16 Avenue NW The Trans-Canada Highway in Alberta originates at the
British Columbia border, where it proceeds east through
Banff National Park to Calgary and becomes 16 Avenue NW. It enters the city as a freeway and remains as such through the far western portions. It first intersects
Valley Ridge Boulevard /
Crestmont Boulevard before a major interchange at the
Stoney Trail (Highway 201) ring road. Signage recommending that traffic en route to the
International Airport,
Edmonton, and
Medicine Hat use Stoney Trail as a bypass. It continues past
Canada Olympic Park to an intersection at Bowfort Road, where construction of a
single point urban interchange was completed on August 31, 2017. It passes along the southern boundary of the former town of
Bowness and begins to descend into the Bow River valley where it intersects
Sarcee Trail, an expressway providing a bypass option to
Highway 2 south. 16 Avenue NW transitions from a freeway to a four-lane urban arterial road as it crosses the Bow River and the CPR mainline tracks. Between the city limits and Sarcee Trail, 16 Avenue NW separates the northwest and southwest quadrants of Calgary. After crossing the Bow River, 16 Avenue NW passes through the former village of
Montgomery after which it becomes a short expressway that crosses Bowness Road (signed as Memorial Drive for eastbound traffic),
Shaganappi Trail, and exits the Bow River valley. It passes the
Alberta Children's Hospital and
Foothills Medical Centre before crossing University Drive, which provides access to the
University of Calgary,
McMahon Stadium, and access to southbound Crowchild Trail. After crossing Crowchild Trail, it becomes a six-lane urban arterial road with numerous signalized intersections and extensive, increasingly dense commercial development. It passes Motel Village, a cluster of motels which were constructed due to its proximity to the Trans-Canada Highway, which is accessible via a signalized service road and Banff Trail, which also doubles as the access road northbound Crowchild Trail. It passes by
North Hill Centre (Calgary's first shopping mall),
14 Street NW, and
Southern Alberta Institute of Technology (SAIT) continuing east and intersects Centre Street, leaving the northwest quadrant. before leaving Calgary and heading east towards
Chestermere, Medicine Hat, and the
Saskatchewan border. == History ==