Alberta Highway 28

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Template: Infobox high-level street / Maintenance / CA / AB-H
Highway 28 in Alberta, Canada
Alberta Highway 28
map
Course of the H 28
Basic data
Operator: Alberta Transportion
Start of the street: Edmonton
( 53 ° 35 ′  N , 113 ° 30 ′  W )
End of street: Cold Lake
( 54 ° 28 ′  N , 110 ° 10 ′  W )
Overall length: 277 km

Municipal District :

The Alberta Highway 28 begins in the capital of Alberta , Edmonton and ends at Cold Lake in the city of the same name Cold Lake . The highway has a total length of 277 km.

The highway is between the intersection with Highway 16 and the city of Cold Lake (intersection "10th Street"), as a so-called feeder route (feeder or connecting route), part of the Canadian National Highway System .

Route

The highway starts in central Edmonton on Highway 16 and heads north out of the city. It crosses Highway 216 , which is a city ring around Edmonton and leads to Canadian Forces Base Edmonton , on the west side of which the road runs. The route crosses Highway 37 , which u. a. leads to Fort Saskatchewan ; Highway 28A branches off at Gibbons , which is a branch route to Highway 28 to Edmonton. At Redwater the leading eastward starts off Highway 28, Highway 38 . Before Radway , Highway 63 branches off to the north , which leads to the oil mining areas in northern Alberta. East of Smoky Lake coming from Lac La Biche , Highway 36 meets Highway 28 and leads together to Ashmont , where it branches off in a southerly direction to Two Hills . Coming from the south, Highway 41 meets the route and runs together to Bonnyville . The route continues eastwards, south of Cold Lake South , Highway 55 coming from Saskatchewan meets Highway 28 and runs northwards together. To the west of the route is the Canadian Forces Base Cold Lake . At the city limits to Cold Lake, Highway 55 branches off again in a westerly direction, Highway 28 runs through the city and ends on the shore of the eponymous Cold Lake.

Individual evidence

  1. Alberta Highways 1 to 986. (PDF, 419 kB) Transport Alberta, p. 11 , accessed on April 29, 2016 (English).
  2. ^ National Highway System - An Overview. (PDF; 146.21 kB) Council of Ministers - Responsible for Transportation and Highway Safety, April 2008, accessed on June 29, 2016 (English).