Between Stratford and Kitchener, Highway8 is concurrent with Highway 7. The two highways widen into a four-lane freeway east of New Hamburg, eventually becoming the Conestoga Parkway within Kitchener, where it splits with Highway7. It follows a short connector freeway – known as the Freeport Diversion, King Street Bypass, or Highway 8 expressway – south to Highway 401. The route continues as the locally maintained Regional Road 8 (King Street East) through downtown Cambridge before resuming as a provincial highway at Branchton Road and soon after that entering the city of Hamilton. Highway8 ends east of Peters Corners at an intersection with Hamilton Road8.
Highway8 was one of the first roads assumed when the provincial highway system was established, though it was not numbered until 1925. The routes that predate the highway, including the Huron Road, and the Queenston Stone Road, were established during the settlement of Southwestern Ontario between 1780 and 1830. These early trails served as the principal routes in the regions through which they passed and eventually became part of the provincial highway system circa 1918.
Route description
Highway8 is a 159.7-kilometre (99.2 mi) route that connects the shores of Lake Huron at Goderich with the head of Lake Ontario in Hamilton. Portions of the highway through Goderich, Clinton, Seaforth, Mitchell and Stratford are locally-maintained under a Connecting Link Agreement with the provincial government.[1][2]
Highway8 begins at its western terminus in downtown Goderich, at a junction with Highway 21, within Huron County. It exits the town travelling southeast as a rural two-lane highway running roughly parallel and south of the Maitland River, passing through farmland outside of the many small communities it serves. At Holmesville, the river moves northwards while the highway continues southeast, now parallel to and north of the Goderich–Exeter Railway. Soon after, it passes through Clinton, where it intersects the northern terminus of Highway 4. Highway8 is completely straight for approximately 50 kilometres (31 mi) between Clinton and Stratford. After bisecting Seaforth, the highway enters Perth County and passes through the communities of Dublin, Mitchell (where it intersects Highway 23) and Sebringville.[3][4]
Entering Stratford as Huron Street, Highway8 widens to four lanes. It crosses the Avon River, then turns east onto Ontario Street before encountering Highway7 at Erie Street.[4] The two routes become concurrent for the next 44.5 kilometres (27.7 mi), between Stratford and Kitchener. East of Stratford, the highway narrows back to two lanes and travels north of and parallel to the CN railway Guelph Subdivision. After passing through the village of Shakespeare, the route enters the Regional Municipality of Waterloo as it widens to four lanes and curves onto the New Hamburg Bypass. It travels south of New Hamburg and crosses the Nith River before becoming a divided four-lane freeway near Baden. At Trussler Road, the combined Highway7/8 enters the city of Kitchener, where it is known as the Conestoga Parkway.[3][4]
The Conestoga Parkway runs through Kitchener, widening to a six-lane freeway near Fischer Hallman Road. At King Street in the city's centre, Highway8 splits off southeastward at an interchange, while Highway7 continues along the Conestoga Parkway. Traffic on Highway8 heading northwest can continue under the Conestoga Parkway onto King Street into downtown Kitchener.[3][4]
Between the Conestoga Parkway and Highway401, Highway8 follows an eight-lane freeway known as the Freeport Diversion or Highway8 Expressway.[5][6]
The expressway initially travels southeast, passing under Franklin Street before swerving slightly south. It crosses over the Grand River at its midpoint, followed by a partial interchange with King Street East that provides access to Highway401 westbound to London. The expressway narrows to six lanes and later to four lanes at Sportsworld Drive. It merges to eastbound Highway401 and from westbound 401.[3][4]
The MTO maintains approximately 670 metres (2,198.2 ft) of King Street and Shantz Hill Road at the Highway401 interchange as an unsigned portion of Highway8.[7]
Within Cambridge, the route continues as Waterloo Regional Road 8 along Shantz Hill Road, Fountain Street, King Street, Coronation Boulevard, and Dundas Street.[8]
Highway8 resumes at Branchton Road, where it exits urban Cambridge into farmland travelling southeast. After approximately 3 kilometres (1.9 mi), the route enters Hamilton. It bypasses the communities of Sheffield and Rockton before eventually reaching Peters Corners, where it meets the western terminus of Highway5 at a multilane roundabout. Highway8 ends 200 metres (660 ft) to the east at an intersection with Hamilton Road8.[1][4]
History
Predecessors (1780–1918)
While its history as a provincial highway dates back to 1918, significant portions of the roads that would be taken over by the province and eventually designated as Highway8 had existed for nearly a century or longer. These include the Huron Road between Berlin (renamed Kitchener in 1916) and Goderich, which was built c. 1827;[9][10]
the Dundas and the Hamilton Stone Road that were established in 1819 along a trail blazed between Hamilton and Berlin in 1798;[11][12][13]
and the Queenston Road (later the Queenston Stone Road or the Queenston and Grimsby Stone Road[14][15]),
established along an aboriginal trail at the foot of the Niagara Escarpment in the 1780s.[12][16]
When settlers began arriving in the Niagara Peninsula following the American Revolution and the signing of the Treaty of Paris in 1783, natives were non-existent in the area, the local tribe having been ravaged over a century earlier. Trails crisscrossed the peninsula, with the dominant routes favouring an east–west orientation.[17] The most significant of these was the Iroquois Trail that traversed along the foot of the Niagara Escarpment. In the east, Queenston provided an ideal crossing of the Niagara River. In the west, the escarpment breaks at Dundas, where the trail continued towards the Grand River at present-day Brantford, thus providing a portage between Lake Ontario and Lake Erie. The Iroquois Trail was utilised by famous historical figures, including John Graves Simcoe in 1793 on his voyage to Detroit, as well as during the War of 1812.[16] It was widened to accommodate wagon traffic by 1785.[18]
Between approximately 1800 and 1820, large numbers of German and Dutch settlers from Pennsylvania travelled west across the Niagara Peninsula and onward to the Waterloo area.[19] A trail cut from Hamilton to the Grand River, at Galt, in 1798[13] or 1799,[20] was gradually widened to be fit for wagons by 1819.[20] While Niagara-on-the-Lake served as the initial focal point of settlement into southwestern Ontario, Hamilton emerged in 1816 at the head of Lake Ontario, and immediately became the new hub for settlers.[21] The route between Hamilton and Waterloo was improved to a stone road circa 1836.[22]
Over the years the route was known by various names, including the Waterloo Road, the Galt Road, the Old Dutch Road,[23] the Beverly Road,[20] and most often the Dundas and Hamilton Stone Road.[11]
Settlement beyond Waterloo was accomplished by the Canada Company, which acquired the Huron Tract in 1826.[24]
In order to implement the grand settlement plan, a trail was surveyed by Mahlon Burwell and William Dunlop from Guelph to Lake Huron at the mouth of the Maitland River beginning in 1827.[10] After company commissioner Thomas Mercer Jones rode the muddy trail from Guelph to Goderich in June 1829, he recommended that it be widened to four rods (20 metres (66 ft)),[25] which was done by the end of that year by Colonel Anthony Van Egmond.[26] The trail was further improved to allow for the passage of wagons by 1832.[10] The Canada Company venture would ultimately fail, but not before establishing the present-day settlement patterns.[27]
Designation and paving (1918–1949)
Until 1918, the majority of the primary roads through southern Ontario formed part of the County Road System. The Department of Public Works and Highways paid up to 60% of the construction and maintenance costs for these roads, while the counties were responsible for the remaining 40%.[28] The Ontario government passed an act in 1917 to permit the newly formed Department of Public Highways (DPHO) to take over (or assume) responsibility and upkeep of a provincial highway system. The initial system, between Windsor and Quebec, was bookended by branches to Niagara and Ottawa.[29]
The branch to Niagara would become the first provincial highway connection to the United States, and later become the easternmost portion of Highway8.[30]
The Hamilton–Queenston Highway was assumed as part of "The Provincial Highway" in August 1918.[31]
In 1919, the federal government passed the Canada Highways Act, which provided C$20,000,000 to provinces under the condition that they establish an official highway network; up to 40% of construction costs would be subsidized. The first network plan was approved on February26, 1920, and included the Queenston Road.[32]
Most of the remainder of what would become Highway8 – from Goderich to Hamilton – was assumed by the department throughout July 1920.[33]
On October13, several roads were taken over by the province between St. David's near Queenston and the Whirlpool Rapids Bridge in Niagara Falls.[33] The new route followed the present Four Mile Creek Road, St. Paul Avenue, and Portage Road south to Thorold Stone Road, which it followed east to Stanley Avenue, thence south to Bridge Street.[34]
However, none of these roads would receive a route number until the summer of 1925.[35]
Initially Highway8 was almost entirely unpaved, except within towns and portions between Stratford and Shakespeare as well as between Kitchener and Hamilton. During the initial few years of the existence of the highway network, which were spent rebuilding culverts, bridges, and ditches, paving took a low priority. The first sections of Highway8 paved by the DPHO were in 1922 between Hamilton and Stoney Creek, as well as between Sebringville and Stratford.[36]
The rest of the highway between Hamilton and Niagara Falls, as well as the remaining gaps between Kitchener and Hamilton, were paved the following year. Work was completed between Shakespeare and New Hamburg, as well as on the gaps between Petersburg and Kitchener in 1924. In 1925, paving between Mitchell and Sebringville was completed.[37]
At this time, Highway8 was paved from Mitchell to New Hamburg, and from Petersburg to Niagara Falls.[38]
In 1926, paving was completed for 10 kilometres (6 mi) southeast of Goderich, as well as between Dublin and Mitchell. The following year, it was completed on the remaining gap between Goderich and Clinton, as well as between Seaforth and Dublin.[39]
The final unpaved section of Highway8, between Clinton and Seaforth,[40]
was completed in 1928.[41]
Bypasses and the Conestoga Parkway (1949–1970)
Highway8 would remain unchanged for approximately 20years until bypasses of several cities and towns along the route were built. The first such bypass was in Kitchener, where until 1949, the highway travelled into and out of the downtown core along King Street and Queen Street before following Highland Road west towards Stratford.[42]
By 1950, to divert truck traffic from the King and Queen Street intersection, it was redirected slightly along Ottawa Street and Courtland Avenue.[43][44]
The New Hamburg Diversion opened in 1957, bypassing its namesake as well as the community of Baden. The original route – following Huron Street, Waterloo Street, and Snyder's Street West – met the new bypass at Gingerich Road east of Baden.[45][46][47]
Farther east, two bypasses were constructed around the villages of Rockton and Sheffield beginning in 1958 that opened the following year.[47][48][49][50]
Within Hamilton, growing congestion in the 1950s led the city to hire American traffic engineer Wilbur Smith, who had made a business of consulting for cities to develop one-way street plans.[51]
Smith proposed a complete reorganisation of the downtown area, including converting Main Street – which Highway8 followed through the city[52]
– to an eastbound one-way. King Street served the opposing direction in the one-way pairing. The switch from two-way to one-way traffic took place on October28, 1956. It immediately drew condemnation from local businesses, which saw a significant reduction in customers. A special council meeting to discuss the matter was held on July15, 1957, which drew a large public audience. At it, alderman Ramsey Evans, a member of the committee that had first suggested the one-way conversion, sought to undo it. The motion was defeated, and Main Street and King Street remain one-way streets.[51]
In the fall of 1961, the Department of Highways began construction of the Freeport Diversion, providing a new divided highway crossing of the Grand River. The diversion, connecting with King Street south of the Grand River and at Fergus Street, was completed in 1963.[53][54][55]
Although the concept of a ring road around Kitchener and Waterloo originated from the Kitchener-Waterloo and Suburban Planning Board in 1948,[56][57]
actual consideration was not given to it until it was recommended by a 1961 traffic study.[58]
By then, the opening of Highway401 was attracting business away from the rapidly growing twin cities. Land was gradually purchased over the intervening years and picked up considerably when plans for the expressway system were first raised in late 1962.[56]
The provincial government reached a funding arrangement with Kitchener and Waterloo to cover 75% of the expected C$22 million cost, and officially announced the Kitchener–Waterloo Expressway on May21, 1964.[59]
The province eventually took over authority for the entire project in August 1965.[60]
Construction of the Kitchener–Waterloo Expressway began in February 1966 with the awarding of a C$3 million contract to rebuild 2.7 kilometres (1.7 mi) of King Street into a four lane divided highway from Fairway Road (renamed from Block Line Road) to Doon Road,[61]
including the half cloverleaf interchange that would serve the western and northern legs of the expressway system.[62]
In the mid-to-late 1960s, Highway8 was redirected along Fairway Road, Mill Street (now Vanier Drive) and a new road named Henry Sturm Boulevard that travelled east from Ottawa Street and Highland Road to Mill Street.[63]
The expressway was renamed the Conestoga Parkway in January 1967, after being chosen by a joint committee from a shortlist of 12 publicly-submitted names.[64]
The reconstruction of King Street was completed and opened in November 1967.[65]
Construction began several months later in October on a C$3.6 million contract to build a 2.9-kilometre (1.8 mi) segment of the parkway from King Street to west of Homer Watson Boulevard.[66]
This section, which was built along the alignment of Henry Strum Boulevard, was opened to traffic between Courtland Avenue and King Street on November25, 1968,[67][68]
at which point the Highway8 designation was redirected along King Street and the Conestoga Parkway to Homer Watson Boulevard, via Henry Strum Boulevard, and onto Highland Road.[67][69]
Transfers and expressway extensions (1970–1997)
During the 1960s, the Department of Highways undertook several regional transportation studies to determine traffic patterns, which had changed significantly since the highway network was established in the 1920s. Among these was the Niagara Peninsula Planning Study, released in 1964. It indicated that several highways were no longer provincially significant, and responsibility for them should be transferred to local government. Having largely been supplanted by the Queen Elizabeth Way, opened in the 1940s, the winding route of Highway8 east of Winona was transferred to the new Regional Municipality of Niagara on September1, 1970.[70][71]
The region designated the former highway as Regional Road81.[72]
Meanwhile, work continued on the Conestoga Parkway in the early 1970s, with a section between Courtland Avenue and Fischer-Hallman Drive opening on September1, 1971.[67][73]
Around this time, construction was underway on a new two lane alignment of Highway7/8, first announced in 1963, to connect the New Hamburg Diversion with the Conestoga Parkway. It opened on August13, 1973, bypassing Baden; the former alignment east of New Hamburg is now known as Gingerich Road.[3][74][75]
During the mid-1970s, proposals for a Highway8 bypass of Cambridge were floated, but never gained traction.[76]
Although the proposal was shelved in 1988,[77]
the bypass idea was briefly revived as a result of recommendations in the Cambridge Area Transportation Study, released in June 1992. It recommended construction of a C$54.5 million bypass of Highway8 around the west side of Cambridge, from Highway401 to south of the city. The proposal faced public backlash due to the cost as well as environmental concerns of crossing the Grand River and five environmentally sensitive areas.[78]
Following the completion of an environmental assessment in 1984,[79]
construction began by 1985 on a new 3.3-kilometre (2.1 mi) freeway link between the Freeport Diversion and Highway401, which was known as Highway8 New during construction.[80]
Highway8 New was completed by 1988, and received the non-public designation Highway7187, since the Highway8 designation continued along King Street East and Shantz Hill Road towards Cambridge. However, in 2008, Highway8 was rerouted along the 3.3-kilometre (2.1 mi) freeway segment, while King Street East and Shantz Hill Road were re-designated as Waterloo Regional Road8.[81][82]
The province continues to maintain approximately 670 metres (2,198.2 ft) of Waterloo Regional Road8 at the Highway401 interchange as an unsigned portion of Highway.8.[83]
The two lane segment of Highway 7/8 from Fischer-Hallman Road west to Baden was originally slated to be twinned to four lanes in the 1980s, but the project was put off for a decade. Early works tree clearing got underway in 1991 before the project was put on hold for archeological excavations.[84][85][86]
Construction began to widen the route as far west as Waterloo Regional Road12 (Queen Street), south of Petersburg, on July6, 1992, with a planned completion by August 1993.[87]
Budget constraints brought on by a recession in the 1990s resulted in the Mike Harris provincial government forming the Who Does What? committee to determine cost-cutting measures in order to balance the budget after a deficit incurred by former premier Bob Rae.[88]
It was determined that many Ontario highways no longer served long-distance traffic movement and should therefore be maintained by local or regional levels of government. The MTO consequently transferred many highways to lower levels of government in 1997 and 1998, which resulted in the removal of a significant percentage of the provincial highway network.[89][90]
As a result of this, the portion of Highway8 east of Highway5 at Peters Corners, through Dundas, Hamilton and Stoney Creek, was transferred to the Regional Municipality of Hamilton–Wentworth on April1, 1997. A 2.3-kilometre (1.4 mi) section of King Street in Kitchener, from north of the Highway401 interchange to the Freeport Diversion, was also transferred on that day to the Regional Municipality of Waterloo.[91][92]
Since 1997
In the early 1990s, the provincial government announced plans to widen the Conestoga Parkway and Freeport Diversion, as well as to improve the interchange between the two.[93]
The project was broken into several phases, and included rebuilding the Ottawa Street and Franklin Street overpasses.[94]
Construction began in August or September 1998 to widen the Conestoga Parkway from four to six lanes between Courtland Avenue and King Street.[95]
It was completed, along with widening of the parkway between King Street and Frederick Street, in July 2000.[96]
The expansion of Highway8 from four lanes to eight lanes between the Conestoga Parkway and Fergus Avenue was originally scheduled to begin in 2001, but was delayed as businesses along Weber Street fought expropriation.[97]
Construction instead began in April 2002, which involved shifting one of the retaining walls further north and a new Franklin Street bridge to accommodate the eight lane cross-section freeway. Included with this project was a reconstruction of the bottle-necked interchange of the Conestoga Parkway and Highway8, including a new flyover ramp from westbound Conestoga Parkway to eastbound Highway8 to replace one of the two loop ramps, and realignment of the northbound to eastbound ramp.[98]
Both were completed and opened on June11, 2004.[99]
Work began on the next phase, widening Highway8 from four to eight lanes from Fergus Avenue to northwest of the Grand River, in April 2006. This work included rebuilding the Fairway Road interchange.[100]
Construction to twin Highway8 over the Grand River and widen it northwest of the Sportsworld Drive interchange began in the summer of 2009, following the relocation of approximately 50 Wavy-rayed lampmussel, considered a species at risk in Canada.[101][102]
Both projects were completed and opened, except for one westbound lane over the Grand River, in November 2011; the fourth westbound lane was opened the following year.[103]
An operational and safety review of the three intersections at Peters Corners near Hamilton was undertaken in February 2001. Studies, including an environmental assessment were conducted between 2004 and 2009, and settled upon a roundabout as the ideal replacement, with traffic signals at the two intersections with Westover Road.[104]
Construction began in the spring of 2012,[104] and the C$6.3 million roundabout was opened on September25, 2012.[105]
Future
The interchange between the Freeport Diversion and Highway401 is incomplete, providing access only between eastbound Highway8 and eastbound Highway401, and between westbound Highway401 and westbound Highway8.[106]
Although a detailed design for two additional ramps to provide access to and from the west to Highway8 was prepared in 2010, there is no schedule or funding as of 2021 for this work.[107][108]
The following table lists the major junctions along Highway 8, as noted by the Ministry of Transportation of Ontario. Highway 8 is maintained under a Connecting Link agreement within Goderich, Clinton, Seaforth, Mitchell, and Stratford.[2]
Eastbound exit and westbound entrance; continuation from Highway 8 west; Highway 8 formerly exited Freeport Diversion and followed King Street (present-day Regional Road 8 east)
Highway 403 exits 69 & 70; one-way transition where eastbound follows Main Street and westbound follows King Street; present-day Highway 403 / Highway 6 concurrency
^Annual Report (Report) (1963 ed.). Department of Highways. March 31, 1963. p. 7. Archived from the original on March 2, 2022. Retrieved February 7, 2022.
^Swayze, Kevin (August 19, 2005). "Massive road work chugs along; Building tunnel under train tracks biggest project tackled by region". The Record. p. B1. ProQuest358936288(subscription required). The $14.7- million job started in June and involves road widenings, a tunnel under CP Rail tracks serving Toyota and new access ramps to the Highway 8 expressway.
^"Regional Roads By Name"(PDF). Region of Waterloo. October 19, 2016. pp. 2, 3, 5. Archived(PDF) from the original on December 22, 2021. Retrieved February 8, 2022.
^"III. Provincial Highways". Annual Report (Report) (1918 ed.). Department of Public Highways. April 11, 1919. p. 13. Retrieved February 15, 2022 – via Internet Archive.
^"Plan Showing Provincial Highways Assumed in the Province of Ontario in 1919". Annual Report (Report) (1920 ed.). Department of Public Highways. April 26, 1921. p. 41. Retrieved February 15, 2022 – via Internet Archive.
^"Hamilton–Queenston Road". Annual Report (Report) (1919 ed.). Department of Public Highways. p. 16. Retrieved February 15, 2022 – via Internet Archive.
^Shragge, John; Bagnato, Sharon (1984). From Footpaths to Freeways. Ontario Ministry of Transportation and Communications, Historical Committee. pp. 73–75. ISBN0-7743-9388-2.
^ abAnnual Report (Report) (1920 ed.). Department of Public Highways. April 26, 1921. pp. 42–45. Retrieved February 17, 2022.
^Niagara, Ontario. Map Sheet 30 M/03 (Map) (1930 ed.). 1:63,360. Cartography by General Staff, Geographical Section. Department of National Defence. 1906. Archived from the original on August 13, 2022. Retrieved March 1, 2022 – via Scholars GeoPortal.
^"Provincial Highways Now Being Numbered". The Canadian Engineer. 49 (8). Monetary Times Print: 246. August 25, 1925. Numbering of the various provincial highways in Ontario has been commenced by the Department of Public Highways. Resident engineers are now receiving metal numbers to be placed on poles along the provincial highways. These numbers will also be placed on poles throughout cities, towns and villages, and motorists should then have no trouble in finding their way in and out of urban municipalities. Road designations from "2" to "17" have already been allotted...
^Annual Report (Report) (1922 ed.). Department of Public Highways. May 28, 1923. pp. 12–14. Retrieved March 1, 2022.
^Annual Report (Report) (1923, 1924 and 1925 ed.). Department of Public Highways. April 26, 1926. pp. 66–68. Retrieved March 2, 2022.
^Ontario Road Map (Map) (1925 ed.). Department of Public Highways of Ontario. Archived from the original on January 29, 2022. Retrieved February 17, 2022 – via Archives of Ontario.
^Annual Report (Report) (1926 and 1927 ed.). Department of Public Highways. March 1, 1929. pp. 22–24. Retrieved February 23, 2022.
^Ontario Road Map (Map) (1928 ed.). Cartography by D. Barclay. Department of Public Highways of Ontario. § D5. Archived from the original on March 4, 2022. Retrieved February 17, 2022 – via Archives of Ontario.
^"Provincial Highway Construction, 1928". Annual Report (Report) (1928 and 1929 ed.). Department of Public Highways. March 3, 1931. p. 21. Retrieved February 27, 2022.
^Ontario Road Map (Map) (1949 ed.). Cartography by C. P. Robins. Department of Highways of Ontario. Waterloo / Kitchener inset. Archived from the original on March 1, 2022. Retrieved February 27, 2022 – via Archives of Ontario.
^Ontario Road Map (Map) (1950 ed.). Cartography by C. P. Robins. Department of Highways of Ontario. Waterloo / Kitchener inset. Archived from the original on March 1, 2022. Retrieved February 27, 2022 – via Archives of Ontario.
^Stratford, Ontario. Map Sheet 40 P/7 (Map) (1938 ed.). 1:63,360. Cartography by General Staff, Geographical Section. Department of National Defence. 1927. Archived from the original on August 13, 2022. Retrieved March 1, 2022 – via Scholars GeoPortal.
^"District No. 3—Stratford". Annual Report (Report). Department of Public Highways. April 15, 1958. p. 47. Archived from the original on August 13, 2022. Retrieved March 1, 2022.
^ abOntario Road Map (Map) (1958 ed.). Cartography by C. P. Robins. Department of Highways of Ontario. § T31. Archived from the original on March 1, 2022. Retrieved February 28, 2022 – via Archives of Ontario.
^Ontario Road Map (Map) (1959 ed.). Cartography by C. P. Robins. Department of Highways of Ontario. § T31–32. Archived from the original on March 1, 2022. Retrieved February 28, 2022 – via Archives of Ontario.
^Ontario Road Map (Map) (1960 ed.). Cartography by C. P. Robins. Department of Highways of Ontario. § T32. Archived from the original on November 29, 2021. Retrieved February 28, 2022 – via Archives of Ontario.
^Ontario Road Map (Map) (1957 ed.). Cartography by C. P. Robins. Department of Highways of Ontario. Hamilton inset. Archived from the original on March 5, 2022. Retrieved March 5, 2022 – via Archives of Ontario.
^Outhit, Jeff (March 8, 2002). "Freeport Bridge to get $1.6-million overhaul". The Record. p. B1. ProQuest266974851(subscription required).
^Annual Report (Report). Ontario Department of Highway. March 31, 1962. p. 32. Archived from the original on March 16, 2022. Retrieved March 6, 2022. Work on the dual highway diversion of Highway 8 at Freeport, with structures, was begun in the fall of 1961.
^Annual Report (Report). Ontario Department of Highway. March 31, 1963. p. 31. Archived from the original on March 16, 2022. Retrieved March 6, 2022.
^ ab"Expect Expressway Opening Soon". Waterloo Chronicle. December 13, 1962. pp. 1, 4. Archived from the original on March 4, 2022. Retrieved March 4, 2022 – via Waterloo Public Library.
^"Expressway Has Top Priority". Waterloo Chronicle. February 14, 1963. p. 1. Archived from the original on March 4, 2022. Retrieved March 4, 2022 – via Waterloo Public Library.
^"Expressway Unveiled For Kitchener Region". The Globe and Mail. May 22, 1964. p. 4. ProQuest1282688633(subscription required).
^"D Of H Take Over K-W Expressway". Waterloo Chronicle. August 11, 1965. p. 3. Archived from the original on March 4, 2022. Retrieved March 4, 2022 – via Waterloo Public Library.
^"Choose Name For Expressway". Waterloo Chronicle. January 25, 1967. p. 1. Archived from the original on March 4, 2022. Retrieved March 4, 2022 – via Waterloo Public Library.
^Annual Report (Report). Ontario Department of Highway. March 31, 1968. p. 10. In November the first major contract for the Kitchener-Waterloo Expressway, a two-mile section of King Street in Kitchener, was completed.
^ abcThompson, Bill (2014). "Commencement of Construction for the Expressway". The Conestoga Parkway vision to reality: with some stories and events along the way. Pandora Print Shop. p. 61.
^"No Fanfare As X-way Link Opens". The Record. November 25, 1968.
^Ontario Road Map (Map) (1970 ed.). Cartography by Photogrammetry Office. Department of Highways of Ontario. Waterloo / Kitchener inset. Archived from the original on October 7, 2021. Retrieved March 5, 2022 – via Archives of Ontario.
^Planning Branch (1964). Niagara Peninsula Planning Study (Report). Department of Highways.
^"Appendix 17 – Schedule of Reversions and Transfers of Sections of the King's Highway and Secondary Highway Systems for the fiscal Year Ending March 31, 1971". Annual Report (Report). Department of Highways. March 31, 1971. p. 153.
^Ontario Road Map (Map) (1980/81 ed.). Cartography by Cartography Section, Surveys and Plans Office. Ministry of Transportation and Communications. South-Central Ontario inset. Archived from the original on March 6, 2022. Retrieved March 5, 2022 – via Archives of Ontario.
^"All X-Way Open Now". The Record. September 1, 1971.
^"X-way link to Hamburg opens today". The Record. August 13, 1973.
^"Consistency the Key". Waterloo Chronicle. March 13, 1974. p. 4. Archived from the original on March 5, 2022. Retrieved March 4, 2022 – via Waterloo Public Library.
^Aagaard, Christian (May 12, 1999). "New roads overdue, residents complain". The Record. p. B01. ProQuest275682678(subscription required).
^Danard, Susan (June 17, 1992). "Highway 8 bypass plan opposed in Cambridge". Kitchener - Waterloo Record. p. B3. ProQuest275395985(subscription required).
^Ibbitson, John (February 1, 1997). "Rough roads ahead under Tories: Experts fear Ontario's plan to turn over local highways to municipalities could lead to the demise of the road system". The Ottawa Citizen. p. E.10. ProQuest240087831(subscription required).
^Highway Transfers List (Report). Ministry of Transportation of Ontario. April 1, 1997. pp. 2–3.
^"Region forced to assume responsibility for highway". The Record. July 4, 1996. p. B3. (subscription required).
^Crone, Greg (February 11, 1992). "Province must find alternative to road widening, Wagner says". The Record. p. B2. ProQuest275282812(subscription required).
^Crowley, Kevin (February 13, 1998). "Parkway plans miff neighbors". The Record. p. B1. ProQuest275522021(subscription required).
^Goodwin, Carol (July 21, 2000). "Overpass woes will blossom in spring". The Record. p. B01. ProQuest266880910(subscription required).
^Burtt, Bob (October 12, 2001). "Highway 8 project on back burner". The Record. p. A01. ProQuest266960877(subscription required).
^Caldwell, Brian (April 27, 2002). "Highway bottleneck surgery starts". The Record. p. A1. ProQuest266981212(subscription required).
^"Enjoy the ride". The Record. June 10, 2004. p. A12. ProQuest267094832(subscription required). It cost $29 million and took three years of construction work, but the most loathed and clearly one of the most dangerous interchanges in Waterloo Region is being closed and replaced by a new flyover. If the weather co-operates, this two-lane, 800-metre long engineering marvel which boasts its own automatic, de-icing system will open in time for tomorrow morning's rush hour.
^Outhit, Jeff (May 23, 2009). "Mussels must be relocated before Hwy. 8 expansion finished". Waterloo Region Record. p. B.1. ProQuest267284068(subscription required).
^ ab"Gonna Go 'Round in Circles". Road Talk. Vol. 19, no. 2. Ministry of Transportation of Ontario. Archived from the original on March 6, 2022. Retrieved March 6, 2022.
^ abc"Sheet 030M03A" (Map). Niagara Falls [Ontario, New York] (2 ed.). 1:25000. Cartography by Canadian Army Survey Establishment. Mapping Branch of the Department of Energy, Mines and Resources, Government of Canada. 1963.
Bibliography
Breithaupt, William Henry (1919). Seventh Annual Report(PDF) (Report). Waterloo Historical Society. Retrieved February 14, 2021.