Manitoba Highway 8 Explained

Province:MB
Type:PTH
Route:8
Alternate Name:Veterans Memorial Highway, McPhillips Street
Maint:Manitoba Infrastructure
Length Km:162
Direction A:South
Direction B:North
Terminus A: at Winnipeg city limits
Junction:
Terminus B:Hecla-Grindstone Provincial Park
Cities:Winnipeg
Districts:Unorganized Division No. 18
Established:1928
Previous Type:PTH
Previous Route:7
Next Type:PTH
Next Route:9

Provincial Trunk Highway 8 (PTH 8) is a provincial primary highway located in the Canadian province of Manitoba. It runs from the north limit of the City of Winnipeg, where it meets with Route 180 (McPhillips Street), north to Hecla-Grindstone Provincial Park. The highway between Winnipeg and PR 230 is known as McPhillips Street. At PR 230, McPhillips Street becomes McPhillips Road and continues along PR 230 to PTH 9 (Selkirk Bypass). The route is a major road connecting Winnipeg with the communities of Winnipeg Beach and Gimli. The speed limit is 100 km/h (60 mph).

Route description

PTH 8 begins in the Rural Municipality of West St. Paul at an intersection with Emes Road on the Winnipeg city line, with the road continuing south into Winnipeg as Winnipeg Route 180 (Route 180 / McPhillips Street). The road heads northeast as a 4-lane divided highway to immediately have a cloverleaf interchange with PTH 101 (North Perimeter Highway) before traveling through rural areas, having intersections with PR 220 (Grassmere Road) and PR 321 (Miller Road) before entering the Rural Municipality of St. Andrews. PTH 8 has intersections with PTH 27 (Parkdale Road) and PR 230 (McPhillips Road) as it passes by the hamlet of Parkdale and the St. Andrews Airport before curving due north and narrowing to 2-lanes.

The highway has intersections with PTH 67 (Fort Garry Road), PTH 17, and PR 225 as it bypasses Selkirk, Petersfield, and Dunnottar a few kilometers to the west, where it crosses Netley Creek at the hamlet of Netley and begins paralleling the western coastline of Lake Winnipeg. PTH 8 goes through a switchback near Melnice before entering the Rural Municipality of Gimli at an intersection with PR 229 near Winnipeg Beach.

PTH 8 has an intersection with PR 519 near Sandy Hook and crosses Willow Creek near Husavik before traveling through the town of Gimli, where it passes just to the east of former RCAF Station Gimli and has an intersection with PR 231 (which connects to the northern end of PTH 9). The highway bypasses several beach communities as it has an intersection with PR 324 and crosses into the Municipality of Bifrost - Riverton.[1]

PTH 8 has an intersection with PTH 68 in Hnausa before crossing the Icelandic River and traveling through the town of Riverton, where it has an intersection with PR 329, which connects to PR 222. The highway now becomes more remote as it makes a sharp curve to the east, having intersections with PR 234 near Washow Bay and Grindstone Road (which provides access to Blacks Point and Grindstone). The highway turns southward to cross a narrow Causeway over a portion of the Lake Winnipeg Narrows onto Hecla Island, entering Unorganized East Division No. 18 and Hecla-Grindstone Provincial Park. It winds its way along Hecla Island to travel through the hamlet of Hecla Village, where the PTH 8 designation ends and the road continues north to a dead end at Gull Harbour.[2]

History

PTH 8 formerly extended into the city of Winnipeg. Prior to 1966, PTH 8 followed McPhillips Street (present-day Winnipeg Route 180), Notre Dame Avenue (present-day Winnipeg Route 57), and Arlington Street to PTH 1 / PTH 4 (Portage Avenue); sharing a brief concurrency with PTH 6 along Notre Dame Avenue.[3] When the Winnipeg Metro Routes were established in, PTH 8 was decommissioned inside the Perimeter Highway.[4]

Related routes

Provincial Road 225

See main article: article and Manitoba Provincial Road 225.

Province:MB
Type:MB
Route:225
Alternate Name:Whytewold Road
Established:1966
Length Km:6.2
Location:Dunnottar

Provincial Road 225 (PR 225), also known as Whytewold Road, is a 6.2adj=midNaNadj=mid east-west spur of PTH 8 in the Rural Municipality of St. Andrews, linking it with PTH 9 and the Whytewold neighborhood of the village of Dunnottar.

Provincial Road 324

Province:MB
Type:PR
Route:324
Alternate Name:Camp Morton Road
Established:1966
Length Km:1.6
Location:Camp Morton

Provincial Road 324 (PR 324), also known as Camp Morton Road, is a short 1.6adj=midNaNadj=mid east-west spur of PTH 8 in the Rural Municipality of Gimli, connecting it to Camp Morton Provincial Park (as well as the community of the same name) and PR 222. It is entirely a paved two-lane highway, with no other intersections or settlements along its route.

Previously, PR 324 extended further northwest, following a 3.2km (02miles) concurrency (overlap) with PTH 8 and what is now Lake Forest Road to an intersection with PTH 7 in the tiny community of Rembrandt.

Provincial Road 519

Province:MB
Type:PR
Route:519
Alternate Name:First Avenue
Established:1966
Length Km:2.8
Location:Sandy Hook

Provincial Road 519 (PR 519) is a short 2.8adj=midNaNadj=mid east-west spur of PTH 8 in the Rural Municipality of Gimli, serving as an access road to the community of Sandy Hook, as well as connecting to PTH 9. Within Sandy Hook, it is known as First Avenue. The entire length of PR 519 is a paved two-lane highway.[5]

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Official Highway map #3. Government of Manitoba. December 24, 2022.
  2. Web site: Official Highway map #5. Government of Manitoba. December 24, 2022.
  3. Province of Manitoba. 1964-1965. Manitoba Official Highway Map. Winnipeg. https://web.archive.org/web/20150914045954/http://content.gov.mb.ca/mit/maparchive/high/1964_1965_cover.pdf. September 14, 2015.
  4. Province of Manitoba. 1966-1967. Manitoba Official Highway Map. Winnipeg. https://web.archive.org/web/20160913102937/http://content.gov.mb.ca/mit/maparchive/high/1966_1967_cover.pdf. September 13, 2016.
  5. Web site: Official Highway Map of Manitoba section 3. Government of Manitoba. June 1, 2024.