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・ Ontario Highway 28
・ Ontario Highway 2A
・ Ontario Highway 3
・ Ontario Highway 30
・ Ontario Highway 32
・ Ontario Highway 33
・ Ontario Highway 34
・ Ontario Highway 35
・ Ontario Highway 36
・ Ontario Highway 37
・ Ontario Highway 38
・ Ontario Highway 39
・ Ontario Highway 3B
・ Ontario Highway 4
・ Ontario Highway 40
Ontario Highway 400
・ Ontario Highway 400A
・ Ontario Highway 401
・ Ontario Highway 402
・ Ontario Highway 403
・ Ontario Highway 404
・ Ontario Highway 405
・ Ontario Highway 406
・ Ontario Highway 407
・ Ontario Highway 409
・ Ontario Highway 41
・ Ontario Highway 410
・ Ontario Highway 412
・ Ontario Highway 416
・ Ontario Highway 417


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Ontario Highway 400 : ウィキペディア英語版
Ontario Highway 400

King's Highway 400, commonly referred to as Highway 400, historically as the Toronto–Barrie Highway, and colloquially as the 400, is a 400-series highway in the Canadian province of Ontario linking the city of Toronto in the urban and agricultural south of the province with the scenic and sparsely populated central and northern regions. The portion of the highway between Toronto and Lake Simcoe roughly traces the route of a historic trail between the Lower and Upper Great Lakes. Highway 400 is part of the highest-capacity route from southern Ontario to the Canadian West, via a connection with the Trans-Canada Highway in Sudbury. The highway also serves as the primary route from Toronto to southern Georgian Bay and Muskoka, areas collectively known as ''cottage country''. The highway is patrolled by the Ontario Provincial Police and has a speed limit of , except for the section south of the 401, where the speed limit is .
Highway 400 is the second longest freeway in the province, the trans-provincial Highway 401 being the longest. It was the first fully controlled-access highway in Ontario when it was opened between North York and Barrie on July 1, 1952. On that date, it was also the first highway to be designated as a 400-series. The freeway was extended in both directions; north of Barrie to Coldwater in 1958, and south of Highway 401 to Jane Street in 1966. It was widened between North York and Barrie in the 1970s. Since 1977, construction on the freeway has been snaking north along Highway 69 towards Parry Sound and now Sudbury.
As of 2011, a four lane freeway is opened as far north as Carling. At the north end of Highway 69, a segment of freeway is in operation between Murdock River and Sudbury; while this section will be part of the completed Highway 400 route, at present it remains signed as Highway 69. The remaining gap between Carling and Murdock River will be opened in stages and is expected to be completed by 2021.〔("Highway 69 to be delayed, province admits" ). ''Sudbury Star'', March 7, 2015.〕
== Route description ==

While Highway 400 was originally known as the Toronto–Barrie Highway, the route has been extended well beyond Barrie to north of Parry Sound, and is projected to reach its eventual terminus in Sudbury by 2017. , the length of the highway is with an additional planned.
Highway 400 begins at the Maple Leaf Drive overpass in Toronto, south of Highway 401.〔 South of that, it is known as Black Creek Drive, a high speed commuter road once planned as a southern extension of the 400. Highway 400 had been completed to Jane Street in 1966 (alongside the expansion of Highway 401) but plans to extend Highway 400 further south to the Gardiner Expressway were cancelled after several citizens groups protested the proposal in the 1970s. Black Creek Drive was built along the empty right-of-way and transferred to Metro Toronto in 1982.
North of Maple Leaf Drive, the highway shifts northwestward, but then turns approximately northward at Highway 401. At the interchange with the 401, Highway 400 widens to twelve lanes. It continues north through Toronto, shedding two lanes at Finch Avenue.
The congested section between Highway 407 and Langstaff Road in suburban Vaughan features a short collector-express system.
The 400/407 junction is the only four-level stack interchange in Canada.〔
From Highway 401 to the Holland Marsh the freeway largely parallels the arterial / concession roads Weston Road and Jane Street, passing over the height of land at the Oak Ridges Moraine.〔 The highway passes through protected rural areas in northern York Region and encounters rolling countryside in Simcoe County south of Barrie.〔 The section near Barrie is subject to snowsqualls as it lies near the edge of Georgian Bay's snowbelt.
Within Barrie, Highway 400 passes through a trench which places it below grade for most of its length,〔 the route curving around downtown Barrie towards the north-east.〔 On the outskirts of Barrie, the through right-of-way continues as Highway 11 towards Orillia and North Bay, while Highway 400 exits and veers 90 degrees to the north-west towards Georgian Bay, travelling alongside the former Highway 93 to Craighurst.
At Craighurst the highway again turns north-east, skirting the Copeland Forest and the ski hills of the Oro Moraine, to meet Highway 12 in Coldwater.〔 From here, the highway takes on the Trans-Canada Highway designation, and follows a predominantly north-western heading along what was the route of Highway 69, toward the planned terminus of Sudbury.〔 In Muskoka and Parry Sound Districts, Highway 400 is in most sections a twinned four-lane highway,〔 but several bypasses have and are being built to circumvent the communities along the way.〔 At Port Severn, the highway meets the rugged Canadian Shield, and winds its way north through the granite, often flanked by towering slabs of rock.〔

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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