Nova Scotia Highway 101 Explained

Province:NS
Type:Hwy
Route:101
Alternate Name:Harvest Highway
Maint:Nova Scotia Department of Transportation and Infrastructure Renewal
Map Custom:yes
Map Notes:Highway 101 highlighted in red
Length Km:308.5
Established:1962
Direction A:East
Direction B:West
Terminus A: in Bedford
Junction: near Windsor
near Annapolis Royal
Terminus B: in Yarmouth
Previous Type:Trunk
Previous Route:33
Next Type:Hwy
Next Route:102

Highway 101 is an east-west highway in Nova Scotia that runs from Bedford to Yarmouth.[1] [2]

The highway follows a 310km (190miles) route along the southern coast of the Bay of Fundy through the Annapolis Valley, the largest agricultural district in the province. Between its western terminus at Yarmouth to Weymouth, the highway is 2-lane controlled access. Between Weymouth and Digby, the highway reverts to a 2-lane local road. From Digby to Grand Pre, the highway is 2-lane controlled access. From the Gaspereau River crossing near Grand Pre to 3 km west of Exit 6 (Falmouth) the highway is a 4-lane freeway. Heading east the highway is 2-lane controlled access until Exit 5 (Trunk 14). From Three Mile Plains to its eastern terminus at Bedford, the highway is a 4-lane freeway. Some of the 2-lane controlled access sections of the highway are 3 or 4 lanes, with the addition of passing lanes. One section of the 4-lane freeway near Hantsport is a short 5-lane (3 lanes westbound) section for about 2 km due to previous road configuration for a passing lane due to a steep hill. Similar to Highway 103, kilometre markers increase run west-to-east, increasing from Yarmouth to Bedford; however, exit numbers run east-to-west, increasing from Bedford to Yarmouth.

The provincial government named the highway the Harvest Highway on 7 December 2008 to recognize the important contributions of farmers in Nova Scotia.[3]

History

Background

In the late 1950s, the demand for limited access arterials in Nova Scotia became evident due to congestion on trunk routes such as Highway 1, which led to the development of the 100-series highway system.

Construction

Highway 101 was developed in non-contiguous sections with the first parts, between Bedford and Upper Sackville, and between Windsor and Avonport, built in the early 1960s, before the 100-series highways were named. Due to the lack of numerical designation, these short sections were generally referred to as bypasses. In the late 1960s, sections between Mount Uniacke and Windsor, as well as between Avonport and Coldbrook began development and opened in 1970.[4] Further demand saw the construction of segments through the Annapolis Valley, Digby and Yarmouth counties in the 1970s–1990s. The highway was built to provide a modern limited-access route between Halifax and Yarmouth, and the many towns and villages in the corridor.

Twinning

The first section of Highway 101 to be twinned was between Bedford and Lower Sackville, which was completed in the late 1970s. By the early 1990s, the highway was divided from Bedford to Mount Uniacke, and in 2004 twinning to Windsor was completed. The posted speed limit on most twinned segments is 110km/h. As of 2023, Highway 101 is twinned from Bedford to Avonport, with the exception of the Windsor Causeway which is still under construction. All other sections are 2 lane, undivided highways with occasional passing lanes and a posted speed limit of 100km/h. There is a proposed exit for Cambridge, Kings County, Nova Scotia.

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Nova Scotia Roads - Highway 101. https://web.archive.org/web/20100205051218/http://the506.com/roads/NS/101.html. dead. 2010-02-05. Nova Scotia Roads Website on the Internet Archives. 2009-05-30.
  2. News: Nova Scotia's Highway 101 to be widened. CBC News. 2017-06-26 . 2009-03-06.
  3. Farmers Honoured with Harvest Highway Designation. Government of Nova Scotia. 2008-12-07. 2013-09-03.
  4. Book: Benoit, Joseph . A complete history of Nova Scotian Roads . Jameson Hatcher . 1995 . Halifax . English.