Dixie Road | |
Marker Image: | |
Other Name: | Peel Regional Road 4 Veterans Memorial Roadway |
Map: | Dixie Road Peel route map.svg |
Maint: | Region of Peel |
Direction A: | North |
Terminus A: | Olde Base Line Road in Caledon (Continues as Horseshoe Hill Road) |
Direction B: | South |
Terminus B: | Lakeshore Road in Mississauga |
Junction: |
|
Dixie Road is a major north–south thoroughfare in the Regional Municipality of Peel in Ontario, Canada, passing through the lower-tier cities of Mississauga and Brampton, and the rural town of Caledon. It is the third concession road east of Hurontario Street, and before being named was concession-numbered as 3rd Line East.[1] It is designated and signposted as Peel Regional Road 4[2] in Peel's regional road system. Despite already being named, it has also been designated as Veterans Memorial Roadway (which extends along its continuation, Horseshoe Hill Road) since 2016.[3]
Dixie Road is named for the former rural hamlet of Dixie at Cawthra Road and Dundas Street in Mississauga, 2 km to the west of the street along Dundas. The hamlet was named for Beaumont Dixie, a settler who paid for the establishment of the Union Chapel, a multi-denominational Protestant church in the village.[4]
Dixie begins at Lakeshore Road in southeast Mississauga at Lake Ontario in the Lakeview neighbourhood, just west of the Etobicoke Creek near the Toronto city limits. A short distance north of Lakeshore, it dips under GO Transit's Lakeshore West Line tracks. It then interchanges with the Queen Elizabeth Way and passes through the Applewood (where it passes under the Canadian Pacific Kansas City tracks which host GO Transit's Milton line trains, with Dixie GO station a short distance southeast of the Dundas Street) intersection) and Rockwood Village neighbourhoods. At Eastgate Parkway, a road running through a hydro corridor, it crosses the Mississauga Transitway, an east–west bus rapid transit line also running through the corridor, with a station at Dixie. It then enters a major industrialized zone with heavy truck traffic and is often congested as a result. In the centre of this industrial district, it interchanges with Highway 401. Some distance north of that freeway the industrial development thins out as Dixie passes the western outfield of Toronto Pearson International Airport and the end of Runway 05. North of Derry Road, it crosses through another hydro corridor and the tolled Highway 407 and enters Brampton.
North of Steeles Avenue, Dixie passes under the Canadian National tracks carrying GO Transit Kitchener Line trains, enters residential areas again as it continues through the Bramalea district, passing the namesake Bramalea City Centre, a regional shopping mall at Queen Street, which was formerly Highway 7, and is now Peel Regional Road 107. It enters the Springdale district north of Bovaird Drive, and narrows to a two-lane semi-rural road as it passes through a mixed residential/commercial area still under development as it approaches Mayfield Road.
Dixie then enters the mostly rural Town of Caledon north of Mayfield, though it briefly passes though an area of newer industrial developments (both complete and under construction) spilling over from Brampton before the suburban environs give way to farmland. It ends at Olde Base Line Road (Peel Regional Road 12) at a roundabout where it becomes Horseshoe Hill Road, which continues to and ends at Highway 9.
Dixie Road is served by two bus routes in Mississauga and Brampton. Both cities operate separate systems; MiWay in Mississauga and Brampton Transit in Brampton. MiWay's Route #5 Dixie's southern terminus is at Long Branch Loop in Toronto, where it makes connections with GO Transit commuter trains and even the city's streetcar system, which otherwise is limited to areas closer to its downtown. Brampton Transit's Route #18 Dixie travels into Mississauga as far south as Meyerside Drive, and also has limited service extending a short distance north into Caledon.
The trunk routes serving the street are:
Mississauga (MiWay):
Brampton (Brampton Transit):
Sites along Dixie Road include: