Not much to say today except this one is short. This is an interesting highway. Definitely lots of hopes and dreams fulfilled by its completion. It's somewhat unique in that it had two separate openings. Without further ado, here's the article for today:
Friday, 24 November 2023
The Salmo-Creston Highway: The Summarized History 2023-5
Friday, 17 November 2023
To the South of the Fraser: The Introduction of Bus Service to Surrey-White Rock-Delta in 1975 (2023-4)
Friday, 10 November 2023
At-Grade Crossings of the Trans-Canada Highway From Bridal Falls to Taylor Way (2023-3)
- The highway did have freeway sections when it was officially opened. The "Abbotsford Bypass" (Highway 1 from Highway 11 (at the time called 'C Street') to Fraser Highway/Mt Lehman Road) was a freeway. That opened on April 19, 1962. When it was built it had interchanges at all of its present locations. The "Burnaby Freeway" (which opened on May 1, 1964 some 42 days before the Port Mann opened). The last large section of freeway was the section from the Cape Horn-Mt. Lehman section. The Cape Horn-Mt. Lehman section has an unverifiable opening date of June 12, 1964. Why unverifiable? No newspapers seemed to comment on the opening of this section. They all focused on the Port Mann's opening. It's a ~38.8 km long piece of freeway that is totally unaccounted for. There seemed to be a sense too that the previous openings of the four other sections of the Trans-Canada Highway were just a lead up to the official opening of the whole system. Frontier to Freeway, a government publication on road history seems to take the position that the sections of highway that opened before June 12 were minor. So minor that no dates are specified in it. It also gets the number of previously opened sections wrong! It forgot the Burnaby Freeway.
- It was a very slow process to remove intersections from the highway. It took until 1999 for the last minor intersection to be removed and 1997 for the last traffic light (Westview). Given the population growth of MV, it's odd how long it took.
- Population: There were far fewer people when the freeway was built around Metro Vancouver and the Fraser Valley. Vancouver. The lower population outside of the Burrard Peninsula probably influenced the decision to include intersections. The 1961 census counted 885,314 people in what's now the Metro Vancouver and Fraser Valley Regional Districts (perhaps missing a few unincorporated localities). Interestingly the project number for the Burnaby Freeway was 885 as well. I assume that the project designers of the time wanted to future-proof it a bit for the areas they knew would grow substantially. It'd be interesting to see how the highway planners communicated with the municipalities the highway passes through.
Friday, 3 November 2023
Three Historical Bus Loops Around Metro Vancouver
Three Historical Bus Loops Around Metro Vancouver (no. 2023-2)
- Joyce Loop at Kingsway and Joyce Street in Vancouver
- Edmonds Loop at Edmonds and Kingsway in Burnaby
- The two former loops at Lougheed Mall (1973 and c. 1980s)
Tuesday, 31 October 2023
Welcome to BC Transportation History!
The Idea of This Blog and Disclaimers
This post is intended to serve as an introduction to this blog’s concepts,
ideas, schedule and other relevant topics.
I (George) established this blog on October 31, 2023 because I found
that transportation history isn’t taken seriously within the Province ofBritish Columbia. I suppose it doesn’t have to be taken seriously; it just
seems that a large majority of people who use the established systems do
not care or are too busy to notice or research the bus routes, roads and
other methods they use to get to work, school, shop and live.(Probably too busy). I don’t even think that the MOTI’s employees
care sometimes
My hope is that this blog will change that.
To make it clear, I am NOT affiliated with the Provincial or Federal
Governments, the Ministry of Transportation and Infrastructure, Translink, BC Transit,
BC Ferries, any municipalities or other entities who look after transportation
related issues.
Note that I don't necessarily endorse any source or work cited or any page I recommend.
Typically I will use a lot of newspaper citations, so some of the language in those articles
might be considered offensive. I do not accept outdated or harmful language used in any
article I reference.
I ask that you don't vent or complain about transportation issues or problems
unless it is pertinent to the story. Saying "x road sucks it's always congested"or "this bus route is always overcrowded" is fine, just know I can't address the issue
personally.
If you want to report an issue with roads or transit, here are some links:
Translink Feedback:
https://www.translink.ca/about-us/customer-service/feedback
BC Transit (contact your local transit system or contractor for your specific system): https://www.bctransit.com/about/contact
To contact the Ministry of Transportation directly go to either their website at https://www2.gov.bc.ca/gov/content/governments/organizational-structure/ministries-organizations/ministries/transportation-and-infrastructure
OR use the Government Directory:
https://dir.gov.bc.ca/
If there's an issue with a roadway like a dead animal or pothole, you should contact the Ministry Contractor who is responsible for the area. To view maps and a list of contractors and their phone numbers, you should visit:
https://www2.gov.bc.ca/gov/content/transportation/transportation-infrastructure/contracting-to-transportation/highway-bridge-maintenance/highway-maintenance/boundary-maps
(you can navigate to the list of contractors from that page)
Please note I CANNOT provide legal advice. I am not a lawyer! I might discuss laws and their history but nothing on this website should be taken as legal advice. Please talk to a lawyer if you need legal advice.
Hopes for the Blog and Plans + Scheduling
How I Cite Sources
Contact and Questions for Me
If ten people read this, I'll be happy with it (I hope more do).
Also, sorry if the formatting is odd, I've never used Blogger before and struggle
with webpages and HTML.
That is all. more to come.
George Asham
ARTICLE 2023-1
2023-9 The First Traffic Lights in Victoria
A quick one for this week. I think I'm going to take a break for a while but I will let you know next week. It's about the first tr...
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A quick one for this week. I think I'm going to take a break for a while but I will let you know next week. It's about the first tr...
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There will be no post this Friday, December 22, 2023. I am taking a small break. Sorry I didn't get this notice out sooner!
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Man I am disappointed. Workers under Pacific Western Transit started a strike today in Campbell River and the Comox Valley (Friday, December...