67.
- ^ Alberta Official Road Map (Map) (1989 ed.). Alberta Culture and Tourism. § Camrose.
- ^ "City of Camrose Map". City of Camrose. Retrieved July 15, 2016.
- ^ Alberta Official Road Map (Map) (1982 ed.). Alberta Culture and Tourism. § Westaskiwin.
- ^ Alberta Official Road Map (Map) (1988 ed.). Alberta Culture and Tourism. § Westaskiwin.