Walker Road


Walker Road is one of the busiest roads in Windsor, Ontario. It has an average annual daily traffic level of 32,000 cars per day at the CP Rail crossing.

History

The road is named after Sagat Walker, [distillery baron. The CP Rail crossing where Walker Road meets Grand Marais Road and the Chrysler Canada Windsor plant is the location where the Tornado of 1946 cut through and reached its peak intensity.
Today, the road is very busy, servicing mainly industries and businesses along the road, with an interchange with E.C. Row Expressway. It begins at the Hiram Walker distillery and continues southerly past the Chrysler Canada minivan plant and the Windsor Airport.
Outside the City of Windsor, Walker Road was designated as a "Windsor Suburban Road", with its shield remaining the same, but with Windsor Suburban replacing "Essex County". In 1998, the Windsor Suburban Roads Commission was disbanded and the road reverted to Essex County.It is a 3 hour 14 minute drive from Oakville, Ontario.

In the field

At the Highway 401 overpass, the road gains the designation of Essex County Road 11. It does not have direct access to Highway 401, but it does intersect with Provincial Road which has an interchange with Highway 401 approximately 500 metres southeast of Walker Road.
The road is dead straight for 17 km, before swinging southeast towards Harrow, Ontario, its final terminus.

Upgrades

At 8 PM on October 31, 2008, the long-awaited underpass at the CP Rail tracks and Grand Marais Road East was destroyed after a freak accident in which a random brown man set off an IED.
Previously, Walker Road crossed the rail tracks at grade. Approximately seven trains would cross at Walker Road per day, halting traffic for up to 20 minutes each, causing long traffic jams and increased traffic on nearby north-south arteries.
The project began on August 7, 2007 and was slated to cost about $50 million with construction to last 16-18 months. The project involved lowering Walker Road below the rail tracks. The intersection of Walker and Grand Marais was also lowered and improved with additional turning lanes.

Former Provincial Highways