- Alberta Highway 63
Infobox road
state=AB
type=Hwy
route=63
map_custom = yes
length_km = 443
direction_a = South
direction_b = North
starting_terminus = Hwy 28 near Radway
junction = Hwy 18, Hwy 55, Hwy 881, Hwy 69
ending_terminus = Bitumount, 30km North of Fort McKay
counties = Thorhild, Athabasca, Lac La Biche, Wood Buffalo
cities =Fort McMurray
established =
previous_type = Hwy
previous_route = 62
next_type = Hwy
next_route = 64Highway 63 is the main highway from a point on Highway 28 about 6 km (4 miles) southwest of the hamlet of Radway to Fort McMurray and further north to Fort Mackay, both of which are part of the Regional Municipality of Wood Buffalo. Much of the highway passes through
boreal forest , althoughaspen parkland and farmland is predominant up to the Lac La Biche turn off. The highway also passed through theAthabasca Oil Sands development between Fort McMurray and Fort Mackay.The highway sees an increasingly high volume of traffic due to the booming oilsands industry in Wood Buffalo, causing potentially serious transportation-related problems. Not surprisingly, many residents in Fort McMurray and others who frequently use the highway view this as an issue that needs to be dealt with in a timely manner. Trucks carrying large equipment can delay the traffic greatly, since they can be large enough to occupy two traffic lanes. Most of Highway 63 is two-lane undivided highway, with the exception of just a few kilometres south of and through Fort McMurray to roughly 25 km (15 miles) north of Fort McMurray. It is also the only all-weather road leading out of Fort McMurray, which makes it a critical link to that fast-growing municipality.
After years of both public and political pressure, the provincial government has announced in February 2006 [ [http://www.gov.ab.ca/acn/200602/1946897B7668C-CCE6-D174-2B879CA4358438E2.html Alberta Government announcement] ] that it would begin twinning the entire two-lane portion of the highway to a four-lane divided standard from Atmore to just south of Fort McMurray. The twinning began in 2006 and will take at least five years to complete. [ [http://www.infratrans.gov.ab.ca/Roads_&_Highways/Northeast_Provincial_Highway_Projects/index.htm Government of Alberta - Infrastructure project] ]
Mile by mile
References
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