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・ Ontario Highway 21
・ Ontario Highway 22
・ Ontario Highway 23
・ Ontario Highway 24
・ Ontario Highway 25
・ Ontario Highway 26
・ Ontario Highway 27
・ Ontario Highway 28
・ Ontario Highway 2A
・ Ontario Highway 3
・ Ontario Highway 30
・ Ontario Highway 32
・ Ontario Highway 33
・ Ontario Highway 34
・ Ontario Highway 35
Ontario Highway 36
・ Ontario Highway 37
・ Ontario Highway 38
・ Ontario Highway 39
・ Ontario Highway 3B
・ Ontario Highway 4
・ Ontario Highway 40
・ Ontario Highway 400
・ Ontario Highway 400A
・ Ontario Highway 401
・ Ontario Highway 402
・ Ontario Highway 403
・ Ontario Highway 404
・ Ontario Highway 405
・ Ontario Highway 406


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Ontario Highway 36 : ウィキペディア英語版
Ontario Highway 36

King's Highway 36, commonly referred to as Highway 36, was a provincially maintained highway in the Canadian province of Ontario. The highway connected Highway 7 and Highway 35 in Lindsay with Highway 28 in Burleigh Falls, providing access to recreational cottages along the northern shore of several of the Kawartha lakes as well as to multiple communities, including Bobcaygeon. Today it is known as Kawartha Lakes City Road 36 and Peterborough County Road 36.
The route was first assumed in 1931 as a depression relief project and extended in 1937. It remained generally unchanged for the next 60 years before being decommissioned in 1998. However, a realignment near Lindsay in the late 1950s changed the southern terminus of the route from the centre of the town to southeast of it; the original route through Lindsay became Highway 36B and is now known as Kawartha Lakes Road 17.
== Route description ==

The route and surroundings of former Highway 36 have largely remained unaltered since the highway was decommissioned in 1998. Within the City of Kawartha Lakes, the road is now known as Kawartha Lakes Road 36, while within the County of Peterborough, it is known as Peterborough County Road 36.
The route begins east of Lindsay at an intersection with Highway 7 and progresses north, crossing a former railway (now the Kawartha Rail Trail) before intersecting Kawartha Lakes Road 17.〔 The western leg of Road 17, which travels to downtown Lindsay, was the original route of Highway 36 and later became Highway 36B.〔〔 Continuing north, Highway 36 jogs north and east, serving cottages and communities lining the southern shore of Sturgeon Lake, but remains inland by over a kilometre (0.6 mi) itself. At Dunsford, which is bypassed, the highway intersects Kawartha Lakes Roads 7 and 24 — the former travels south to Omemee and the latter provides an alternative route to Bobcaygeon. Former Highway 36 continues, alternating directions between east and north twice before entering the village of Bobcaygeon.〔
Within Bobcaygeon, Highway 36 crosses the Trent–Severn Waterway and intersects the eastern end of Kawartha Lakes Road 8. At this point it is following the southernmost section of the Bobcaygeon Colonization Road. At the intersection with Main Street in the northern end of the village, the route turns northeast while former Highway 649 continues north.〔
Exiting Bobcaygeon, the former highway serves cottages along the northern shore of Pigeon Lake and Little Bald Lake.〔 After passing Nogies Creek, the highway descends a hill and encounters the Canadian Shield for the first time. The road runs along the border of the Precambrian shield and the Ordovician limestone plateau en route to Burleigh Falls. The shield lies to the north and is overlain by the plateau to the south.
The highway turns south at Flynns Corner, intersecting former Highway 507. It enters the town of Buckhorn from the north, then drivers must turn to remain on the route, which exits the town to the east. Between Buckhorn and Burleigh Falls, the highway serves the cottages that line the northern shore of Lower Buckhorn Lake.〔

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
ウィキペディアで「Ontario Highway 36」の詳細全文を読む



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