British Columbia Highway 18

Highway 18 is a short main vehicle route in the Cowichan Valley Regional District on Vancouver Island, connecting the city of Duncan on the Trans-Canada Highway with the community of Lake Cowichan, on the shore of Cowichan Lake.[2] The highway first opened to vehicle traffic in 1953, and was re-routed to a straighter and wider alignment in 1970. The speed limit along most of the highway is 100 km/h (62 mph).

Highway 18 marker
Highway 18
Cowichan Valley Highway
Map
Highway 18 highlighted in red
Route information
Maintained by the Ministry of Transportation and Infrastructure
Length26 km[1] (16 mi)
Existed1953–present
Major junctions
East end Highway 1 (TCH) in Duncan
West endYoubou Road in Lake Cowichan
Location
CountryCanada
ProvinceBritish Columbia
Highway system
Highway 17A Highway 19

In late 2006, drivers using Highway 18 experienced broken parts (such as windows with big shatter marks) on their cars, most of these came from loose rocks after passing other drivers. This generated anger and was called the "Sealcoat Job" because of the bad gravel sealcoating of the stretch to Duncan from the Cowichan Lake Road junction at Lake Cowichan by the new highway contractor company.

In early 2004, a proposal was brought forward to extend Highway 18 west from Lake Cowichan, all the way along existing logging roads to the community of Port Renfrew on the southwest coast of Vancouver Island, as a way of rerouting traffic from the northern part of the Island to Victoria in case of a bad accident or any other extraordinary event forcing a closure of the Malahat. The highway between Mesachie Lake and Port Renfrew is known as the Pacific Marine Circle Route.

Major intersections

edit

The entire route is in Cowichan Valley Regional District.

Locationkm[1]miDestinationsNotes
Lake Cowichan0.000.00Youbou RoadWestern terminus; road continues into downtown Lake Cowichan
Duncan25.7616.01  Highway 1 (TCH) – Nanaimo, VictoriaEastern terminus; road continues as Herd Road
1.000 mi = 1.609 km; 1.000 km = 0.621 mi

References

edit
KML is not from Wikidata
  1. ^ a b Landmark Kilometre Inventory (PDF). British Columbia Ministry of Transportation and Infrastructure (Report). Cypher Consulting. July 2022. pp. 354–355. Retrieved 2022-07-29.
  2. ^ Millette, Zoe (4 September 2017). "Take the Scenic Route to Cowichan: The Pacific Marine Circle". Cowichan. Tourism Cowichan. Retrieved April 12, 2019.