What is Highway 427 (ontario)?

Information about Highway 427 (ontario)

Highway 427
Formed: 1972
South end: QEW in Toronto
East end: RR 7 in Vaughan
Ontario provincial highways
< Hwy 420QEW >
400-series
Highway 427 is a 400-Series Highway in the Greater Toronto Area of Ontario, Canada, that runs from immediately south of the Queen Elizabeth Way/Gardiner Expressway interchange (its exact southern terminus is on the Brown's Line at Coules Court, just south of Evans Avenue) in Toronto to Highway 7 in Vaughan. It is 21.3 kilometres in length.

Highway 427 is Ontario's second busiest freeway by volume, and has no fewer than 12 lanes between the QEW/Gardiner and Highway 401, divided into a collector-express system similar to that of Highway 401. Notable about Highway 427 are its several multi-level interchanges; the junctions with QEW and Highway 401 were Ontario's first 4-level interchanges constructed in the late 1960s and early 1970s while the interchanges with Highway 409 and Highway 407 are more recent and were completed in 1992 and 1995.

Enlarge picture
Highway 427 directly north of the Highway 401/27/Eglinton mega-interchange. Initially built in 1964 as the Airport Expressway, this was widened in the late 1990s.
It is a primary feeder route into Toronto Pearson International Airport. Much of the traffic coming from Highway 407, Highway 401 (eastbound), and the QEW/Gardiner uses Highway 427 for airport access, but it also serves the western portion of Etobicoke and the northeastern portion of Mississauga. It is also used as a bypass of the QEW for traffic originating from downtown Toronto headed towards the western suburbs, via Highway 401's collector lanes that provide a direct link between Highway 427 and Highway 403. Eastbound commuters on the QEW who want to bypass Downtown Toronto and Don Valley Parkway/Highway 404 use Highway 427 to reach Highway 401.

History

Highway 427 was inaugurated in 1972 and incorporated two existing routes; the freeway portion of Highway 27 between the QEW and Highway 401 (the initial 401 and Highway 27 was the Toronto Bypass in the 1950s), and the Airport Expressway (that section of 427 is still known by the name since it opened in 1964) between the 401 and Toronto Pearson International Airport since the construction of the former Terminal 1 in the 1960s.

Since 1972, there has been no direct access from Highway 401 westbound to Highway 427 northbound and vice versa; that link is provided by Highway 409 instead. The Carlingview Drive was added into the interchange to serve local needs. The complicated 401-427 interchange also includes high-speed ramps between from Eglinton Avenue westbound to Highway 401 westbound, Highway 427, and Highway 27; those freeway-to-freeway connectors (which seem excessive even for an arterial road like Eglinton) were meant for the abandoned Richview Expressway project which was proposed to run eastward from that interchange, parallel to Eglinton. Plans to have Highway 403 run directly to the 401-427 interchange were scrapped and it was replaced by a collector-express setup on Highway 401 from 403's eventual eastern terminus (401-403-410 interchange) to 427.

In 1980, Highway 427 was initially extended to provincial Highway 50 (Albion Road), along the Clairville Resevoir. This was later abandoned in favour of a new routing, which incorporated a new interchange with the future Highway 407. The Morning Star Drive at-grade access and the at-grade intersection with Highway 409 were removed, to be replaced with an overpass and flyover ramp, respectively, making Highway 427 a fully controlled access freeway. By the mid-1990s the northern stretch from Highway 401 to Highway 7 was completed, replacing the former secondary route known as Indian Line, which also served as the Toronto/Peel boundary.

Highway 427 is one of the few exposed concrete surfaced roads in Ontario, for the segment between the QEW and 401, and it has exceeded its intended 30-year lifespan. From the QEW north to just before the Highway 401 interchange, the pavement in the original express right lanes is un-grooved concrete, while the passing lane adjacent to the median is a grooved surface as it is newer pavement. This is very noticeable to drivers, as the grooving (tining) makes a unique noise on the tires, which is uncommon in Ontario, but very common in all USA concrete driving surfaces.

Collector-Express Setup

Enlarge picture
Highway 427 between QEW and Dundas Street (Formerly Highway 5), showing the 14-lane cross-section.


Highway 427's collector-express system between 401 and the QEW replaced the service roads that previously ran next to that routing (when it was previously known as Highway 27). As Highway 427 lies between Mississauga and Etobicoke, with two different road grid plans, there is no major arterial running parallel to Highway 427. To compensate, one unique feature of Highway 427's collector-express system is that its collector lanes have numerous RIRO onramps and offramps to serve residential traffic. The ramps connect to the two minor arterials, The West Mall and The East Mall, that run north-south parallel to Highway 427 from Eglinton Avenue to Evans Avenue (The West Mall Way's northern terminus is at Rathburn Road and one can continue to Eglinton via Renforth Drive). These RIRO ramps supplement the freeway's standard Parclo interchanges with several major east-west arterials.

The collector-express system is also needed, due to the relatively close proximity of the interchanges with Dundas Street, Burnhamthorpe Road, and Rathburn Road.

Unlike Highway 401 whose main collector-express system is also designed to increase the overall capacity of the road, Highway 427's collector-express system merely separates two streams of traffic, squeezing two parallel freeways into one corridor. The express lanes connect the QEW/Gardiner with 401 and exclusively lead to freeway-to-freeway ramps, while the collector lanes link up Highway 27 with Browns Line and have interchanges with local traffic. By contrast, on Highway 401, the collectors enjoy equal access to intersecting freeways as the express lanes do, so their use is not restricted to local traffic (it is often common for the MTO to close off either the express or collector lanes for night maintenance on Highway 401, but not Highway 427).

There are transfers between express and collector lanes; however 401/Airport to QEW/Gardiner traffic has grown far heavier, making the express lanes congested while the collectors are underused. A good example of this jam occurs on Highway 427 southbound at the collector-to-express transfer near Bloor Street, where the majority of commuters need to get to the express lanes in order to reach the QEW/Gardiner. There is little utility for the collectors south of that transfer since only a minority of motorists are headed for local traffic (The Queensway, Evans Avenue, Browns Line). Recent 427-QEW interchange improvements in 2001-2002 allowed southbound traffic in the collector lanes to access the Gardiner Expressway via a newly constructed loop ramp.

Recent developments


This article contains information about a planned or expected future road.
It may contain information of a speculative nature and the content may change as the road's construction or completion approaches and more information becomes available.
From summer 2004-2005, an "Ontario" tall-wall concrete median barrier, incorporating high-mast lighting, was installed in the segment between Highway 401 and the QEW, after complaints that the existing steel "W" guardrail (in use since 1972) was insufficient to stop traffic from crossing over to the opposing lanes, considering the high volumes. Though the original truss light poles (initially fitted with mercury, later replaced with high-pressure sodium in the 1990s) are no longer in use, they have not been removed as of June 2007.

There is talk of expanding this route further north from Vaughan, to at least Highway 89, and possibly as far north as Barrie, as a parallel bypass of the existing Highway 400 whose traffic levels are expected to outstrip expansion capacity in the next 20 years. No firm plans for a 427 extension have been put forward yet, but current plans will likely extend the road to Rutherford Road or possibly Major Mackenzie Drive.

Volume Information (2005)

  • Highest Volume: 311,400 AADT from Burnhamthorpe Road to Rathburn Road
  • Lowest Volume: 44,700 AADT from Coules Court to QEW

Lane Configurations from South to North

Section Travel Lanes
Evans Avenue to Queen Elizabeth Way/Gardiner Expressway2 lanes in each direction
Queen Elizabeth Way/Gardiner Expressway to Dundas Street7 lanes in each direction (4 express, 3 local)
Dundas Street to Burnhamthorpe Road6 lanes in each direction (3 express, 3 local)
Burnhamthorpe Road to Highway 4017 lanes in each direction (4 express, 3 local)
Highway 401 to Dixon Road/Airport Road/Toronto Pearson International Airport5 lanes in each direction
Dixon Road/Airport Road/Toronto Pearson International Airport to Highway 4093 lanes in each direction
Highway 409/Toronto Pearson International Airport to Rexdale Boulevard/Derry Road3 lanes Northbound (1 Continus Auxiliary on/off lane), 4 Lanes Southbound
1 HOV lane per direction currently under planning
Rexdale Boulevard/Derry Road to Finch Avenue3 Lanes Southbound, 2 Lanes Northbound
1 HOV lane per direction currently under planning
Finch Avenue to Highway 4072 lanes in each direction
1 HOV lane per direction currently under planning
Highway 407 to Highway 7 (York Regional Road 7)2 Lanes Southbound, 3 Lanes Northbound

Exit list

Location Destinations Notes
Toronto QEW – HamiltonSouthbound exit and northbound entrance
Gardiner ExpresswaySouthbound exit and northbound entrance
Brown's Line, Evans AvenueSouthbound exit and northbound entrance
Sherway Gardens Road, The QueenswaySouthbound exit and northbound entrance
Dundas StreetFormer Highway 5
Valhalla RoadNorthbound exit and entrance
Eva RoadSouthbound exit and entrance
Burnhamthorpe Road
Holiday DriveSouthbound exit only
Rathburn RoadNorthbound exit and southbound entrance
Eglinton Avenue
Hwy 27 northNorthbound exit and southbound entrance
Hwy 401 eastNorthbound exit and southbound entrance
Hwy 401 west
Toronto, MississaugaDixon Road - Toronto Pearson International AirportNorthbound exit and southbound entrance
Fasken DriveNorthbound exit and southbound entrance
Hwy 409 east to Hwy 401 east
Toronto Pearson International AirportNo northbound exit
RR 5 (Derry Road, Rexdale Boulevard)
Finch Avenue
Vaughan Hwy 407
RR 7 – Brampton, VaughanNorthbound exit and southbound entrance

Proposed Interchanges from South to North (exit numbers assumed)

Municipality Kilometre Post* Intersecting Roads
Vaughan24 Langstaff Road (York Regional Road 72)
Vaughan26 Rutherford Road (York Regional Road 73)
Vaughan28 Major Mackenzie Drive (York Regional Road 25)
Vaughan33Kirby Sideroad
King37 King Road (York Regional Road 11)
King4317th Sideroad
King - New Tecumseth Boundary50 Highway 9
New Tecumseth56New Tecumseth 5th Line
New Tecumseth60 New Tecumseth 8th Line (Simcoe County Road 1)
New Tecumseth63Bradford Bypass (proposed freeway)

External links

References

Queen Elizabeth Way

1936-39

I-190 in Buffalo, NY

Hwy 405 near Niagara Falls
Hwy 406 in St. Catharines
Burlington St. in Hamilton
Hwy 403/Hwy 407 in Burlington
Hwy 427/Gardiner in Toronto

Ontario provincial highways
..... Read more.
City of Toronto

Flag
Coat of arms
Nickname: T.O., Hogtown, The Big Smoke, T-Dot, Toronto the Good
Motto: Diversity Our Strength
..... Read more.


Highway 7
Avenue 7 (Proposed)
Maintained by York Region

41 km (0 mi)
1998

RR 24 (Highway 50)/RR 107

RR 68 (Markham Road)/Hwy 7
York

Markham
Richmond Hill
Vaughan


..... Read more.
City of Vaughan

Seal
Motto: The City above Toronto
Vaughan's location in York Region.
Coordinates:
Country Canada
Province Ontario
..... Read more.
Regional roads: Durham Halton Hamilton Niagara Peel Waterloo York District roads: Muskoka Municipal roads: Chatham-Kent Haldimand Kawartha Lakes Ottawa Sudbury

..... Read more.
Highway 420, Regional Road 420

1972

QEW in Niagara Falls

RR 102 in Niagara Falls (east end of Hwy 420)
Rainbow Bridge to Niagara Falls, NY
(to US 62)

Ontario provincial highways
< Hwy 417

400-series

..... Read more.
Queen Elizabeth Way

1936-39

I-190 in Buffalo, NY

Hwy 405 near Niagara Falls
Hwy 406 in St. Catharines
Burlington St. in Hamilton
Hwy 403/Hwy 407 in Burlington
Hwy 427/Gardiner in Toronto

Ontario provincial highways
..... Read more.
400-series highways are a network of controlled-access freeways throughout the southern portion of the province of Ontario, Canada, forming a special subset of the provincial highway system.
..... Read more.
400-series highways are a network of controlled-access freeways throughout the southern portion of the province of Ontario, Canada, forming a special subset of the provincial highway system.
..... Read more.
Greater Toronto Area (widely abbreviated as the GTA) is the most populous metropolitan area in Canada. The GTA is a provincial planning area with a population of 5,555,912 at the 2006 Canadian Census.
..... Read more.
Ontario


Flag Coat of arms
Motto: Ut Incepit Fidelis Sic Permanet (Latin: Loyal she began, loyal she remains)

Capital Toronto
Largest city Toronto
Official languages English (de facto)
Government
..... Read more.
This page is currently protected from editing until disputes have been resolved.
Protection is not an endorsement of the current [ version] ([ protection log]).
..... Read more.
Queen Elizabeth Way

1936-39

I-190 in Buffalo, NY

Hwy 405 near Niagara Falls
Hwy 406 in St. Catharines
Burlington St. in Hamilton
Hwy 403/Hwy 407 in Burlington
Hwy 427/Gardiner in Toronto

Ontario provincial highways
..... Read more.
Gardiner Expressway

Frederick G. Gardiner Expressway

1955 - completed

East/West Map
Toronto, Ontario

Toronto, Ontario

Toronto, Ontario

The Frederick G.
..... Read more.
City of Toronto

Flag
Coat of arms
Nickname: T.O., Hogtown, The Big Smoke, T-Dot, Toronto the Good
Motto: Diversity Our Strength
..... Read more.
Highway 7

1920

Hwy 4 near London

Hwy 8 in Kitchener
Hwy 6 in Guelph
RR 107 at the Halton-Peel line
Hwy 48 in Markham
Hwy 115 near Peterborough
Hwy 417 near Ottawa

Ontario provincial highways
< Hwy 6
..... Read more.
City of Vaughan

Seal
Motto: The City above Toronto
Vaughan's location in York Region.
Coordinates:
Country Canada
Province Ontario
..... Read more.
1 kilometre =
SI units
0 m 0106 mm
US customary / Imperial units
0 ft 0 mi
A kilometre (American spelling: kilometer, symbol km
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Highway 401

Macdonald-Cartier Freeway, Highway of Heroes

825.1 km[1] (0 mi)
1938 (parts as Highway 2A),
1947 (numbered in 1952)[2]

Hwy 3 in Windsor

Hwy 402 in London
Hwy 8 in Kitchener
Hwy 427 in Toronto
..... Read more.
Local-express lanes or collector-express lanes are a set of two same-direction one-way multi-lane roadways, usually on a freeway. The outer set, usually called local lanes or collector lanes, provide access to most or all interchanges.
..... Read more.
Highway 409

Belfield Expressway

1975

Pearson Airport

Hwy 401 in Toronto

Ontario provincial highways
< Hwy 407

400-series
Highway 409
..... Read more.
Highway 407

Express Toll Route

1997

QEW/Hwy 403 in Burlington

Hwy 410 in Brampton
Hwy 404 in Markham
Hwy 7 in Pickering

Ontario provincial highways
< Hwy 406

400-series
Highway 407
..... Read more.
Toronto Pearson International Airport, or Pearson Airport (IATA: YYZ, ICAO: CYYZ), located 27 kilometres (17 mi) west of downtown Toronto by road, in Mississauga, Ontario, is Canada's busiest airport and part of the National Airports System.
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Highway 407

Express Toll Route

1997

QEW/Hwy 403 in Burlington

Hwy 410 in Brampton
Hwy 404 in Markham
Hwy 7 in Pickering

Ontario provincial highways
< Hwy 406

400-series
Highway 407
..... Read more.
City of Etobicoke (Dissolved)

Flag

Country Canada
Province Ontario
Established 1 January 1850 (township)
  1 January 1967 (borough)
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Malton

Motto: Home of the Avro Arrow
Country Canada
Province Ontario
Government
 - Mississauga Ward 5 Councillor Eve Adams
Population
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Highway 403

Chedoke Expressway

1963

Hwy 401 near Woodstock

Hwy 24 in Brantford
Linc in Hamilton
QEW/Hwy 407 in Burlington
Hwy 401/Hwy 410 in Mississauga

Ontario provincial highways
< Hwy 402

400-series

..... Read more.
Downtown Toronto is the heart of the City of Toronto, Ontario, Canada. It is approximately bounded by Bloor Street (including areas slightly north of Bloor around Yonge Street) to the north, Lake Ontario to the south, Bayview Avenue - Don Valley Parkway to the east, and Bathurst
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Don Valley Parkway

DVP

1960s - completed 1966

North/South Map
Gardiner Expressway, Toronto, Ontario

Highway 401 & Highway 404, Toronto, Ontario

Toronto, Ontario

The Don Valley Parkway (generally referred to as the "
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Highway 404

1977

Hwy 401/DVP in Toronto

RR 19 near Newmarket

Ontario provincial highways
< Hwy 403

400-series
Highway 404 is a 400-Series Highway in Ontario, Canada.
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