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Manitoba Highway 14

Route map:
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Provincial Trunk Highway 14 marker
Provincial Trunk Highway 14
Manitoba Hwy 14.jpg
Highway 14 east of Winkler
Route information
Maintained by Manitoba Infrastructure
Length50.2 km[citation needed] (31.2 mi)
Existed1950–present
Major junctions
West end PTH 3 near Winkler
Major intersections
East end PTH 75 (Lord Selkirk Highway) near Letellier
Location
CountryCanada
ProvinceManitoba
Rural municipalities
Major citiesWinkler
Highway system
PTH 13 PTH 15

Provincial Highway 14 (PTH 14) is a provincial highway in the Canadian province of Manitoba. PTH 14 is a 2 lane high-speed rural highway (100 km/h) and carries relatively high traffic volumes of approximately 1800 vehicles per day.[1] The route extends west to east from its junction with PTH 3 to its junction with PTH 75, the Lord Selkirk Highway.[2][3]

Route description

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PTH 14 begins in the Rural Municipality of Stanley at an intersection with PTH 3 (Boundary Commission Trail), with the road heading east in the city of Winkler as a 4-lane divided highway. The highway passes along the northern side of the city, travelling through neighbourhoods and a business district, where it junctions with PTH 32 (Boundary Commission Trail) and PR 428, before narrowing to two lanes and leaves Winkler. PTH 14 travels along the northern edge of Reinfeld, where it has an intersection with Reinfeld Street, before crossing into the Rural Municipality of Rhineland.

PTH 14 passed through the town of Plum Coulee, where it crosses a canal and has an intersection with PR 306, before travelling due east through Horndean and Rosenfeld, where it has a junction between PTH 30 and PR 322. The highway crosses into the Rural Municipality of Montcalm to have a junction with PR 426 near St. Joseph before coming to an end a few kilometres later at a junction with PTH 75 (Lord Selkirk Highway).[4][5][6]

Between its western terminus at PTH 3 to its junction with PTH 32 in Winkler, PTH 14 forms part of the Boundary Commission Trail.

History

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Prior to 1949, Highway 14 was the designation of the highway from Winnipeg to Emerson, which is now PTH 75.[7]

PTH 14 was designated to its current route in 1950.

Major intersections

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DivisionLocationkm[8]miDestinationsNotes
Stanley00.0 PTH 3 (Boundary Commission Trail) – Morden, Carman, WinnipegThrough traffic follows PTH 3 west; Boundary Commission Trail follows PTH 3 west
City of Winkler53.1 PTH 32 south / PR 428 north (Boundary Commission Trail) – Roland, WalhallaBoundary Commission Trail follows PTH 32 south
Rhineland18.511.5 PR 306 – Plum Coulee, Myrtle, Rosetown
HorndeanRoad 9 West - Kaneformer PR 336
33.620.9 PTH 30 south / PR 332 north – Rosenfeld, Altona, Gretna
Montcalm45.528.3 PR 426 south – St. Josephformer PR 246
50.231.2 PTH 75 – Winnipeg, Emersonformer PTH 14
1.000 mi = 1.609 km; 1.000 km = 0.621 mi

References

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  1. ^ "M A N I T O B A ( Order No. 130/03 ) THE HIGHWAYS PROTECTION ACT ..." (PDF). Manitoba Infrastructure and Transportation. Government of Manitoba. 27 August 2003. Retrieved 30 March 2008.
  2. ^ "Motor Carrier Enforcement Programs – RTAC Routes". Manitoba Infrastructure and Transportation. Government of Manitoba. Archived from the original on 11 August 2007. Retrieved 30 March 2008.
  3. ^ Curtis Walker's Road Photos. "Manitoba Provincial Trunk Highway 14". Retrieved 10 December 2024.
  4. ^ Government of Manitoba. "Highway map of Manitoba section 2" (PDF). Retrieved 12 September 2023.
  5. ^ "Official Highway Map". Government of Manitoba. Retrieved 30 March 2008.
  6. ^ "Map of Manitoba Highway 14" (Map). Google Maps. Retrieved 9 September 2023.
  7. ^ "Winnipeg-Emerson Highway to become No. 75" (PDF). Government of Manitoba. Retrieved 4 November 2014.
  8. ^ Microsoft Streets and Tips (Map) (2004 ed.). Microsoft Corporation Redmond Washington.
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