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・ British Columbia Highway 33
・ British Columbia Highway 35
・ British Columbia Highway 37A
・ British Columbia Highway 39
・ British Columbia Highway 395
・ British Columbia Highway 3A
・ British Columbia Highway 3B
・ British Columbia Highway 4
・ British Columbia Highway 41
・ British Columbia Highway 43
・ British Columbia Highway 49
・ British Columbia Highway 5
・ British Columbia Highway 52
・ British Columbia Highway 5A
・ British Columbia Highway 6
British Columbia Highway 7
・ British Columbia Highway 7A
・ British Columbia Highway 7B
・ British Columbia Highway 8
・ British Columbia Highway 9
・ British Columbia Highway 91
・ British Columbia Highway 91A
・ British Columbia Highway 93
・ British Columbia Highway 95
・ British Columbia Highway 95A
・ British Columbia Highway 97
・ British Columbia Highway 97C
・ British Columbia Highway 99
・ British Columbia Highway 99A
・ British Columbia Historical Federation


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British Columbia Highway 7 : ウィキペディア英語版
British Columbia Highway 7

Highway 7, known for most of its length as the Lougheed Highway, is an alternative route to Highway 1 through the Lower Mainland region of British Columbia. Whereas the controlled-access Highway 1 follows the southern bank of the Fraser River, Highway 7 follows the northern bank.
Highway 7 was first commissioned in 1941, and originally went from Vancouver to Harrison Hot Springs, following Dewdney Trunk Road between Port Moody and Port Coquitlam. In 1953, Highway 7 was moved to its current alignment between Vancouver and Coquitlam. Its eastern end was moved south from Harrison Hot Springs to Agassiz in 1956, and then east to Ruby Creek in 1968. Since 1973, Highway 7 has travelled to a junction with Highway 1 just past Hope.
Unlike former Alberta premier Peter Lougheed's name, the name of the highway is pronounced . The highway is named after Nelson Seymour Lougheed, MLA for the Dewdney District and the BC Minister of Public Works (1928–29) who ran a logging company in the area.
==Route details==

Highway 7's total length under the jurisdiction of the British Columbia Ministry of Transportation (MOT) is 118 km (93 mi). Highway 7 is signed as far west as Granville Street on Broadway in Vancouver, all the way east through Burnaby into Coquitlam, which is under the jurisdiction of the South Coast British Columbia Transportation Authority (TransLink). The section under the MOT's jurisdiction begins at the westbound exit with Highway 1 near Schoolhouse Street, with a total length of 2.3 km (1.4 mi). The highway then turns immediately northeast, meets with Highway 1 at the Cape Horn Interchange, and has an exit with United Boulevard. The highway leaves the MOT's jurisdiction 300 m (1000 ft) after the interchange.〔(【引用サイトリンク】title=Coquitlam council asks for better signage after drivers cross Port Mann Bridge by mistake )〕 TransLink again has jurisdiction of Highway 7 from the point east of Ottawa Street to the point east of United Boulevard.〔(【引用サイトリンク】 Official Numbered Routes in British Columbia )
Highway 7 falls under the MOT's jurisdiction again after Ottawa Street, crossing over the Pitt River Bridge into Pitt Meadows. 6 km (4 mi) southeast of the Pitt River bridge, it crosses into Maple Ridge at Maple Meadows Way, and the highway then crosses into Mission another 20 km (12 mi) east. 9 km (6 mi) of Highway 7's entry into Mission, it meets a junction with Highway 11. 8 km (5 mi) east of the Highway 11 junction, Highway 7 leaves Mission over the Hatzic Pump Bridge.
27 km (17 mi) east of the Highway's eastern exit from Mission, Highway 7 enters the Municipality of Kent. 14 km (9 mi) east, it reaches a junction with Highway 9 at Agassiz. 18 km (11 mi) northeast of the Highway 9 junction, it leaves Kent. Another 12 km (7 mi) northeast, Highway 7 finally reaches its eastern terminus at a junction with Highway 1 at Haig, just across the Fraser River from the main part of Hope.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
ウィキペディアで「British Columbia Highway 7」の詳細全文を読む



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