Country: | CAN |
Crowsnest Highway | |
Type: | Hwy |
Alternate Name: | Highway 3 |
Marker Image: | |
Map: | Crowsnest Highway Map 2017.png |
Map Notes: | The Crowsnest Highway highlighted in red |
Length Km: | 1161 |
Allocation: | BC 3, AB 3 |
Direction A: | West |
Direction B: | East |
Terminus A: | near Hope |
Junction: |
|
Terminus B: | in Medicine Hat |
Provinces: | British Columbia, Alberta |
Established: | 1932 |
Browse: | National Highway System |
The Crowsnest Highway is an east-west highway in British Columbia and Alberta, Canada. It stretches across the southern portions of both provinces, from Hope, British Columbia to Medicine Hat, Alberta, providing the shortest highway connection between the Lower Mainland and southeast Alberta through the Canadian Rockies. Mostly two-lane, the highway was officially designated in 1932, mainly following a mid-19th-century gold rush trail originally traced out by an engineer named Edgar Dewdney. It takes its name from the Crowsnest Pass, the location at which the highway crosses the Continental Divide between British Columbia and Alberta.
In British Columbia, the highway is entirely in mountainous regions and is also known as the Southern Trans-Provincial Highway. The western-most segment between the Trans-Canada Highway and Highway 5A is locally known as the Hope-Princeton Highway, and passes by the site of the Hope Slide. In Alberta, the terrain is initially mountainous, before smoothing to foothills and eventually generally flat prairie in the vicinity of Pincher Creek. The highway forms part of the Red Coat Trail and the CANAMEX Corridor from Highway 2 near Fort Macleod to Highway 4 in Lethbridge.Many sections of the highway was built by Japanese labour while they were interned during the Second World War, including sections like the Hope-Princeton. This history has been preserved at a heritage marker at Sunshine Valley, which was the largest internment camp in Canada.
Crowsnest Highway is designated a core route in Canada's National Highway System, and is designated as Highway 3 for its entire length.[1]
See main article: British Columbia Highway 3. The Crowsnest Highway's western terminus is at Hope, where it branches off from the Trans-Canada Highway (Highway 1). The highway goes east for to its junction with the Coquihalla Highway (Highway 5), where it exits the freeway and continues for on a segment known as the Hope-Princeton Highway, passing the Hope Slide en route to Allison Pass, Manning Provincial Park, and Sunday Summit; at Princeton, the Crowsnest Highway meets Highway 5A. East of Princeton, the Crowsnest Highway goes southeast for to Keremeos, where it meets Highway 3A, leading towards Penticton and Highway 97. Another southeast, and the Crowsnest Highway reaches Osoyoos and a junction with Highway 97.
Approximately east of Osoyoos, the Crowsnest Highway reaches its junction with Highway 33 at Rock Creek, then the highway heads east for 70km (40miles) to its junction with Highway 41, just before passing through Grand Forks. Another east, the Crowsnest Highway meets Highway 395 at the southern end of Christina Lake. The Crowsnest Highway travels for through Bonanza Pass to its junction with Highway 3B at Nancy Greene Lake, which is the cutoff to Rossland and Trail. It is another east to Castlegar, where the Crowsnest Highway intersects Highway 22 and Highway 3A, leading towards Nelson. Approximately east of Castlegar, the Crowsnest Highway reaches its eastern junction with Highway 3B; another to the east it converges with Highway 6 at Salmo and the two highways share a concurrency for to Burnt Flat.
The Crowsnest Highway continues through the Kootenay Pass on the Salmo-Creston Highway, a stretch known colloquially as the Kootenay Skyway, or Salmo-Creston Skyway. 67km (42miles) east of Burnt Flat, the Crowsnest Highway reaches Creston, just past junctions with Highway 21 and Highway 3A. later, south of Yahk, Highway 95 merges onto the Crowsnest Highway. The two highways share a common alignment for northeast to Cranbrook and the junction with Highway 95A. Another east, Highway 95 diverges north while Highway 93 merges onto the Crowsnest Highway from a shared alignment. Highway 93 and the Crowsnest share a common alignment for the next southeast to Elko, where Highway 93 diverges south. northeast of Elko, the Crowsnest Highway reaches Fernie, then it goes north another to its junction with Highway 43 at Sparwood, and another east, the highway reaches the boundary with Alberta at Crowsnest Pass.
See main article: Alberta Highway 3. The Alberta portion of the Crowsnest Highway is also designated as Highway 3, running for approximately from the British Columbia border to Medicine Hat. It begins in Crowsnest Pass paralleling the Canadian Pacific Railway, first meeting Highway 40 at Coleman, then running east to the southern terminus of Highway 22. Highway 6 splits south near Pincher Creek. Approximately east of Pincher Creek, the highway becomes divided and interchanges with Highway 2 with which it is briefly concurrent, assuming the designation of the Red Coat Trail and CANAMEX Corridor. It proceeds for into the town of Fort Macleod, after which Highway 2 splits south to Cardston and the United States border. Highway 3 then crosses the Oldman River east of Fort Macleod near Monarch, prior to a partial interchange with Highway 23.
After Coalhurst, the highway reaches Westview Drive W, which provides access to West Lethbridge. It then becomes a freeway named Crowsnest Trail as it reaches Highway 25 which branches north to Picture Butte while University Drive runs south to the University of Lethbridge as the main thoroughfare through West Lethbridge. Highway 3 again crosses the Oldman River in central Lethbridge and the freeway segment ends at Mayor Magrath Drive, marking the northern terminus of Highway 5. The highway meets the northern end of Highway 4 at the eastern limit of Lethbridge before continuing east to Coaldale and Taber. Within Taber, Highway 36 runs concurrently with Highway 3 for . The highway reduces to a two-lane undivided road and the Crowsnest Highway ends later at the Trans-Canada Highway in Medicine Hat.
Alberta Transportation has long-term plans to upgrade the entire Highway 3 corridor to a freeway from the British Columbia border to Medicine Hat. The plans include the construction of a Lethbridge bypass to render the CANAMEX Corridor free-flowing through southern Alberta, in combination with proposed bypasses of Fort Macleod, Claresholm and Nanton.[2] The route would split from Highway 3 west of Coalhurst and run east, bypassing Lethbridge and Coaldale to the north before rejoining the existing highway.[2]
During the 2021 British Columbia floods, the Crowsnest Highway was closed by landslides, as were the other routes connecting the Lower Mainland with the rest of Canada. It was the first of these routes to reopen.[3] During the period when it was the only road route between Metro Vancouver and the rest of Canada, it experienced a high rate of crashes among heavy trucks driving faster than the route's windy curves would allow for.[4]
The following is a list of major intersections along the Crowsnest Highway:[5] [6] [7]