Transport in Winnipeg
This article has multiple issues. Please help improve it or discuss these issues on the talk page. (Learn how and when to remove these messages)
|
Early transport
For thousands of years the Indigenous of the region used various networks of rivers across what is now known as the province of Manitoba. The Forks became an early meeting place for the purpose of trade. Situated at the confluence of the Red and the Assiniboine in what is now downtown Winnipeg, the Forks would prove to be the most important location for European and First Nations trade in Manitoba. The common method of transportation on these waterways during this time were often birch bark canoes generally used by the Indigenous while European traders would tend to use York boats. Overland transport in the 19th century was often by ox-drawn Red River cart, which could be built and maintained using only locally obtained material.
Roads and expressways
Winnipeg is unique among cities its size in that it does not have freeways within the urban area. Beginning in 1958, the primarily suburban Metropolitan council proposed a system of freeways, including one that would have bisected the downtown area. The plan culminated in the monumental Winnipeg Area Transportation Study (WATS)[1] of 1968. The extensive freeway plan faced stiff community opposition and was deemed over-ambitious. It was not implemented as a concerted undertaking, but construction of major traffic corridors follows the study to this day, including expressways such as Route 165/Bishop Grandin Blvd., although most are in the form of urban arterial roads, and no freeways are likely to be constructed within the urban area anytime soon. However, a one-mile stretch of freeway was built in the late 1950s, called the Disraeli Freeway (part of the Disraeli Bridge project), which is part of Route 42.
A four-lane highway (the Perimeter Highway, which is mostly an expressway around the city (also known as a ring road) with interchanges and at-grade intersections) bypasses the city entirely, allowing travellers on the Trans-Canada Highway to avoid the city and continue east or west. The Perimeter Highway was chosen over the freeways that would have been in the city. Now the city is planning to create an Inner Perimeter Highway with Route 17, Route 90, Route 165, and Route 20.
Many Manitoba provincial highways enter Winnipeg, but the majority lose their highway designation and become Winnipeg Routes once they reach the Perimeter Highway. At present, only two provincial highways pass entirely through the Winnipeg area:
- Highway 1 and
- Highway 59 (which is a northern continuation of US 59) and is also designated as Route 20 (or Lagimodière Boulevard) in Winnipeg.
Several highways also converge on Winnipeg without passing entirely through the city. These include:
- Highway 2, which meets with Highway 3 at the southwest Perimeter,
- Highway 3, which becomes Route 155 (known as McGillivray Boulevard) in Winnipeg,
- Highway 6, which is the main highway to northern Manitoba,
- Highway 7, which becomes Route 90 (known through various street names) in Winnipeg,
- Highway 8, which becomes Route 180 (known as McPhillips Street) in Winnipeg,
- Highway 9, which becomes Route 52 (known as Main Street) in Winnipeg, and
- Highway 15, which becomes Route 115 (known as Dugald Road) in Winnipeg, and
- Highway 75 (a northern continuation of I-29 and US 75), which becomes Route 42 (known as Pembina Highway) in Winnipeg. (This road is an exception to the rule that only two provincial highways penetrate the Perimeter Highway, as Highway 75 actually continues until the intersection with Bison Drive / Chancellor Matheson Road (which leads to the Fort Garry campus of the University of Manitoba)).
One noted feature of Winnipeg's urban road network is Confusion Corner, a complex intersection where four arterial roads and a special Winnipeg Transit bus lane are funnelled into a rhomboid-shaped loop of one-way streets at a junction with Osborne Street.[2]
Public transit
Winnipeg has had a public transit system since the 1880s, starting with horse-drawn streetcars.
It had electric streetcars from 1891 until 1955, and electric trolley buses from 1938 until 1970. Winnipeg Transit now operates entirely with diesel buses.
For decades, the city has explored the idea of a rapid transit link, either bus or rail, from downtown to the University of Manitoba's suburban campus. The most recent proposal[3] calls for several enhanced bus routes, which would extend across the city. These routes would use bus-only lanes for most of their length, with separate busways being built around congested sections.
Winnipeg is home to many large transit bus manufacturers, including New Flyer Industries and Motor Coach Industries. New Flyer Industries supplies transit buses for many major North American cities including New York City and Vancouver, British Columbia.
Winnipeg transit
The public transit needs of Winnipeg are primarily met through Winnipeg Transit's regularly scheduled bus service.[4] Primary bus routes run from 5:30 a.m. until just before 2:00 a.m. Monday to Saturday, and until just after midnight on Sunday.
As of June 2019, 89 fixed routes plus four DART routes throughout the city. There are three types of routes:
- Main line routes provide service from suburban neighbourhoods to downtown, observing all bus stops, and normally operate seven days a week. Some routes operate as crosstown routes, which means buses operate from one suburban area to another, in most cases passing through the downtown area.
- Express routes operate mainly during rush hour from suburban neighbourhoods, observing a limited number of bus stops to downtown.
- Suburban feeders generally provide service in suburban areas where ridership demand is lower.
The Winnipeg RT is a 3 km bus transitway between Harkness and Jubilee Station. A Phase 2 extension between Beaumont and University of Manitoba and St. Norbert Station commenced April 12, 2020.
Airports
Winnipeg is currently served by the Winnipeg James Armstrong Richardson International Airport (IATA: YWG, ICAO: CYWG) which was redeveloped, with a new passenger terminal completed in 2010.[5] The old terminal was constructed in the early 1960s, is demolished. The airport is operational 24 hours per day, handling about 3.5 million passengers annually, and is part of the national airports system of Canada. It is the only international airport between Toronto and Calgary capable of handling large freighter aircraft, and as such handles many arctic flights. From 1937 to 1949, the airport was the headquarters and site of the national maintenance base of Air Canada which has moved to Montreal-Dorval.
Railways
Winnipeg is served by Via Rail, Canadian National Railway (CN), Canadian Pacific Railway (CP), Burlington Northern Santa Fe Manitoba and the Central Manitoba Railway, (CEMR). It is the only city between Vancouver and Thunder Bay, Ontario with direct U.S. connections.
CN and CP operate large railyards, customer service operations and intermodal facilities inside Winnipeg.
There are approximately 5,000 people employed in Winnipeg in the rail transportation industry.
Via Rail operates out of Union Station, a grand neoclassical structure near The Forks in downtown Winnipeg. The station was built by the Canadian Northern Railway & National Transcontinental/Grand Trunk Pacific Railway and was designed by the same architects responsible for Grand Central Terminal in New York City.
In addition to the major commercial railways, the City of Winnipeg owns and operates the Greater Winnipeg Water District Railway, which runs parallel to the city aqueduct to Shoal Lake.
Bus terminal
The Winnipeg Bus Terminal is located at Winnipeg James Armstrong Richardson International Airport. Beaver Bus Lines commuter service between Selkirk, Manitoba and Winnipeg ended in June 30, 2016 after 68 years (1948–2016).[6] Afterwards two succeeding companies, Exclusive Bus Lines,[7] and Kasper Transportation tried unsuccessfully to keep Winnipeg–Selkirk service running.[8]
Since the end of October 31, 2018, Greyhound Canada no longer serves the Canadian Prairies.[9]
Taxi services
Winnipeg is served by several taxi companies, the three largest in order of size being Unicity, Duffy's and Spring Taxi.[10] Fifty percent of Winnipeg residents can be expected to use a taxi at least once during the year.[11] Both Unicity and Duffy's Taxi are co-ops where the individual participating co-op drivers own their own license and supply their own vehicle, while Spring Taxi owns a significant portion of its taxi fleet.[12]
Unicity is a cooperative which collectively owns the assets of the Unicity dispatch or taxi call center, and it is the largest taxi operation in Winnipeg.[13] Unicity Taxi was formed by three smaller companies in the mid-1970s — Moore's, Grosvenor and Yellow Taxi.[citation needed] The company has subsequently brought many smaller independent companies into its fleet and now offers 165 cars as well as an ultra modern dispatching (DDS Pathfinder) and accounting(taxicharger)systems to serve its customers.[citation needed]
Duffy's taxi is a cooperative taxi firm that operates 154 vehicles,[14] with a large call center that accepts approximately 2,800 calls per day.[15] Duffy's Taxi was formed in the 1950s as an amalgamation of the original and much smaller Duffy's Taxi with Vets Nash Taxi which was a cooperative of war veterans.[citation needed]
Spring Taxi is the newest and smallest centrally dispatched taxi company in Winnipeg, and the company owns 16 of the 32 Spring Taxi vehicles, with the remaining 16 being owner operated vehicles.[16]
Splash Dash water services
The Splash Dash water taxi service was created a few years after the Forks opened, as a shuttle service between various downtown areas. In the early 2000s Hugo Dock was added. This is still the most western of the terminals for the River Spirit Water Bus Service, as it is officially known.[17]
The water taxi has struggled to operate since the opening, due to the problem of high water on both the Red and Assiniboine Rivers during most years. After the ice melt in spring, it may take several weeks, sometimes until late June or early July, for the waters of the two rivers to recede enough to allow the installation of the fixed and floating portions of the docks in use.
Expansion plans had earlier called for the Splash Dash to run as far west as the Sherbrook-Maryland Bridge by 2007.
As of 2012, the current one-way fare is $3.50. An unlimited day-pass is $15.00.[17]
Future plans
Active transportation
The city wants to connect AT missing links, with a bridge across the rail yards between Arlington and Salter, and a bridge across the Red River at Matheson.[18]
Transit
There are plans to add additional transit corridors, each serving various areas in Winnipeg. These are: Eastern Transitway (downtown to Transcona), West Transitway (downtown to St. James and the Airport), and North Transitway (downtown to West Kildonan).[18]
Roads
There are plans to:
- Widen Kenaston to six lanes form Ness to Taylor.
- Widen Marion
- Extend Chief Peguis Trail to McPhilips
- Widen St Mary's Road St. Anne’s to Marion[18]
See also
References
- ^ Winnipeg Area Transportation Study: Volume 3 - Projections and Recommendations. Metropolitan Corporation of Greater Winnipeg, Streets and Transit Division. September 1968. p. 233 p. ill.
- ^ David A. Wyatt, Winnipeg Transit and Osborne Junction (Confusion Corner). University of Manitoba.
- ^ Transit plans
- ^ "Winnipeg Transit". www.winnipegtransit.com. Retrieved 2018-02-26.
- ^ "Fact Sheet, Winnipeg Airports Authority". Archived from the original on 2008-07-03. Retrieved 2008-07-02.
- ^ "Beaver Bus route between Selkirk and Winnipeg done as of July 1". CBC News Manitoba. March 28, 2016.
- ^ Forlanski, Tamara (May 26, 2017). "Exclusive Bus Lines cancels service from Selkirk to Winnipeg". Global News Winnipeg.
- ^ "Kasper Transportation cuts Selkirk to Winnipeg bus line". CBC News Manitoba. August 20, 2019.
- ^ Klinkenberg, Marty (October 30, 2018). "Greyhound's last run: On the road in Prairie communities the bus service is leaving behind". Globe and Mail.
- ^ "Winnipeg Taxi Study (Volume One – Report)" (PDF). Winnipeg Taxi Study. Tennessee Transportation & Logistics Foundation. 4 February 2009. p. 4. Archived from the original (PDF) on 20 January 2013. Retrieved 16 August 2012.
- ^ "Winnipeg Taxi Study (Volume One – Report)" (PDF). Winnipeg Taxi Study. Tennessee Transportation & Logistics Foundation. 4 February 2009. p. 5. Archived from the original (PDF) on 20 January 2013. Retrieved 16 August 2012.
- ^ "Winnipeg Taxi Study (Volume One – Report)" (PDF). Winnipeg Taxi Study. Tennessee Transportation & Logistics Foundation. 4 February 2009. p. 7. Archived from the original (PDF) on 20 January 2013. Retrieved 16 August 2012.
- ^ "Winnipeg Taxi Study (Volume One – Report)" (PDF). Winnipeg Taxi Study. Tennessee Transportation & Logistics Foundation. 4 February 2009. p. 19. Archived from the original (PDF) on 20 January 2013. Retrieved 16 August 2012.
- ^ "Winnipeg Taxi Study (Volume One – Report)" (PDF). Winnipeg Taxi Study. Tennessee Transportation & Logistics Foundation. 4 February 2009. p. 10. Archived from the original (PDF) on 20 January 2013. Retrieved 16 August 2012.
- ^ "Winnipeg Taxi Study (Volume One – Report)" (PDF). Winnipeg Taxi Study. Tennessee Transportation & Logistics Foundation. 4 February 2009. p. 11. Archived from the original (PDF) on 20 January 2013. Retrieved 16 August 2012.
- ^ "Winnipeg Taxi Study (Volume One – Report)" (PDF). Winnipeg Taxi Study. Tennessee Transportation & Logistics Foundation. 4 February 2009. p. 25. Archived from the original (PDF) on 20 January 2013. Retrieved 16 August 2012.
- ^ a b "River Spirit Water Bus Service". Splash Dash River Tours. Retrieved 16 August 2012.
- ^ a b c "Winnipeg Transportation Master Plan" (PDF). Retrieved 26 July 2014.