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・ Ontario Highway 112
・ Ontario Highway 114
・ Ontario Highway 115
・ Ontario Highway 117
・ Ontario Highway 118
・ Ontario Highway 12
・ Ontario Highway 121
・ Ontario Highway 124
・ Ontario Highway 125
・ Ontario Highway 127
・ Ontario Highway 129
・ Ontario Highway 130
・ Ontario Highway 131
・ Ontario Highway 132
・ Ontario Highway 135
Ontario Highway 136
・ Ontario Highway 137
・ Ontario Highway 138
・ Ontario Highway 14
・ Ontario Highway 140
・ Ontario Highway 141
・ Ontario Highway 144
・ Ontario Highway 148
・ Ontario Highway 15
・ Ontario Highway 16
・ Ontario Highway 169
・ Ontario Highway 17
・ Ontario Highway 17A
・ Ontario Highway 17B
・ Ontario Highway 18


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Ontario Highway 136 : ウィキペディア英語版
Ontario Highway 136

King's Highway 136, commonly referred to as Highway 136, was a provincially maintained highway in the Canadian province of Ontario that connected former Highway 24 near Caledon with Highway 9 in Orangeville. The majority of the route was located in the Regional Municipality of Peel; however, the section in Orangeville was in Dufferin County. The route of Highway 136 was originally part of Highway 24; it was created in 1962 when Highway 24 was rerouted along Highway 51. The highway remained unchanged until 1997, when it was transferred to the Regional Municipality of Peel and the Town of Orangeville.
The majority of the former highway is rural in nature, passing through farmland on the highlands of the Niagara Escarpment, located a short distance south of the southern terminus of the route. Near its northern terminus, the surrounds are suburban as the highway enters Orangeville. The only notable community on the route outside of Orangeville is Alton.
== Route description ==
Highway 136 was a short route through the northern section of Caledon. The former route is mostly rural, surrounded by the expanse of farmland that sits atop the Niagara Escarpment.
The route follows several concession roads along its length, and is known locally by the names of those roads today. It begins at a junction with former Highway 24 (Charleston Sideroad) immediately north of Forks of the Credit Provincial Park, which straddles the escarpment northwest of Brampton.〔 The route proceeds northwest alongside the Charles Sauriol Conservation Area for approximately before entering the community of Alton.〔 Within Alton, the route follows Main Street until a broad 90° curve directs traffic northeast onto Queen Street. It follows this road out of the community, encountering a railway crossing and the Credit River at the town limits.
The route takes another 90° curve to the northwest, intersecting Porterfield Road, after which the route takes that name.〔 It crosses the same railway line and proceeds north for between farm fields. South of Orangeville, the route intersects the Orangeville Bypass (Riddell Road), after which the farmland transitions to suburbs.〔
It takes a broad curves to the northeast and becomes Townline Road, which acts as the boundary between Peel Region and Dufferin County as well as the town limits of Orangeville. After following this road for a kilometre, it intersects John Street. The final section of the route follows John Street northwest to end at former Highway 9 (Broadway).〔

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「Ontario Highway 136」の詳細全文を読む



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