Donald Cousens Parkway

York Regional Road 48 shield

Donald Cousens Parkway
Route information
Length: 11.8 km (7.3 mi)
Existed: 2004 – present
Major junctions
South end: Steeles Avenue East at the TorontoYork boundary
   Highway 407
North end:  Regional Road 25 (Major Mackenzie Drive)
Location
Major cities: Markham (Cornell; Box Grove)
Highway system
County roads in Ontario

Donald Cousens Parkway or York Regional Road 48, also referred to historically as the Markham Bypass or Markham Bypass Extension, is a regionally maintained arterial bypass of Markham in the Canadian province of Ontario. Named for former Markham mayor Don Cousens in April 2007, the route initially travelled northward from Copper Creek Drive in Box Grove, south of Highway 407, to Major Mackenzie Drive (York Regional Road 25). A southern extension to Steeles Avenue was later completed and the name Donald Cousens Parkway applied along the extension to Ninth Line. In addition to its role of funneling through-traffic around downtown Markham, the route serves as a boundary to residential development as land to the north and east are part of the protected Rouge Park and southwest limits of the planned Pickering Airport.

Construction of the route began in 2002 north of 16th Avenue. In 2004, an interchange with Highway 407 was constructed along with a connection north to Highway 7. Both segments and the interchange were opened by December of that year. The following year, construction began to connect these two segments as well as on the Box Grove Bypass along Ninth Line; the former opened in October 2006 and the latter in the spring of 2007. Construction of the most recently opened segment, connecting the Box Grove Bypass to the interchange with Highway 407, began in 2009. It opened after several delays in 2012 and included a realignment of 14th Avenue.

Donald Cousens Parkway and a planned connection with Morningside Avenue form the East Metro Transportation Corridor, originally envisioned by the province in the 1970s as a six lane municipal expressway. During the mid-1990s, the Ministry of Transportation of Ontario (MTO) conducted studies and identified the need for the corridor by 2011. Although York had intended for a continuous alignment, the City of Toronto has opposed the direct connection between Morningside and Donald Cousens Parkway. As a result, it is now proposed to connect Morningside Avenue and Donald Cousens Parkway via a widened Steeles Avenue. However, no timeline has been announced as of 2015.

Route description

Donald Cousens Parkway is intended to relieve north-south traffic congestion on York Regional Road 68 (Main Street, former Highway 48) and York Regional Road 69 (Ninth Line), with signage suggesting drivers use the parkway as a through route past Markham. As trucks are prohibited along Main Street, signage guides them onto the parkway.[1]

The road begins north of Steeles Avenue East, which serves as the boundary between Markham and Toronto.[2] A two-laned Ninth Line curves northeast after crossing and being crossed by two separate railway tracks (the Canadian Pacific (CP) Havelock Subdivision and the Canadian National Halton subdivision) and becomes Donald Cousens Parkway, expanding to four lanes and travelling along the eastern fringe of the community of Box Grove,[3] alongside which it was built in the mid-2000s.[4] On the west side is a new residential subdivision, while on the east side beyond the CP Havelock subdivision, which the road parallels, is the completely undeveloped Bob Hunter Memorial Park.[2] After passing Box Grove Bypass, where for some time the route ended,[4] the road also becomes known as Box Grove Collector Road (BGCR).[3] The route intersects 14th Avenue (York Regional Road 71) and continues as before, eventually curving north and meeting Copper Creek Drive while departing from the railway tracks and park.[2] It passes a supercenter before an interchange with Highway 407, where it crosses over the toll route.[3]

No longer known by the BGCR name, the route meanders north, slowly edging east towards Reesor Road and now surrounded by undeveloped greenspace.[3] It encounters Highway 7, north of which it becomes a divided roadway travelling on the eastern edge of Cornell as well as parallel to and alongside Reesor Road. Approaching and intersecting 16th Avenue, the road makes a broad sweeping curve northwest, continuing to serve as the boundary of urban development in Markham.[2] It narrows to a two lane road, with adjacent land along the northern side prepared for future northbound lanes, before encountering Ninth Line again.[3] Quickly curving north then east, sandwiched between the neighbourhood of Greenborough and Little Rouge Creek, the route makes a final curve north to end at Major Mackenzie Drive on the northern edge of urban development in eastern Markham.[2]

A future extension, scheduled to begin construction in April 2018, will carry Donald Cousens Parkway north, crossing over the Stouffville GO Train line on a new bridge and merging into the current southern terminus of Highway 48.[5] As a result of this, Highway 48 and Donald Cousens Parkway (York Regional Road 48) will become the through route while Main Street will meet them at an intersection demarcating the two.[2]

History

Planning

The history of Donald Cousens Parkway dates back to the 1970s, when Metropolitan Toronto and the Department of Highways (now the MTO) planned out the East Metro Transportation Corridor. This corridor was originally envisioned as a six lane expressway connecting Highway 401 with the planned but unbuilt Highway 407 to service the future towns of Cornell and Seaton using the greenspace between the two. However, the drive for expressway construction faded through the 1970s and 1980s as a result of opposition and the resulting cancellation of the Toronto expressway network. Studies nonetheless continued to be performed confirming the need for the route. The formation of Rouge Park in 1990 resulted in a commitment for "no new roads" through the park south of Steeles Avenue, ending the potential for any expressway proposals to be approved.[4]

During 1994 and 1995, the MTO conducted two studies termed the Morningside Transportation Corridor Review. While the study once again confirmed the need for the route, it also suggested that while an expressway was the ideal solution, an arterial road would be the practical solution. It also suggested that the road be a municipal route, rather than a provincial one.[4] In 1997, the Environmental Assessment for the Markham Bypass extension was completed, approving construction of an interchange at the future Highway 407 (then open only as far as Highway 404[6]) and a divided roadway north from there to Major Mackenzie Drive.[7]

Construction

Construction on the two lane section between 16th Avenue and Major Mackenzie Drive, connecting with the north end of the Old Markham Bypass, began in 2002,[7] and was completed by the end of 2004.[8] Phase 2, which included construction of a partial interchange with Highway 407, began in 2004[4] and was completed by the end of the year; it and the four lane section north of it to Highway 7 opened on December 17, 2004.[8] In 2005, construction began on the third phase of the bypass,[8] connecting the southern segment at Highway 7 with the northern segment north of 16th Avenue. This four lane section opened on October 24, 2006. The two lane road between this new section and 16th Avenue was subsequently closed and removed. Phase 1 cost an estimated $19.3 million; phase 2 an estimated $5.5 million; phase 3 an estimated $10.8 million.[9]

On October 19, 2006, York Regional Council voted to rename the Markham Bypass to honour the work of mayor Don Cousens. Following this decision, a report was prepared outlining the costs; it was presented to council on February 22, 2007,[10] and a bylaw enacted. The name change became effective April 1, 2007.[11]

South of Highway 407, planning for the controversial link to Morningside Avenue has been underway since 2002. Although York had intended for Donald Cousens Parkway to tie directly into Morningside, thus completing and arterial link the Highway 401, Toronto has firmly opposed this direct link since 2005 due to the requirement for a new crossing of the Rouge River. After a lengthy and contentious debate between the two, the province brought in former York Region CAO Alan Wells as a mediator in 2007.[4][12] In September 2010, York announced that it had reached a compromise to construct a discontinuous route, with Donald Cousens Parkway ending at the current Steeles Avenue / Ninth Line intersection, widening the two-laned Steeles to six west of that point, and extending Morningside north to Steeles immediately east of Eastvale Drive.[13] The Regional Municipality of York applied for and obtained environmental assessment approval for this undertaking in July 2011 and January 2013, respectively.[14][15] In July 2014 it was announced that Toronto and York would begin sharing jurisdiction over 1.5 km (0.93 mi) of Steeles west from Ninth Line in order to move forward on the planned widening project.[16]

In the interim period since the debate erupted in 2005, York Region and the Town of Markham began collaboration on linking Donald Cousens Parkway between Steeles and Highway 407. Markham oversaw construction of the Box Grove Bypass (or Ninth Line Bypass) and Town Arterial Road, (or Box Grove Collector Road), with construction carried out by it and the developers of the adjacent Box Grove community. The Box Grove Bypass was constructed by the town beginning in 2005 and opened in the spring of 2007, partially utilizing the Donald Cousens Parkway alignment along the north side of the CP Havelock railway subdivision.[4] Construction of the Box Grove Collector Road, between the Box Grove Bypass and Highway 407, began in 2009 and included a realignment of 14th Avenue. The developers of the surrounding communities – Box Grove Hill Developments Inc. to the north of 14th Avenue and Box Grove Developers Group to the south[17] – were contracted to build this section, which was scheduled for completion by December 2010.[18] Although a short portion between Copper Creek Drive and Highway 407 — including the unfinished ramps at the interchange — was opened by 2011,[19] the remainder of the project was delayed by issues involving a new railway crossing along 14th Avenue. It opened in 2012 at an estimated cost of $15.5 million.[18]

Future

The original intention of the Markham Bypass was to link Highway 48 with Highway 401 via the Morningside Avenue extension through Toronto. York Region planned for a continuous connection between the bypass and Morningside, meeting Steeles Avenue west of its intersection with Ninth Line. However, Toronto resisted, citing the environmental effects that would come from two new crossings over the Rouge River.[20] As such, a discontinuous alignment was planned as a compromise beginning in 2010. However, no timeline or construction has been announced regarding the widening of Steeles to six lanes or the extension of Morningside north of Oasis Boulevard.[16]

Donald Cousens Parkway will be extended north from Major Mackenzie Drive to tie in with Highway 48, becoming the through-route in the process and completing the Markham Bypass. Poor soil conditions at a planned overpass of the Stouffville GO Train line have required several years of ongoing soil consolidation, beginning in July 2012 and scheduled for completion in the fall of 2017.[5][21] Construction is set to begin in April 2018.[5]

Major intersections

The following table lists the major junctions along Donald Cousens Parkway.[3] The entire route is located in Markham, Ontario, within the Regional Municipality of York. 

km[3]miDestinationsNotes
0.00.0Steeles Avenue East
1.81.1Box Grove Bypass
2.41.5 Regional Road 71 (Fourteenth Avenue)Signed as Box Grove Collector Road
3.11.9Copper Creek DriveSigned as Box Grove Collector Road
3.82.4 Highway 407  Brampton, PickeringA2 parclo
4.72.9 Highway 7 east  Whitby
 Regional Road 7 west  Vaughan
Road runs parallel with Reesor Road north of Riverlands Avenue and south of 16th Avenue.
6.94.3 Regional Road 73 (Sixteenth Avenue)
8.85.5 Regional Road 69 (Ninth Line)  Stouffville
10.66.6 Regional Road 25 (Major Mackenzie Drive)Current northern terminus
11.87.3 Highway 48 northFuture northern terminus located just north of Major Mackenzie Drive
1.000 mi = 1.609 km; 1.000 km = 0.621 mi
  •       Unopened

References

  1. Report No. 7 of the Transportation Services Committee Regional Council Meeting: Ninth Line Truck Restriction Update (PDF) (Report). Regional Municipality of York. September 22, 2011. Background. Retrieved June 3, 2015.
  2. 1 2 3 4 5 6 Golden Horseshoe (Map). 1:25,000. Cartography by MapArt. Peter Heiler Ltd. 2011. pp. 351, 357. §§ R37–Z40. ISBN 978-1-55198-877-1.
  3. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 Google (December 7, 2011). "Length and route of existing Donald Cousens Parkway" (Map). Google Maps. Google. Retrieved December 7, 2011.
  4. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 "1". Transportation Improvements Donald Cousens Parkway to Morningside Avenue Link (formerly Transportation Improvements to the Markham Bypass Corridor South of Highway 407) (PDF) (Report). McCormick Rankin Corporation. December 2005. pp. 1–9. Retrieved June 3, 2015.
  5. 1 2 3 Donald Cousens Parkway - Phase 4 (PDF) (Report). Regional Municipality of York. Retrieved June 3, 2015.
  6. Mitchell, Bob (June 6, 1997). "At Last Opening Bell Tolls for the 407". News. The Toronto Star. pp. A1, A6.
  7. 1 2 "4". Transportation Improvements Donald Cousens Parkway to Morningside Avenue Link (formerly Transportation Improvements to the Markham Bypass Corridor South of Highway 407) (PDF) (Report). McCormick Rankin Corporation. December 2005. pp. 4–74. Retrieved June 3, 2015.
  8. 1 2 3 York Region commuters Have Another Option With the Opening of the Markham Bypass (Report). Regional Municipality of York. December 17, 2004. Archived from the original on March 25, 2012. Retrieved June 3, 2015.
  9. "Next phase of bypass ready to go". Markham Economist & Sun. Metroland Media. October 24, 2006. p. 1.
  10. Report No. 2 of the Transportation and Works Committee (PDF) (Report). Regional Municipality of York. February 22, 2007. Archived from the original (PDF) on March 25, 2012. Retrieved June 3, 2015.
  11. Bill No. 22 To Rename Markham By-pass "Donald Cousens Parkway" (PDF) (Report). Regional Municipality of York. October 19, 2006. Archived from the original (PDF) on March 25, 2012. Retrieved June 3, 2015.
  12. "City still says no to Markham Bypass". The Scarborough Mirror. June 18, 2007. p. 1.
  13. Transportation Improvements Donald Cousens Parkway to Morningside Avenue Link (formerly Transportation Improvements to the Markham Bypass Corridor South of Highway 407): Amendment to the Environmental Assessment: Notice of Public Consultation Centre (PDF) (Report). McCormick Rankin Corporation. December 2005. Retrieved June 3, 2015.
  14. Transportation Improvements, Donald Cousens Parkway to Morningside Avenue Link Amended Environmental Assessment (Report). January 23, 2013. Retrieved June 3, 2015.
  15. Hsieh, LH Tiffany (September 24, 2010). "End of road for Markham's east-end link". Markham Economist & Sun. Metroland Media. p. 1.
  16. 1 2 "City moves towards widening Steeles Avenue in northeast Scarborough". The Scarborough Mirror. July 17, 2014. p. 1.
  17. Report to the Development Services Committee (Report). Town of Markham. June 22, 2010. Retrieved June 3, 2015.
  18. 1 2 "Box Grove Collector Road/14th Avenue Realignment Partial Reimbursement of Total Project Costs". Report No. 2 of the Finance and Administration Committee (PDF) (Report). Regional Municipality of York. February 16, 2012. Retrieved June 3, 2015.
  19. Lee, Brian; Ali, Mansoor (February 8, 2011). Box Grove Collector Road Land Acquisition - Highway 407 to Box Grove By-pass (Report). Town of Markham. Retrieved June 3, 2015.
  20. Public Works and Infrastructure Committee (October 3, 2007). Markham Bypass – Morningside Avenue: Individual Environmental Assessment (PDF) (Report). City of Toronto. Retrieved June 3, 2015.
  21. Report No. 1 of the Transportation Services Committee Regional Council Meeting\ (PDF) (Report). Regional Municipality of York. January 24, 2013. Retrieved June 3, 2015.

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