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Alberta Highway 8
Highway in Alberta
Highway in Alberta
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| province | AB |
| type | Hwy |
| route | 8 |
| map | |
| map_notes | |
| direction_a | West |
| direction_b | East |
| length_km | 16.9 |
| length_ref | |
| terminus_a | near Redwood Meadows |
| terminus_b | in Calgary |
| rural_municipalities | Rocky View County |
| cities | Calgary |
| established | 1980 |
| previous_type | Hwy |
| previous_route | 7 |
| next_type | Hwy |
| next_route | 9 |
Highway 8 is a highway in Southern Alberta that connects Highway 22 in Rocky View County, just north of Redwood Meadows, to Calgary.
Route description
Highway 8 begins west of Calgary in a rural area of Rocky View County. Its terminus is a roundabout with Highway 22 in the Elbow River valley after which it proceeds east, paralleling the Elbow River through agricultural lands as a two-lane rural highway with a posted speed limit of 100 km/h. In Rocky View County the highway is alternately designated as Township Road 241, and after it crosses Range Road 32 the speed limit reduces to 80 km/h as the highway bisects the estate residential area of Elbow Valley. After a signalized intersection at Clearwater Drive / Lott Creek Boulevard, the highway then descends into the Elbow River valley before veering slightly north to cross the river, entering Calgary city limits almost immediately thereafter at 101 Street SW.
Many commercial maps show Highway 8 continuing east through Calgary along Glenmore Trail to Highway 2 (Deerfoot Trail); however, the route is unsigned.
History
In the late 1800s, Calgary was a small town at the confluence of the Elbow and Bow Rivers. A lightly travelled road led away from the town to the southwest, following the alignment of present-day Richmond Road. In the early 20th century it was called South Morley Road before being renamed to Richmond Road, and eventually led west to Springbank, Alberta remaining north of the Elbow River. A spur from the road at 101 Street SW proceeding due south across the river had been constructed by the mid‑1920s, known as Bragg Creek Road. South of the river, it veered west following the present day alignment of Highway 8 to its current terminus, where it turned south to Bragg Creek on the alignment of present-day Highway 22.
The first use of Highway 8 was as a small connector route that connected Calgary with the town of Bowness. Highway 8 began at 10 Street NW, which at the time was part of Highway 1 which passed through Downtown Calgary, crossed the Bow River along the Louise Bridge, and proceeded north and west towards Cochrane and Banff. Highway 8 travelled west on Kensington Road and Parkdale Boulevard along the north side of the Bow River, becoming Bowness Road when it entered the village of Montgomery. It crossed the original Shouldice Bridge (renamed the John Hextal Bridge) into Bowness and ended near Bowness Park. The highway was decommissioned in when Montgomery and Bowness were annexed by the City of Calgary.
In the mid 1970s, Alberta introduced its Secondary Highway system (present day 500-900 series highways), and Richmond Road west of Calgary was designated as Secondary Highway 559, but was renumbered in 1979 to Highway 8. Highway 8 first followed Richmond Road into Calgary to Sarcee Trail, and followed Sarcee Trail and Glenmore Trail as an unsigned highway to Deerfoot Trail. When the residential community of Signal Hill was developed in the late 1980s and Highway 8 was realigned in 1992 to the south along a new two lane roadway which also served as a western extension of Glenmore Trail. Despite it being part of Glenmore Trail, the new roadway ended a T-intersection at the transition between the existing Sarcee and Glenmore Trails; resulting in "Glenmore Trail" commonly referring to the roadway east of Sarcee Trail and "Highway 8" referring to the roadway west of Sarcee Trail, despite both officially sharing the same designations.
When the Calgary Ring Road alignment was established, it was determined that the West Leg and Southwest Leg would follow and area just east of 101 Street SW from Highway 1 south to Highway 8, travel east on Highway 8 to Sarcee Trail, and then resume heading south through the eastern perimeter of the Tsuutʼina Nation – as part of the construction the effected area of Highway 8 would become part of Stoney Trail. On October 1, 2020, upgrades to Highway 8 and the stack interchange were opened and the highway inside the ring road was redesigned as Highway 201.
As part of the Southwest Ring Road construction, approximately 2 km Highway 8 was twinned west of Calgary city limits, while a new Y-interchange at the eastern terminus of Highway 8 was scheduled to be completed in 2024 as part of the West Ring Road. This project opened on December 19, 2023, ten months ahead of originally scheduled.
Future
Long-term plans call to twin the remainder of the route to Highway 22 as well as replacing the existing roundabout with an interchange, with provisions for a western extension beyond Highway 22.
Major intersections
References
References
- "Highway 8 Overview".
- (March 2016). "2016 Provincial Highway 1-216 Progress Chart". Alberta Transportation.
- (May 2016). "Highway 8 and Highway 22 Roundabout". Google Street View.
- (June 2016). "Highway 8 in Rocky View County". Google Street View.
- (October 1, 2020). "Tsuut'ina Trail section of Calgary ring road opens to traffic, ceremony interrupted by displaced family". CTV Calgary.
- (1894). "Preliminary map of a portion of the District of Alberta showing Canadian irrigation surveys during 1894". Department of the Interior.
- (1912). "Harrison and Ponton's map of the City of Calgary and environs". Great West Drafting and Blue Print Co..
- (February 1926). "Calgary District, Alberta". Topographical Survey of Canada, Department of the Interior.
- The H.M. Gousha Company. (1956). "Shell Map of British Columbia, Alberta, Saskatchewan, and Manitoba". The Shell Oil Company.
- (May 17, 2015). "John Hextall Bridge (Shouldice Bridge) - HistoricBridges.org".
- Travel Alberta. (1978–1979). "Alberta Official Road Map". The Province of Alberta.
- Travel Alberta. (1980–1981). "Alberta Official Road Map". The Province of Alberta.
- (1993). "1992/1993 Annual Report". Alberta Transportation and Utilities.
- Travel Alberta. (1995). "Alberta Official Road Map". The Province of Alberta.
- (June 13, 2014). "Calgary Ring Road update - frequently asked questions". Government of Alberta.
- (June 2020). "South project: Old Banff Coach Road SW to Hwy 8". Government of Alberta.
- (December 18, 2023). "Calgary ring road opens months ahead of schedule". [[Corus Entertainment]].
- (April 2011). "Highway 8 Twinning". Government of Alberta.
- (September 7, 2018). "Figure 4-1: Hwy 8 & Hwy 22 Functional Planning Study {{!}} Recommended Interchange Plan - Interim State". Government of Alberta.
- (September 7, 2018). "Figure 4-2: Hwy 8 & Hwy 22 Functional Planning Study {{!}} Recommended Interchange Plan - Ultimate State". Government of Alberta.
This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.
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