Nova Scotia Highway 107
Highway 107 in Nova Scotia runs through the eastern suburbs of the Halifax Regional Municipality, from the Bedford, Nova Scotia-Lower Sackville Border Line off Nova Scotia Highway 107 an intersection with Trunk 7 in Musquodoboit Harbour. It is 52.1 km (32.4 mi) long, and is mostly two lane, controlled access highway. Route descriptionFrom its current western terminus at the intersection of Exit 4C off of Nova Scotia Highway 102, the Highway also travels on Main Street between Exit 15 and Exit 17 via Nova Scotia Highway 7. Highway 107 Continues until Exit 22 on Eastern Terminus and in the Future To Nova Scotia Highway 104 on the Trans Canada Highway. The Bedford-Burnside Opened on December 20, 2024. HistoryDartmouth to Musquodoboit Harbour sectionConstruction of the highway began in 1972/73.[2] The first segment, running from Trunk 7 to Mineville Road, opened to traffic during the 1975/76 fiscal year. At that time a further extension of the road, across Lake Echo, was under construction.[3] Grading work for the final segment from Head of Chezzetcook (exit 20) to Musquodoboit Harbour began in 1986/87.[4] Dartmouth Bypass / Forest Hills ExtensionThe section of Highway 107 between Trunk 7 (at Forest Hills) and Highway 118 has also been known as the Dartmouth Bypass, or Forest Hills Extension. The first section of the bypass (from Trunk 7 to the interchange at Montague Road) opened to traffic in 1985/86.[5] The remaining section, connecting to Highway 118, opened in 1986/87.[4] A short extension to Akerley Boulevard in the Burnside Industrial Park was constructed in the early 1990s. Burnside/Sackville extensionThe section from Akerley Boulevard, along the southwestern side of Anderson Lake, to Exit 4C on Highway 102 opened to traffic on December 20, 2024.[6] This extension, known locally as the Burnside Expressway, allows commuters from Halifax and Burnside heading to Sackville to bypass the Bedford Bypass and Windmill Road and instead go through Burnside and connect directly into Sackville. The western terminus includes connections to Highway 102, Duke Street and Glendale Avenue. New exits were also constructed at Akerley Boulevard, Burnside Drive, and at a future connection near Anderson Lake. Future Eastern Shore ExtensionThe Final Extension will travel Between Musquodoboit Harbour And Antigonish. The Highway will be faster then Traveling Thru Truro and Pictou on Nova Scotia Highway 104 from Dartmouth, Nova Scotia but end on Highway 104 in Antigonish off exit 31. Exit listThe entire route is located in Halifax Regional Municipality.
References
External linksKML is from Wikidata
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