Alberta Highway 36

Template:Attached KML/Alberta Highway 36
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Highway 36
Veterans Memorial Highway
Highway 36 highlighted in red
Route information
Maintained by the Ministry of Transportation and Economic Corridors
Length679 km[1] (422 mi)
Major junctions
South end Highway 4 in Warner
Major intersections
North end Highway 55 in Lac La Biche
Location
CountryCanada
ProvinceAlberta
Specialized and rural municipalitiesWarner No. 5 County, Taber M.D., Newell County, Special Area No. 2, Paintearth No. 18 County, Flagstaff County, Beaver County, Minburn No. 27 County, Two Hills No. 21 County, St. Paul No. 19 County, Smoky Lake County, Lac La Biche County
TownsTaber, Vauxhall, Killam, Viking, Two Hills
VillagesWarner, Vilna
Highway system
Highway 35 Highway 37

Highway 36, officially named Veterans Memorial Highway,[2] is a north-south highway in eastern Alberta, Canada that extends from Highway 4 near Warner to Highway 55 in Lac La Biche.[1] Highway 36, along with Highway 41 and the portion of Highway 881 north of Lac La Biche, is part of the Eastern Alberta Trade Corridor,[3] an economic development corridor that links the oil sands with Texas and Mexico, and works in association with the North American Ports-to-Plains Alliance.[4]

Route description

Southbound, south of Vauxhall
Northbound, south of Lac La Biche, marking the divide between the Arctic basin, and the Hudson Bay basin.

Highway 36 begins at Highway 4 near Warner, 38 kilometres (24 mi) north of the Canada–U.S. border at Coutts. It intersects Highway 61 (Red Coat Trail), about 2.3 kilometres (1.4 mi) northwest Wrentham, before reaching Taber where it has a 2.6-kilometre (2 mi) concurrency with the Crowsnest Highway (Highway 3). Highway 36 continues north, crossing the Oldman River, passing through Vauxhall, and crossing the Bow River before intersecting the Trans-Canada Highway (Highway 1) about 8 kilometres (5 mi) northwest of Brooks. It continues north past Duchess, crosses the Red Deer River, and continues to Highway 9 where it heads west and the two routes share an 2.6-kilometre (1.6 mi) concurrency. Highway 36 departs Highway 9 about 7 kilometres (4 mi) east of Hanna and continues north, intersecting Highway 12 about 4 kilometres (2 mi) southeast of Castor, Highway 53 about 16 kilometres (10 mi) east of Forestburg, crossing the Battle River about 6 kilometres (4 mi) south of Alliance, and intersecting Highway 13 on the east side of Killam. At Highway 26, Highway 36 heads east and the two routes share an 4-kilometre (2.5 mi) concurrency before Highway 36 continues north for 9 kilometres (6 mi) and intersects Highway 14 at Viking before intersecting the Yellowhead Highway (Highway 16) about 6 kilometres (4 mi) east of Lavoy or 16 kilometres (10 mi) east of Vegreville. Highway 36 continues to Two Hills, where it meets Highway 45, where Highway 36 heads east and the two routes share an 4-kilometre (2 mi) concurrency. Highway 36 travels north 6.5 kilometres (4 mi) before it reaches Highway 29 and the two routes share a 33-kilometre (20 mi) concurrency, crossing the North Saskatchewan River in the process. At St. Brides, Highway 29 heads east towards St. Paul, 15 kilometres (9 mi) to the east. Highway 36 continues north to Highway 28 at the southwestern edge of Ashmont, where it heads west and the two routes share an 31-kilometre (20 mi) concurrency before to turns north about 8 kilometres (5 mi) west of Vilna. Highway 36 meets Highway 55 (Northern Woods and Water Route) about 20 kilometres (12 mi) south of Lac La Biche; and the two routes share a concurrency into Lac La Biche and Highway 36 ends.

Future

The Alberta government has studied constructing interchanges at both Highway 1 and Highway 16; however neither project have been funded and no construction timelines have been established.[5]

Lac La Biche County has unsuccessfully lobbied the Government of Alberta to renumber Highway 881 to Highway 36 from Lac La Biche north to Highway 63 south of Fort McMurray, with the first attempt being in 2013 and revisited in 2023.[6][7] The two routes are both part of the Eastern Alberta Trade Corridor and if proposal were to be successful, it would extend Highway 36 by 265 kilometres (165 mi) to a total length of 944 kilometres (587 mi).

Major intersections

Rural/specialized municipalityLocationkm[1]miDestinationsNotes
County of Warner No. 5Warner0.00.0 Highway 4 – Coutts, LethbridgeHighway 36 southern terminus
1.00.62 Highway 504 east
Wrentham27.417.0 Highway 61 – Lethbridge, Foremost, Manyberries
M.D. of Taber44.827.8 Highway 513 east
Taber57.235.5 Highway 3 west – LethbridgeSouth end of Highway 3 concurrency
59.837.2 Highway 3 east – Medicine HatNorth end of Highway 3 concurrency
M.D. of Taber80.149.8Crosses the Oldman River
84.152.3 Highway 875 north – Hays, Rolling Hills
Vauxhall93.257.9 Highway 524 west – RetlawSouth end of Highway 524 concurrency
97.660.6 Highway 524 east – Hays, RedcliffNorth end of Highway 524 concurrency
104.164.7 Highway 526 west – Enchant
↑ / ↓113.970.8Crosses the Bow River
County of Newell115.771.9 Highway 530 east – Rolling Hills
120.374.8UAR 110 west – Scandia
129.880.7 Highway 873 – Rainier, Kinbrook Island Provincial Park
143.088.9 Highway 539 west – Lomond
Cassils152.894.9 Highway 542 east – Brooks
160.199.5 Highway 1 (TCH) – Calgary, Brooks, Medicine Hat
166.0103.1 Highway 544 east – Patricia, Dinosaur Provincial Park
Duchess172.2107.0 Highway 550 – Rosemary, Duchess
190.3118.2 Highway 556 west – Gem
↑ / ↓192.5119.6Crosses the Red Deer River
Special Area No. 2203.2126.3 Highway 561 east – Cessford
232.9144.7 Highway 570 – Sunnynook, Dorothy
259.3161.1 Highway 577 east – Sheerness
272.8169.5 Highway 9 east – OyenSouth end of Highway 9 concurrency
275.4171.1 Highway 9 west – Hanna, Drumheller, CalgaryNorth end of Highway 9 concurrency
278.7173.2Township Road 312 – Hanna
288.4179.2 Highway 586 east
County of Paintearth No. 18Castor339.6211.0 Highway 12 – Stettler, Coronation
342.2212.6 Highway 599 westSouth end of Highway 599 concurrency
344.3213.9 Highway 599 eastNorth end of Highway 599 concurrency
↑ / ↓365.0226.8Crosses the Battle River
Flagstaff County368.2228.8 Highway 602 east – Alliance
378.3235.1UAR 137 west – Galahad
384.8239.1 Highway 53 west – Forestburg
Highway 608 east
Killam408.7254.0 Highway 13 – Camrose, Provost
Beaver County433.6269.4 Highway 26 west – CamroseSouth end of Highway 26 concurrency
437.5271.8 Highway 26 east – KinsellaNorth end of Highway 26 concurrency; former Highway 615 east
Viking446.0277.1 Highway 14 – Edmonton, Wainwright
446.2277.3 Highway 619 east – Lloydminster
County of Minburn No. 27483.9300.7 Highway 16 (TCH/YH) – Edmonton, Lloydminster
496.8308.7 Highway 631
County of Two Hills No. 21Two Hills516.7321.1 Highway 45 west – BruderheimSouth end of Highway 45 concurrency
520.5323.4 Highway 45 east – MarwayneNorth end of Highway 45 concurrency
527.0327.5 Highway 29 west – Hairy Hill, LamontSouth end of Highway 29 concurrency; former Highway 637 west
Duvernay
Brosseau
528.8328.6Crosses the North Saskatchewan River[i]
County of St. Paul No. 19548.5340.8 Highway 646 east – Lafond, Elk Point
558.4347.0 Highway 652 west – Saddle Lake
St. Brides560.0348.0 Highway 29 east – St. PaulNorth end of Highway 29 concurrency; former Highway 28 east
Ashmont575.7357.7 Highway 28 east – Bonnyville, Cold LakeSouth end of Highway 28 concurrency; former Highway 28A east
582.7362.1 Highway 866 north – McRae
Smoky Lake County598.1371.6 Highway 859 south – Hamlin
Vilna599.4372.4UAR 116 north
606.9377.1 Highway 28 west – Smoky Lake, EdmontonNorth end of Highway 28 concurrency
Kikino Metis Settlement642.7399.4UAR 213 west – Kikino
Lac La Biche County661.3410.9 Highway 55 east – Cold LakeSouth end of Highway 55 concurrency
Lac La Biche679.0421.9 Highway 55 west – Athabasca
Highway 881 north – Beaver Lake, Conklin, Fort McMurray
Highway 36 northern terminus; north end of Highway 55 concurrency
681.1423.2101 AvenueFormer Highway 55 / Highway 881 alignment
1.000 mi = 1.609 km; 1.000 km = 0.621 mi
  •       Closed/former
  •       Concurrency terminus

Footnotes

  1. ^ Duvernay is on the south bank of the North Saskatchewan River and Brosseau is on the north bank.

References

  1. ^ a b c "Highway 36 in Alberta" (Map). Google Maps. Retrieved January 11, 2018.
  2. ^ Province of Alberta (November 11, 2005). "Highway 36 renamed Veterans Memorial Highway". Retrieved January 27, 2010.
  3. ^ "Ports to Plains Corridor". Town of Two Hills. Retrieved May 13, 2024.
  4. ^ "The EATC – Alberta Trade Corridor". Eastern Alberta Trade Corridor (EATC). Retrieved May 13, 2024.
  5. ^ "Highway 1 and Highway 36 interchange: Functional Planning Study". Alberta Transportation. Government of Alberta. September 1, 2007.
  6. ^ "Topics for Ministers Meetings" (PDF). Lac La Biche County. March 2013. Archived from the original (PDF) on July 21, 2013. Retrieved September 2, 2013.
  7. ^ "2015 Provincial Highway 1-216 Progress Chart" (PDF). Alberta Transportation. March 2015. Archived (PDF) from the original on April 10, 2016. Retrieved October 12, 2016.