British Columbia Highway 101 Explained

Alternate Name:Sunshine Coast Highway
Province:BC
Type:Hwy
Route:101
Length Km:156
Length Ref:[1]
Map Custom:yes
Map Notes:Highway 101 highlighted in red.
Established:1962
Direction A:South
Terminus A: Langdale Ferry Terminal
Direction B:North
Junction: Earls CoveSaltery Bay ferry
Terminus B:Lund Rd in Lund
Districts:Sunshine Coast, qathet
Cities:Powell River
Towns:Gibsons
Previous Type:Hwy
Previous Route:99
Next Type:Hwy
Next Route:113

British Columbia Highway 101, also known as the Sunshine Coast Highway, is a 156km (97miles) long highway that is the main north–south thoroughfare on the Sunshine Coast in British Columbia, Canada.

Highway 101, which first opened in 1962, is divided into two separate land segments, with a ferry link in between. The highway is maintained by Capilano Highway Services.[2] Despite its location on the mainland, the highway is unique for not being connected to the rest of the British Columbia highway system. Access to the highway can only be obtained by taking ferries from Horseshoe Bay to the south end in Gibsons or Comox to Powell River. Highway 101 between Langdale and Powell River is designated as a feeder route of the Canadian National Highway System.[3] The highway is sometimes considered by locals to be an extension of the much more famous U.S. Route 101 that runs all the way to Los Angeles, however there is a 300 km gap between the two highways and the origin of the BC-101's number may not be related to US 101.

Route description

The total distance of Highway 101, including the ferry link, is approximately 156km (97miles). The vast majority of the highway is an exceptionally curvy undivided 2 lane route with few passing opportunities. In general the highway experiences low traffic volumes due to its rural nature and lack of connection to other highways. However much of Highway 101s daily traffic comes in waves timed to when the ferries arrives as a large amount of vehicle suddenly unload onto the highway. The speed limit on the Highway is 80–60 km/h in rural areas and 50 km/h in towns.

South Section

The highway begins in the south at the BC Ferries terminal at Langdale, which connects the Sunshine Coast to Vancouver via a ferry route across Howe Sound to Horseshoe Bay. The southern land section of Highway 101 is 80km (50miles) long. Immediately after leaving the Langdale Ferry terminal Highway 101 follows the Gibson's Bypass, a 2km (01miles) long stretch of 4 lane divided highway that forms the only improved section of Highway 101. The Gibsons Bypass was built in 1995 and was originally intended to entirely bypass the town of Gibsons but the bypass currently abruptly terminates at a T intersection where Highway 101 traffic is forced to turn left onto a 2 lane route though the narrow streets and many signal lights of Gibsons's small commercial area. After leaving Gibsons the highway travels a busy 2 lane route for 20km (10miles) though Roberts Creek, until arriving in the Sechelt, the only other major municipality in the area. In Sechelt the highway travels on a 4 lane Main Street before turning onto several other smaller community roads. North of Sechelt traffic on the highway thins out dramatically. For the next 60km (40miles) to the Earls Cove Ferry Terminal the highway curves though granite outcrops, past lakes and patches of rainforest mixed with small farms. Towns along the way include Halfmoon Bay and Pender Harbour and many smaller hamlets located on the ocean. Near the ferry terminal a small paved side road branches off to Skookumchuck Narrows. The ferry link across the Jervis Inlet lasts 9.5nmi between Earls Cove to the south and Saltery Bay to the north.[4]

North Section

The 59adj=midNaNadj=mid northern land section of Highway 101 curves its way along the Malaspina Strait through the hamlets of Stillwater and Lang Bay. It then enters the small city of Powell River forming its main street. It then crosses a narrow bridge over Powell Lake and soon enters the Tla'amin Nation Reservation. From there the highway downgrades to nothing more than a small rural road for the last 15km (09miles) to the community of Lund, where the highway ends at a boat ramp and dock for the Savary Island water taxi.

Fixed link proposals

The provincial government has conducted several feasibility studies on connecting Highway 101 to the Lower Mainland, as well as replacing the Earls Cove–Saltery Bay ferry. A study launched by the BC Liberal government in 2015 identified four proposals costing between $2.1 billion and $4.4 billion:[5]

All four options were considered feasible, with positive cost to benefit ratios for the two bridge options. The study was inconclusive and recommended further analysis of the four options.[6] The NDP government announced in December 2017 that the study would not move forward due to technical and financial issues.[5]

Major intersections

From south to north:

Notes and References

  1. Landmark Kilometre Inventory. 590–597. British Columbia Ministry of Transportation and Infrastructure. Cypher Consulting. July 2017.
  2. Web site: Highway Maintenance. Capilano Highway Services. December 7, 2017.
  3. National Highway System. https://web.archive.org/web/20130515043935/http://www.th.gov.bc.ca/publications/planning/Provincial%20Highways/National_Highway_System_list.pdf. dead. May 15, 2013. Ministry of Transportation and Infrastructure. Government of British Columbia. December 7, 2017. 3.
  4. Web site: BC Ferries Schedules: Sechelt - Powell River (Earls Cove-Saltery Bay). BC Ferries. December 7, 2017.
  5. News: Watson . Bridgette . December 7, 2017 . Province scraps plan for fixed link to Sunshine Coast . CBC News . August 3, 2021.
  6. Web site: Binnie . 2017 . Sunshine Coast Fixed Link Feasibility Study . British Columbia Ministry of Transportation and Infrastructure . February 8, 2021.