John Laurie/McKnight Boulevard explained

John Laurie Boulevard
McKnight Boulevard
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John Laurie Boulevard
Direction A:West
Terminus A:Arbour Lake Drive /
Arbour Lake Road
Junction:Nose Hill Drive
Sarcee Trail
Shaganappi Trail
14 Street NW
Direction B:East
Terminus B:48 Avenue NW /
McKnight Boulevard
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McKnight Boulevard
Former Names:48 Avenue N
Direction A:West
Terminus A:48 Avenue NW /
John Laurie Boulevard
Junction:Centre Street N
Edmonton Trail

Barlow Trail
Métis Trail / 36 Street NE
52 Street NE
Direction B:East
Terminus B:Calgary City Limits

John Laurie Boulevard / McKnight Boulevard is a major east-west arterial road and expressway in north Calgary, Alberta. The two roadways function together as a major crosstown route between the northwest and northeast quadrants and are part of Calgary's Skeletal Road Network.[1] [2]

Route description

John Laurie Boulevard

John Laurie Boulevard from the community of Arbour Lake as an arterial road and passes through the communities of Hawkwood and Ranchlands with a speed limit of . At Ranchlands Boulevard, it begins to transition to an expressway with the speed limit increasing to and becomes an expressway east of Sarcee Trail. John Laurie Boulevard continues east along the southern edge of Nose Hill Park to its eastern terminus at McKnight Boulevard.

The road is named for John Lee Laurie, a prominent educator and political activist in Calgary, best known for First Nations advocacy.[3]

McKnight Boulevard

McKnight Boulevard begins in the northwestern community of North Haven at a T-intersection with John Laurie Boulevard and 48 Avenue NW as a four lane arterial road and continues east, with speed limits ranging between 50km/h60km/h. East of Deerfoot Trail (Highway 2), McKnight Boulevard becomes an expressway, with speed limits ranging between 70km/h80km/h, to the city limits east of Stoney Trail NE (Highway 201).[4]

It is named for William Lidstone McKnight (1918–1941), a World War II flying ace with the Royal Air Force who had spent much of his childhood in Calgary before disappearing shortly after the Battle of Britain in combat.[5] Prior to the road being renamed in his honour, the portion of the road west of what is now Deerfoot Trail conformed to Calgary's street numbering system, and was known as 48 Avenue N, while the eastern portion was part of Edmonton Trail until the city's road network in the northeast portion of the city was revised in the 1960s.

Future

Increased traffic along John Laurie and McKnight Boulevards has led to increased demands for improvements along the corridor. The City of Calgary has identified the intersection of 12 Street NE, just east of Deerfoot Trail, for a future interchange location; however, no timeline has been set for construction.[6] There has also been renewed demand to improve the John Laurie Boulevard / McKnight Boulevard / 48 Avenue NW intersection; an interchange was proposed in 2005 but ultimately went unfunded.[7] [8]

Major intersections

From west to east.[4]

See also

Notes and References

  1. 2016 Average Daily (24hr) Weekday Traffic Volume. City of Calgary. April 21, 2017. April 5, 2017.
  2. Calgary Transportation Plan. September 2009. City of Calgary. D-1. April 21, 2017.
  3. Book: Foran. Max. Citymakers: Calgarians after the frontier. 1987. Historical Society of Alberta, Chinook Country Chapter. Calgary. 0-88925-725-6. 263.
  4. Sherlock Publishing . Sherlock's Map of Calgary . 2014 . Sherlock Publishing . Langdon, AB . 1-895229-80-4 . 8-9, 17-22 . 16th .
  5. News: Cole. Yolande. Landmarks honour veterans. April 21, 2017. Calgary Herald. November 10, 2016. https://web.archive.org/web/20161110010347/http://calgaryherald.com/. November 10, 2016. Alt URL
  6. Web site: McKnight Boulevard Transportation Study. Transportation Planning. City of Calgary. May 2, 2017. en-CAN. December 9, 2013.
  7. News: Ferguson. Eva. North Haven residents want action on increasingly dangerous northwest intersection. May 2, 2017. Calgary Herald. Postmedia. April 15, 2017.
  8. News: Tighe. Tony. Northwest Calgary residents want improvements to 'dangerous' intersection. May 2, 2017. Global News. Corus Entertainment Inc.. April 18, 2017.