Ontario Highway 3B

Summary

King's Highway 3B, commonly referred to as Highway 3B, was a provincially maintained highway within Windsor, in the Canadian province of Ontario. Its purpose was to link Highway 3 and Highway 401 with the Detroit–Windsor Tunnel and downtown Windsor. Highway 3B was routed along the city streets of Ouellette Avenue, Ouellette Place, Howard Avenue, and Dougall Avenue, and the short freeway of Dougall Parkway.

King's Highway 3B marker

King's Highway 3B

Route information
Maintained by City of Windsor
Length11 km[citation needed] (6.8 mi)
Existed1935–1998
Location
CountryCanada
ProvinceOntario
CountiesEssex
Highway system
Highway 3 Highway 4

Route description edit

The former route of Highway 3B begins at an interchange with Highway 401 as the Dougall Parkway, proceeding westward as a four-lane divided highway having interchanges with Concession Road 6 and with Howard Avenue (formerly Highway 3). Transitioning from freeway to arterial road after Howard Avenue, Highway 3B continues along Dougall Avenue which turns northwestward at that point and intersects Essex County Road 42 (Cabana Road).

At E.C. Row Expressway, the road gains a central divider, but has traffic lights for full access to and from the freeway. It then travels under the CN Rail tracks (still with a central reservation), and along the curve to Ouellette Avenue. It continues north before terminating at the intersection with Wyandotte Street in downtown Windsor, just two blocks from the Detroit–Windsor Tunnel.

 
Highway 401 looking west at the split with Dougall Parkway (former Highway 3B).

History edit

Highway 3B was originally named Highway 3A, when its parent road (Highway 3) was re-routed to meet the newly finished Ambassador Bridge. The original alignment was then named Highway 3A. In 1935, the road was renamed Highway 3B. This road originally travelled along Howard Avenue and Dougall Avenue, before jogging east along Tecumseh Road to Ouellette Avenue, and thenceforth continuing to downtown Windsor's ferry docks. When the Detroit–Windsor Tunnel was completed in 1930,[citation needed] the Highway was truncated about one kilometre from the ferry docks, at the intersection of Ouellette Avenue and London Street (now University Avenue), just two blocks from the tunnel entrance at Goyeau Street.[citation needed]

When the Ouellette Avenue curve was constructed in 1963, the portion north of the curve along Dougall Avenue and Tecumseh Road was reverted to municipal control, and the designation of Highway 3B was placed on the re-aligned curve leading along Dougall Avenue and Ouellette Avenue. In 1966, the road was also designated as a connecting link. This meant that while Windsor would have more responsibility in maintaining and repairing the road, the Ministry of Transportation would still contribute and help. The road's status as a provincial highway was repealed in 1975, but the connecting link agreement was kept, allowing the road to still be signed as Highway 3B.[citation needed]

Dougall Parkway was constructed as one of the two western forks of Highway 401 in the mid-1950s as the other fork ended at Highway 3 (Talbot Road); both opened June 9, 1958. Dougall Parkway ended at Howard Avenue (Highway 3B from 1935 to 1975). Due to the confusion several maps incorrectly listed this road as a part of Highway 3B and Highway 401 (two freeways with the same designation merging as they head east).

 
Highway 401 facing southwest in 1958, at the interchange with then-Highway 98 (now Provincial Road) in the foreground, and the split at Dougall Parkway (then-Highway 3B) in the background. This segment would be reconstructed in 2008-10.

As part of a series of budget cuts initiated by premier Mike Harris under his Common Sense Revolution platform in 1995, numerous highways deemed to no longer be of significance to the provincial network were decommissioned and responsibility for the routes transferred to a lower level of government, a process referred to as downloading. As it generally served a local function, Highway 3B was downloaded in its entirety on January 1, 1998, and transferred to the city of Windsor.[1][2] Since then, it has been known as Ouellette Avenue, Ouellette Place, Howard Avenue, Dougall Avenue, and Dougall Parkway.[3]

In 2008 and 2009, as part of the reconstruction of the section of Highway 401 from Dougall Parkway (former Highway 3B) to Provincial Road (former Highway 98), the Dougall Parkway split with Highway 401 was reconfigured, replacing a one-lane 1950s-era underpass tunnel with a modern high-speed flyover ramp. The old interchange reduced eastbound Highway 401 traffic to one lane as it merged with the left-handed on-ramp from Dougall Parkway, whereas the new interchange allows three lanes per direction of Highway 401 to pass through as mainline traffic.

Exit list edit

The following table lists the major junctions along Highway 3B, as noted by the City of Windsor.[citation needed] The entire route is located in Windsor, Ontario

km[citation needed]miDestinationsNotes
0.00.0Darcey StreetAt grade; beginning of divided highway
0.30.19Howard Avenue
1.81.16th Concession RoadEastbound exit and westbound entrance
3.01.9  Highway 401 east – London, TorontoEastbound exit and westbound entrance
1.000 mi = 1.609 km; 1.000 km = 0.621 mi

References edit

  1. ^ Highway Transfers List – "Who Does What" (Report). Ministry of Transportation of Ontario. June 20, 2001. p. 18.
  2. ^ Murray, Aileen (March 31, 2014). "Municipal amalgamation: The impact on economic development in Chatham-Kent". Papers in Canadian Economic Development. Vol. 10. University of Waterloo. Retrieved January 16, 2022.
  3. ^ Ontario Back Road Atlas (Map). Cartography by MapArt. Mapart Publishing. 2011. p. 4. §§ B1–C2. ISBN 1-55198-226-9.

External links edit

  • Google Maps length and route (eastbound)
  • Video of Dougall Parkway between Highway 401 and the Howard Avenue