Nova Scotia Highway 102

Nova Scotia Highway 102

Highway 102 shield

Highway 102
Veteran's Memorial Highway (entire length)
Bicentennial Drive (exit 0 to exit 4)
Route information
Maintained by Nova Scotia Department of Transportation and Infrastructure Renewal
Length: 100 km[1] (62 mi)
Major junctions
South end: Bayers Road Halifax
44°39′11.2″N 63°37′23.4″W / 44.653111°N 63.623167°W / 44.653111; -63.623167 (Nova Scotia Highway 102 Halifax Terminus)[1]
  Hwy 101 in Bedford
Hwy 118 to Dartmouth
North end: Hwy 104 (TCH) in Onslow45°23′24.5″N 63°19′29.1″W / 45.390139°N 63.32475°W / 45.390139; -63.32475 (Nova Scotia Highway 102 Onslow HWY 104 Terminus)
Location
Counties: Hants, Colchester, Halifax Regional Municipality, East Hants
Highway system

Provincial highways in Nova Scotia

Hwy 101 Hwy 103

Highway 102 is a north-south freeway in the Canadian province of Nova Scotia that runs from Halifax to Truro. It is the busiest highway in Atlantic Canada.

In 2002 the highway was redesignated as Veteran's Memorial Highway while also maintaining its numerical designation.

Contents

Route description

The highway follows a 100-kilometre (62 mi) route through the central part of the province linking Highway 103, Highway 101, and Highway 118 to Highway 104, the Trans-Canada Highway. The entire highway is a divided 4-lane freeway, with the exception of a 5-lane (3 lanes northbound) section between the Highway 118 interchange at Miller Lake and the Halifax International Airport at Enfield. This 3-lane northbound section is not a result of particularly high traffic volumes but rather it is a relic of the previous configuration of this section of Highway 102. Previously the section from Fall River to near Enfield was a three-lane undivided section, including a centre passing lane favouring northbound traffic. When the highway was twinned the three lanes were left in place for northbound traffic.

Portions of Highway 102 near Halifax pass through several microclimates and are notorious for frequent variations in visibility due to fog caused by elevation changes.

Development

The highway parallels the route of its predecessor, Trunk 2, and was developed in stages from the 1950s to the 1980s. Initially, some sections were controlled access 2-lane, as well as 4-lane. The route has also changed somewhat, particularly during the early 1980s when the last part to be constructed resulted in the bypass of Shubenacadie and Stewiacke through to Truro.

The initial speed limit on the highway was 100 km/h (60 mph) until this was raised to 110 km/h (70 mph) for the section between of the interchange with Highway 118 (approximately km post 26) and the Millbrook First Nation exit (approximately km 92). South of Highway 118 and north of Millbrook, the highway retains its original 100 km/h speed limit.

From the 1970s to the early 1990s, Highway 102 was actively patrolled by the RCMP using aerial surveillance for speed limit violations. The aerial surveillance program was restarted in 2005.

The original portion of the highway from Bayers Road to Bedford dates to 1949, the bicentennial year of the founding of Halifax (1749); as such, it is the oldest section of controlled access highway in Atlantic Canada. This portion of the highway is officially named Bicentennial Drive, although many local residents incorrectly refer to it as the "Bicentennial Highway", often shortened to "Bi-Hi".

Future development

The province of Nova Scotia and Halifax Regional Municipality have recently announced funding for a new interchange Highway 102 between Exits 2 (Kearney Lake Road) and 3 (Hammonds Plains Road). The intersection will be diamond-shaped, have three round-abouts and connect to a future extension of Larry Uteck Boulevard, resulting in a connection between the communities of Bedford West and Bedford South. Construction has begun and is expected to be completed by July 31, 2010. [2].

Also between Kearney Lake Road and Hammonds Plains Road is the site for a proposed interchange with the future Highway 113 which is intended to be a connector from Highway 102 to Highway 103. Highway 113 is not yet budgeted and in addition some opposition has been mounted due to the route proposed.

Work has also begun on a new exit between Exits 1A and 2A. This new exit will serve as a second point of entry into the heavily congested Bayers Lake Business Park through Chain Lake Drive.

Congestion

Traffic volumes on Highway 102 between Highway 101 and Bayers Road vary between 40,000 and 53,000 vehicles per day. Many motorists still prefer using the older 2-lane Bedford Highway (Trunk 2), which in comparison has volumes of over 40,000 vpd and operates at near 100% capacity through much of its length.

Access on the Halifax Peninsula

The 4-lane divided freeway portion of Highway 102 ends at Bayers Road in the west end of the city. Some streets on the Halifax Peninsula are signed with Highway 102 directional markers, with the word "INBOUND" marking a path from the end of the freeway section into the downtown core, and "OUTBOUND" marking the reverse path from the same terminus in the downtown core to the start of the freeway. These streets do not appear to be officially part of Highway 102.[2]

Highway 102 Outbound directional marker on Sackville Street in Halifax

Access with Highway 111 is provided on Connaught Avenue north from Bayers Road and the Windsor Street Exchange to the A. Murray MacKay Bridge.

Inbound

The "inbound" route markers are posted east on Bayers Road, south on Connaught Avenue, east on Quinpool Road, south on Bell Road, then east on Sackville Street to the intersection with Lower Water Street.

Outbound

The "outbound" markers are posted beginning north on Lower Water Street, west on Cogswell Street, west on Quinpool Road, north on Connaught Avenue, west on Bayers Road.

Communities served

Communities served along the highway include, from south to north:

Major Intersections (Halifax)

  • Connaught Avenue
  • Desmond Avenue
  • Joseph Howe Drive
  • Northwest Arm Dr / Dunbrack Street
  • Hwy 103
  • Lacewood Drive / Chain Lake Drive
  • Dunbrack Street / Kearney Lake Road
  • Hammonds Plains Road / Bedford Highway
  • Bedford Highway
  • Hwy 101
  • Glendale Avenue / Duke Street

Interchanges from South to North

Location Exit Number Kilometre Post* Intersecting Roads
Halifax RM (Halifax) 0 0 Joseph Howe Drive
Halifax RM 1D 1 Northwest Arm Drive, Dunbrack Street
Halifax RM 1A 2 Hwy 103
Lighthouse Route[3]
Halifax RM (none) 3 Chain Lake Drive, Bayers Lake
Halifax RM 2A 4 Lacewood Drive, Bayers Lake
Halifax RM (Halifax) 2 7 Kearney Lake Road
Halifax RM (Bedford) 2B 10 Larry Uteck Boulevard
Halifax RM (Bedford) (none) 11 Hwy 113 (proposed freeway)
Halifax RM (Bedford) 3 12 Hammonds Plains Road ( Route 213)
Halifax RM (Bedford) 4A/B 16 Hwy 101 / Bedford Highway
Evangeli.png (Trunk 1/Evangeline Trail) (Lower Sackville)[4]
Halifax RM (Lower Sackville/Bedford) 4C 17 Duke Street / Glendale Avenue
Halifax RM (Waverley) 5 24 Trunk 2 / Hwy 118 (northbound)[5]
Halifax RM (Waverley) 5 25 Hwy 118 (southbound only)[6]
Halifax RM 5A 31 Aerotech Drive ( Route 212)[7]
Halifax RM 6 34 Halifax International Airport
Halifax RM (Enfield) 7 40 Trunk 2
Elmsdale 8 47 Route 214
Milford 9 57 Trunk 14 / Route 224 [8]
Shubenacadie 10 64 Route 215
Stewiacke 11 70 Trunk 2
Brookfield 12 84 Route 289
Millbrook First Nation 13A 93 Treaty Trail / Tower Road
Truro 13 95 Truro Heights Road
Truro 14 97 Trunk 2 South / Route 236 (Robie Street)
Glooscap.png Glooscap Trail
Onslow 14A 98 Trunk 2 North (northbound only) (Glooscap Trail)
Onslow 15W/15E 99 Hwy 104 (TCH)
  • *Exit numbers in Nova Scotia are sequential.

Notes

  1. ^ Nova ScotiaStreet and Road Atlas ISBN 1-55109-563-7 Page 39W3"
  2. ^ (September 14, 2010). UK 2 Nova Scotia. Retrieved September 14, 2010

References


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