Québec Autoroute 50

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Autoroute 50

Autoroute Guy-Lafleur
Route information
Maintained by Transports Québec
Length158.3 km[1][2] (98.4 mi)
Existed1975[1]–present
Major junctions
West endRue Montcalm in Gatineau
Major intersections R-148 in Gatineau

A-5 in Gatineau

A-15 (TCH) in Mirabel
East end R-117 in Mirabel
Location
CountryCanada
ProvinceQuébec
Major citiesGatineau, Mirabel, Lachute, Brownsburg-Chatham, L'Ange-Gardien
Highway system
A-40 A-55
Autoroute 50 between Fassett and Calumet in the Ottawa River Valley

Autoroute 50 (Autoroute Guy-Lafleur) is an Autoroute in western Quebec, Canada. It links Canada's National Capital Region (Gatineau) and the Greater Montreal area (Mirabel).

Until November 2012, there were two distinct sections of A-50: one section running eastward from Hull and the other westward from Mirabel. The gap in the highway was filled on November 26, 2012, and the two-lane freeway opened for traffic on the full 159 km (98.8 mi) length.[3][4]

The route provides an east-west freeway alternative to Route 148 that does not require travelling in Ontario, unlike the main Trans-Canada Highway route (A-40 / Hwy 417).

Originally named Autoroute de l'Outaouais, it was announced on April 28, 2023, that A-50 would be renamed to Autoroute Guy-Lafleur in honor of the former Montreal Canadiens player who died of lung cancer a year earlier.[5] The Quebec government officially announced the name change on May 4 in Thurso, Lafleur's birthplace.[6]

History

Oswald Parent (a Liberal MP from Hull) originally proposed construction of the A-50 in 1962. Eight years later, Quebec Premier Jean-Jacques Bertrand announced plans for construction. It was originally envisioned that the A-50 would extend over 400 km from L'Isle-aux-Allumettes at the Ontario border through Saint-Jérôme and Joliette along the Route 148 and 158 corridors to Berthierville and a junction with the A-40. The primary purpose of the A-50 was to connect Ottawa and the Outaouais with Montréal–Mirabel International Airport.

At the time, the Ottawa Macdonald–Cartier International Airport was not yet built, and the national capital lacked highway access to an international air hub. Mirabel's rapid decline as an air hub as well as the Quebec government's decision in the 1970s to impose a moratorium on new autoroute construction resulted in a significantly truncated route for the A-50. Plans for extending the A-50 west of Hull and east of the A-15/TCH were abandoned. The exit numbers, however, are based on that original projected length of the autoroute.

Construction was completed in the fall of 2007 on the road that connects Highway 148 west of the Aylmer and Hull sectors to the A-50 at the Boulevard des Allumettières interchange.

One short section of Route 158 around Joliette was originally signed as A-50 as well until the project was abandoned. In addition, west of the current terminus, a four-lane at-grade expressway continues as Route 148 into the Aylmer section of Gatineau; it may become part of A-50 in the future.

A-50 is a four- to six-lane freeway through Gatineau up to Buckingham, the remainder is mostly a two-lane freeway. Many overpasses are built to accommodate a fully divided, four-lane highway in the future such that only one portion of the overpass is currently used. However, there have been demands for a four-lane highway for the new segment so it can be safer. The first two segments were built with only two lanes and a 2007 multi-fatality accident occurred on highway 148 near Buckingham, a section of highway that A-50 would bypass.[7]

Unusual for a limited-access highway, the A-50 contains two railway crossings at grade, both of the Quebec Gatineau Railway (QGRY). The first crosses the QGRY Lachute Subdivision between exits 260 and 272, while the second crosses the QGRY St-Jerome Spur about 1 km west of exit 279.

There has been some support to rename the highway Autoroute Maurice-Richard after historic Montreal Canadiens hockey player Maurice Richard, but the Commission de toponymie du Québec chose to wait until the section between Buckingham and Notre-Dame-de-Bonsecours was finished before making a decision, and to date no renaming has happened.[8]

In 2022, following the death of Montreal Canadiens hockey legend Guy Lafleur (who was a native of Thurso), the Quebec government openly considered renaming the highway after Lafleur following a request made by the Minister Responsible for the Outaouais Region Mathieu Lacombe and by Thurso mayor Benoit Lauzon.[9][10] In late April 2023, Quebec newspaper Le Droit reported that the highway would officially be renamed Autoroute Guy-Lafleur in a ceremony happening in Thurso on Thursday, May 4, 2023, in which both Lacombe and Quebec premier François Legault would be in attendance for.[11][12]

Safety improvements

Following a series of fatal collisions in 2007, it was announced that centreline rumble strips would be installed in various no-passing zones along Autoroute 50. This is the first installation of its kind in Quebec and serves as a pilot project.

The two at-grade intersections at km 281 and 283 were removed in 2016.

Exit list

RCMLocationkm[2]miExitDestinationsNotes
Gatineau0.00.0Rue MontcalmAt-grade intersection; western terminus
0.30.48134 R-148 west (Boulevard des Allumettières)Westbound exit and eastbound entrance; signed as exits 134-O (west) and 134-E (east); west end of R-148 concurrency
1.3–
2.3
2.1–
3.7
135 A-5 (Autoroute de la Gatineau) – Gatineau Centre-Ville, Ottawa, ManiwakiA-5 exit 2
3.55.6138 R-307 (Rue Saint-Louis) – Cantley
4.77.6139 R-148 east (Boulevard Maloney)Eastbound exit and westbound entrance; east end of R-148 concurrency
4.87.7140Boulevard de La GappeWestbound access to R-148 east
6.810.9141Boulevard de La VérendryeEastbound exit and westbound entrance
11.117.9145Montée Paiement
13.722.0147Boulevard Labrosse
16.426.4150 R-366 (Boulevard Lorrain)
20.132.3154 Boulevard de l'Aéroport – Gatineau-Ottawa Executive Airport
25.741.4159Avenue des Laurentides
31.150.1165Rue GeorgesEastbound exit and westbound entrance
31.951.3166 R-315 (Chemin de Masson / Avenue de Buckingham) to R-148Transition from 4 to 2 lanes or vice versa
36.458.6171Chemin Lépine
Les Collines-de-l'OutaouaisL'Ange-Gardien39.864.1174 R-309 north / Chemin Doherty – Mont-Laurier
PapineauThurso52.584.5187 R-317 – Thurso, Ripon
Plaisance62.8101.1197Montée Papineau
Papineauville70.3113.1205 R-321 – Papineauville, Saint-André-AvellinTransition from 2 to 4 lanes or vice versa
Notre-Dame-de-Bonsecours76.2122.6210 R-323 – Montebello, Mont-TremblantTransition from 4 to 2 lanes or vice versa
Fassett82.7133.1216Fassett
ArgenteuilGrenville-sur-la-Rouge92.3148.5226Chemin Avoca – Grenville-sur-la-Rouge, Harrington
99.6160.3233Chemin Kilmar
105.7170.1239 R-344 south to R-148 / Chemin Scotch – Grenville, HawkesburyTo Ontario Highway 34
Brownsburg-Chatham118.2190.2252Montée Labranche
120.3193.6254 R-148 (Rue Principale) – LachuteTransition from 2 to 4 lanes or vice versa
Lachute124.2199.9258 R-327 (Avenue d'Argenteuil) – Saint-André-d'ArgenteuilTo CarillonPointe-Fortune ferry
126.3203.3260 R-329 (Chemin Béthanie) – Lachute Centre-Ville, Mirabel (Saint-Hermas)Transition from 4 to 2 lanes or vice versa
Mirabel138.6223.1272 R-148 (Route Arthur-Sauvé) to R-158 – Saint-Eustache
145.2233.7279Saint-Colomban, Mirabel (Saint-Canut, Sainte-Scholastique)
150.2241.7285 Boulevard Henri-Fabre O. – Mirabel International AirportSigned as exits 285-N (north) and 285-S (south) westbound; transition from 2 to 4 lanes or vice versa
152.8245.9288Boulevard Henri-Fabre
156.2–
157.9
251.4–
254.1
292 A-15 (TCH) (Autoroute des Laurentides) – Saint-Jérôme, MontréalSigned as exits 292-N (north) and 292-S (south); exit 35 on A-15
158.3254.8 R-117 (Boulevard Curé-Labelle) – Saint-Jérôme, Mirabel (Saint-Janvier)At-grade intersection; eastern terminus
1.000 mi = 1.609 km; 1.000 km = 0.621 mi

References

  1. ^ a b "Répertoire des autoroutes du Québec - Transports et Mobilité durable Québec". Ministère des Transports. Gouvernement du Québec. Retrieved April 26, 2023.
  2. ^ a b Google (June 8, 2023). "Québec Autoroute 50" (Map). Google Maps. Google. Retrieved June 8, 2023.
  3. ^ "Ouverture du dernier tronçon de l'autoroute 50 | Ottawa–Gatineau". Radio-Canada. 2012-11-26. Retrieved 2012-12-04.
  4. ^ "L'autoroute 50 est bel et bien une autoroute, soutient le MTQ | Ottawa–Gatineau". Radio-Canada. 2012-11-27. Retrieved 2012-12-04.
  5. ^ "Highway 50 to be renamed after hockey legend Guy Lafleur". CBC News. April 30, 2023. Retrieved May 4, 2023.
  6. ^ Boulay, Mathieu (May 4, 2023). "L'autoroute 50 devient l'autoroute Guy-Lafleur". Le Journal de Montréal. Retrieved May 4, 2023.
  7. ^ "Gatineau man, 61, dies in 14-vehicle crash". CBC News. 2007-03-15.
  8. ^ Communiqué: L'Autoroute 50 - Commission de toponymie Archived April 24, 2008, at the Wayback Machine, retrieved September 3, 2007
  9. ^ St-Denis, Yanick. "A-50 | Bientôt une autoroute Guy-Lafleur?". 104.7 Outaouais. Retrieved 2022-05-17.
  10. ^ Cantin, Alexandre Robillard, Violette (2022-04-23). "Québec envisage de renommer l'autoroute 50 en l'honneur de Guy Lafleur". Le Devoir. Retrieved 2022-05-17.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  11. ^ Deschatelets, Ani-Rose. "L'autoroute 50 sera renommée l'autoroute Guy-Lafleur". Le Droit. Retrieved 2023-04-30.
  12. ^ "L'autoroute 50 deviendra officiellement l'autoroute Guy-Lafleur". DansLesCoulisses.com. 2023-04-28. Retrieved 2023-04-30.

External links