Centre Street (Calgary)

(Redirected from Alberta Highway 782)

Centre Street is a major road in Calgary, Alberta, and defines the east and west halves of the city for the purposes of street addresses (i.e. NW, SW, NE, SE).

Centre Street
Centre Street, seen from Calgary Tower
LocationCalgary, Alberta

Southern section
Length0.8 km (0.50 mi)[1]
South endGlenmore Trail / Fairmount Drive
North end58 Avenue S

Volunteer Way section
Length0.7 km (0.43 mi)[1]
South end18 Avenue S
Major
junctions
17 Avenue S, 12 Avenue S, 11 Avenue S
North end10 Avenue S

Main section
Length10.1 km (6.3 mi)[1]
South end9 Avenue S
Major
junctions
6 Avenue S, 5 Avenue S, 4 Avenue S, 16 Avenue N (Highway 1), McKnight Boulevard, 64 Avenue N, Beddington Boulevard
North endBeddington Trail (dead end)

Harvest Hills Blvd / Northern section
Length9.1 km (5.7 mi)[1]
South endBeddington Trail
Major
junctions
96 Avenue N, Country Hills Boulevard, Stoney Trail (Highway 201)
North endHwy 566
(Calgary city limits)
Neighborhoods
Centre Street Bridge over Bow River
Centre Street North

Route description

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The main segment of Centre Street is an arterial road that extends from 9 Avenue S, at the base of the Calgary Tower in Downtown Calgary. The roadway passes through Chinatown, crosses the Bow River, to the Beddington Boulevard, after which it becomes a residential street and becomes unavailable to private vehicular traffic north of Bergen Crescent (the road continues, but it is only accessible to Calgary Transit and emergency vehicles). The road resumes immediately north of the "bus trap" at Beddington Trail, where it continues as Harvest Hills Boulevard. When the roadway crosses Stoney Trail, the name reverts to Centre Street N and the road continues north and exits the city limits at Highway 566.[2]

In the downtown section, Centre Street is lined by some of Calgary's landmark buildings, such as the Encana Bow building, Suncor Energy Centre (formerly Petro-Canada Centre), the Dragon City Mall, Telus building, Hyatt Regency hotel and Calgary Tower.

Several non-contiguous sections of Centre Street appear sporadically south of the Calgary Tower, including a segment between 10 Avenue S and 18 Avenue S, also known as Volunteer Way; and a collector road running from 58 Avenue S to Glenmore Trail, where it continues to the south as Fairmount Drive. Macleod Trail forms the division between southwest and southeast quadrants between Glenmore Trail and Highway 22X, while further south the quadrant boundaries are defined by Sheriff King Street.

Future

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The Centre Street N / Harvest Hills Boulevard corridor is chosen alignment for the north leg of the proposed CTrain Green Line, running from downtown Calgary to the North Pointe transit terminal near Country Village Road.[3] Harvest Hills Boulevard was constructed with a wide right-of-way to accommodate future LRT construction; however, the section along Centre Street N would require either lane removal or property expropriation.[4] The majority of the rail line would be surface-level, with tunnels at selected major intersections as well as major tunnel across the Bow River and through downtown Calgary.[5] Funding has not been finalized for the project.

Centre Street Bridge

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The Centre Street Bridge was built by the City of Calgary in 1916 over the Bow River for $375,000 replacing a steel truss bridge built by a land developer called the Centre Street Bridge Company Limited.[6] It was designed by John F. Green, featured an upper and lower deck, and large cast concrete lions on four massive plinths, two at each end of the bridge.

It went through extensive restoration in 2001, when the bridge was closed for one year. The opening scene of the 2001 Steven Seagal movie Exit Wounds was filmed on the bridge during this closure.

Calgary Transit Bus Routes

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The following Calgary Transit bus routes serves Centre Street (as of September 2021, communities served are in parentheses):

  • Route 2 Killarney/17th Ave./Mount Pleasant (Beddington Heights, Crescent Heights)
  • Route 3 Heritage Station/Sandstone (Crescent Heights, Tuxedo Park, Highland Park, Thorncliffe, Huntington Hills, Beddington Heights)
  • Route 4 Huntington (Huntington Hills)
  • Route 5 North Haven (Huntington Hills)
  • Route 17 Ramsay/Renfrew (Crescent Heights)
  • Route 20 Heritage/Northmount (Huntington Hills)
  • Route 32 Sunridge/Huntington (Huntington Hills, Beddington Heights)
  • Route 46 Beddington Heights (Beddington Heights, Huntington Hills)
  • Route 62 Hidden Valley Express (Crescent Heights, Tuxedo Park, Highland Park, Thorncliffe, Huntington Hills)
  • Route 64 MacEwan Express (Crescent Heights, Tuxedo Park, Highland Park, Thorncliffe, Huntington Hills)
  • Route 88 Harvest Hills (Beddington Heights, Huntington Hills)
  • Route 109 Harvest Hills Express (Crescent Heights, Tuxedo Park, Highland Park, Thorncliffe, Huntington Hills, Beddington Heights)
  • Route 114 Panorama Hills (Huntington Hills, Beddington Heights)
  • Route 116 Coventry Hills Express (Crescent Heights, Tuxedo Park, Highland Park, Thorncliffe, Huntington Hills, Beddington Heights)
  • Route 142 Panorama Hills Express (Crescent Heights, Tuxedo Park, Highland Park, Thorncliffe, Huntington Hills, Beddington Heights)
  • Route 300 BRT Airport/City Centre (Thorncliffe, Highland Park, Tuxedo Park, Crescent Heights)
  • Route 301 BRT North/City Centre (Crescent Heights, Tuxedo Park, Highland Park, Thorncliffe, Huntington Hills, Beddington Heights)

Major intersections

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From south to north.[2] The entire route is in Calgary.

km[1]miDestinationsNotes
0.00.0Fairmount DriveContinues south
Glenmore TrailHalf-diamond interchange; westbound exit, eastbound entrance
0.40.2561 Avenue SAccess to   Chinook CTrain station and Chinook Centre
0.80.5058 Avenue S
4 km (2.5 mi) gap in Centre Street
0.00.018 Avenue S
0.10.06217 Avenue S
0.50.3112 Avenue SEastbound, one-way
0.60.3711 Avenue SWestbound, one-way;   Centre Street S station (proposed)
0.70.4310 Avenue S
145 m (475 ft) gap in Centre Street; separated by the Calgary Tower
0.00.09 Avenue SEastbound one-way.
0.10.0628 Avenue S (Stephen Avenue)Pedestrian mall, westbound one-way when open to traffic
0.20.127 Avenue STransit mall, transit access only;    1 Street SW & Centre Street stations
0.30.196 Avenue SWestbound one-way
0.40.255 Avenue SEastbound one-way; south end of rush-hour lane reversal[7]
0.50.314 Avenue SWestbound one-way.
0.80.502 Avenue SConnects to Riverfront Avenue
0.9–
1.1
0.56–
0.68
Riverfront AvenueOverpass (no access), access to Centre Street Bridge lower deck
Centre Street Bridge across the Bow River
Memorial DriveOverpass (no access), access to Centre Street Bridge lower deck
2.11.312 Avenue N
2.51.6  16 Avenue N (Highway 1)  16 Avenue N station (proposed)
2.91.820 Avenue NNorth end of rush-hour lane reversal[7]
4.93.040 Avenue NW, 41 Avenue NE
5.73.5McKnight Boulevard
7.34.564 Avenue N
8.35.24 Street NW, 72 Avenue NE
9.15.7Beddington BoulevardAccess to Beddington Trail
10.16.3Transit only connection between Centre Street and Harvest Hills Boulevard
Beddington TrailTrumpet interchange; south end of Harvest Hills Boulevard
11.16.9  Country Hills Road, 96 Avenue NE – Airport (YYC)
12.57.8Country Hills Boulevard
13.38.3Panamount Boulevard, Country Village Road
14.89.2  Stoney Trail (Highway 201)Partial cloverleaf interchange; Hwy 201 exit 54);
North end of Harvest Hills Boulevard, Centre Street resumes
19.211.9  Highway 566 (146 Avenue N)Calgary city limits; continues north as Range Road 13 into Rocky View County
1.000 mi = 1.609 km; 1.000 km = 0.621 mi

See also

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KML is not from Wikidata

References

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  1. ^ a b c d e "Centre Street in Calgary, AB" (Map). Google Maps. Retrieved May 11, 2017.
  2. ^ a b Sherlock Publishing (2014). Sherlock's Map of Calgary (16th ed.). Langdon, Alberta: Sherlock Publishing. pp. E, 5, 11, 19, 27, 35, and 41. ISBN 978-1-895229-80-6.
  3. ^ "Green Line LRT project". Transportation Infrastructure. City of Calgary. August 28, 2015. Retrieved May 12, 2017.
  4. ^ Gilligan, Melissa (March 22, 2017). "Green Line LRT north route outlined at public sessions: 'traffic patterns will change'". Global News. Corus Entertainment Inc. Retrieved May 12, 2017.
  5. ^ City of Calgary (March 16, 2017). Green Line LRT: North to South track alignment (March 2017) (Video). YouTube. Archived from the original on 2021-12-21. Retrieved May 12, 2017.
  6. ^ Calgary Public Library. Centre Street Bridge Archived June 14, 2007, at the Wayback Machine
  7. ^ a b "Centre Street lane reversals". City of Calgary. March 10, 2011. Retrieved May 10, 2017.