Ontario Highway 40


King's Highway 40, commonly referred to as Highway 40, is a provincially maintained highway in the southwestern portion of the Canadian province of Ontario. The route links Chatham and Sarnia via Wallaceburg, following close to the St. Clair River. The southern terminus is at Highway 401 south of Chatham, while the northern terminus is at Highway 402 in Sarnia.
Highway 40 was built as a depression-relief project in 1934. The original routing followed what is now the St. Clair Parkway, but was rerouted to create that scenic road in the mid-1970s. The Sarnia Bypass was built between 1963 as Highway 40A and renumbered as Highway 40 by 1965; the original route through Sarnia became Highway 40B until it was decommissioned during the early-1990s. The route was extended to Highway 3 in Blenheim during the early 1970s; however this section would be the sole part of Highway 40 decommissioned during the Ontario highway transfers. The route is long.

Route description

Highway 40 begins at an interchange with Highway 401 southeast of the urban centre of Chatham, within the Municipality of Chatham-Kent.
Southwest of the interchange is C.M. Wilson Conservation Area, a campground named for the former Chair of Directors of the Lower Thames Valley Conservation Authority, Clarence Michael Wilson.
The highway proceeds northwest as Communication Road, passing between farmland on the outskirts of Chatham. It crosses a Canadian National Railway mainline followed by the Thames River, then turns southwest onto Grand Avenue East and crosses a Canadian Pacific railway line. The highway progresses from the outskirts of Chatham to downtown before turning onto St. Clair Street and travelling northwest. It encounters the Nortown Centre mall as it passes through the suburbs and eventually leaves the city.
Between Chatham and Wallaceburg, Highway 40 divides a large swath of farmland established in the fertile soils of the region. The only community between the two places is Oungah, Ontario. Immediately southeast of Wallaceburg, the highway turns to the north and becomes known as Murray Street. As it enters the town, it turns onto McNaughton Avenue and crosses a CSX railway line then the Sydenham River. The route turns west onto Dufferin Avenue and proceeds out of the town, crossing the CSX railway a second time. After crossing an irrigation canal, Highway 40 turns north onto Arnold Road and crosses the CSX railway a third and final time before exiting Chatham–Kent.
The route enters Lambton County in the municipality of St. Clair, passing through more farmland. north of the county line, the highway crosses the W. Darcy McKeough Floodway, a channel constructed in 1984 to protect Wallaceburg from flooding.
Highway 40 continues north parallel to and several kilometres east of the St. Clair River. At Bickford, it swerves slightly to the east while passing between the CF Industries nitrogen fertilizer plant to the west and Bickford Oak Woods Provincial Conservation Reserve to the east.
As the highway approaches the south end of Sarnia, it widens into a divided four lane expressway and passes through Chemical Valley, the location of several industrial plants.
The route enters Aamjiwnaang First Nation at La Salle Line where the surroundings abruptly switch to forest from a mix of industry and farmland.
At the intersection with Churchill Line, Highway 40 enters the Sarnia city limits and turns east onto the Sarnia Bypass, a four lane divided expressway. Approximately east of the intersection, the highway narrows back to a two lane road. Soon thereafter, it gently curves to the north, intersecting Plank Road and becoming Modeland Road. It passes along the western edge of the Sarnia Photovoltaic Power Plant, the world's largest photovoltaic power plant.
The route passes above a CN and VIA rail line as it travels along the eastern rural–urban fringe of the city. After a signalized intersection with Wellington Street, Highway 40 widens to a divided four lane expressway once more just prior to a Parclo A2 interchange with London Line, then ends at a Parclo B4 interchange with Highway 402. Modeland Road narrows back to a two lane road and continues north as Lambton County Road 27.
The African-Canadian Heritage Tour follows a portion of Highway 40, from the interchange with Highway 401 to Chatham-Kent Road 29 in Oungah, Ontario, midway between Chatham and Wallaceburg, where it turns east on to Chatham-Kent Road 29 towards Dresden.

History

Highway 40 was established at the height of the Great Depression, during the spring of 1934. The subsequent improvement of the roadway employed several dozen men eight hours per day, six days per week at minimum wage as a depression-relief project.
Highway 40 was created by the assumption of several lengths of concession road created as a result of statute labour by adjacent farmers as part of the requirements to secure a land deed. On March 28, the road connecting Chatham with Wallaceburg was assumed by the Department of Highways and designated King's Highway 40. Just over a month later, on May 2, the DHO assumed the route between Wallaceburg and Sarnia known today as the St. Clair Parkway. The route connected Highway 2 in Chatham with Highway 7 and Highway 22 in Sarnia.

Sarnia Bypass

In the decade following World War II, automobile use in North America increased dramatically, inundating many highways on the approach to and within urbanized areas with heavy traffic. As a result, freeways and bypasses were constructed throughout the province, allowing drivers not destined for those locations avoid congestion. In 1957, the DHO announced that Highway 402 would be extended east of Sarnia to London, starting with the construction of an interchange at Modeland Road.
This interchange would serve as the terminus for a new bypass of Sarnia.
On May 1, 1963, portions of Modeland Road and Churchill Line were taken over by the DHO and numbered as Highway 40A. These roads were reconstructed over the following year as a continuous divided highway. On October 25, 1963, the Sarnia Bypass was opened to traffic.
By 1965, the bypass was renumbered as the northern end of Highway 40; the former route on the west side of Sarnia, via Brock Street, Vidal Street and Front Street, was subsequently renumbered Highway 40B.
During the early 1970s, the province extended Highway 40 along Kent County Road 11, to meet with Highway 3 in Blenheim, Ontario, adding 17 km to the roadway's distance.
East of the Murphy Road overpass, Highway 402 was re-aligned to bypass the original interchange with Highway 40 constructed in 1963; Exmouth Street was redirected to connect with Highway 7 at that Parclo A2 junction, and Quinn Street now follows the former alignment of the freeway.
For the realigned Highway 402, a new Parclo B4 interchange was constructed with Highway 40 just north of the original interchange.

St. Clair Parkway

During the late-1950s, the Saint Lawrence Seaway project created a navigable lock system between the Atlantic Ocean and Lake Superior, while simultaneously reclaiming properties along the shoreline to create a continuous parkway. Seeing the potential tourist draw, several groups and organizations, including the district Chamber of Commerce, convened at the second annual conference of the Southwestern Ontario Chambers of Commerce and Boards of Trade in February 1960. Several resolutions were passed, calling for the DHO to create a new Highway 40 several kilometres inland from the St. Clair River and to have the old highway rebuilt as a scenic route.
These resolutions were echoed by Lambton County Council and the 21 municipalities in the county.
Plans for the parkway were crafted over the next several years before being presented to minister of highways Charles MacNaughton in the spring of 1965.
Subsequently, the St. Clair Parkway Commission was formed in 1966.
Construction of the new inland route of Highway 40 began in 1972. Working south from Sarnia, the first contract reached as far south as Highway 80, a distance of.
A second contract, awarded in 1974, extended construction south an additional to Lambton County Road 2.
Construction began in the early 1970s on a major realignment of Highway 40 between Wallaceburg and Sarnia. The old alignment of the road was bypassed by a newly constructed road around 5 km inland from the St. Clair River. This new alignment of Highway 40 opened in stages in the mid-1970s. From roughly halfway between Highway 80 and CR 4, to the Sarnia Bypass, the road was built as a four-lane divided highway. Once this new alignment was created, the road's length was, as around of the old alignment was bypassed.
The old alignment was turned back from Sarnia to Sombra in 1979, from Sombra to Walpole Island in 1980, and finally from Walpole Island to Wallaceburg in 1984. It was named the St. Clair Parkway and designated as Lambton County Road 33 and Kent County Roads 32 & 33.
The new alignment of Highway 40 was built with a wide-enough right of way for future twinning to an expressway and upgrading to become a freeway, if the need ever arises. There are no private properties on Highway 40's new alignment, and the only access is at intersecting roads, or at traffic signal-governed intersections, with sufficient right-of-way for overpasses and interchanges if upgrading takes place. The entire Sarnia Bypass is also built to this standard for relatively easy upgrading. At the moment, the only parts of the Bypass which are four-lane divided are the Michigan Avenue to Wellington Street stretch, and the Indian Road to Churchill Road segment where the route runs east-west. From the signalized T-intersection on Churchill Road where Highway 40 changes direction from east-west, that portion of the north-south route to Wallaceburg is also four-lane divided until just south of Rokeby Line.

Downloading

April 1, 1997 saw a huge change in Ontario's provincial highway network: over 4000 km of highways were turned back to county, city, and local authorities. Highway 40 was largely spared, although south of Highway 401, the road was turned back, shortening the road by the 17 km it gained in the 1970s.
January 1, 1998 saw further changes to Highway 40. It was rerouted through Chatham, Ontario along the route of Former Highway 2, instead of its old route through downtown via Third Street, Wellington Street, Lacroix Street, and Park Avenue. Highway 40 is now long.

Major intersections