This section serves Manitoba's second largest city, Brandon. As noted in the Portage la Prairie section, this was the original route for PTH 1 through Brandon prior to 1959. PTH 1A is known as
1st Street north-south and
Victoria Avenue east-west inside the city limits, and maintains an east-west designation for the entire route. The route is often used by trucks and
buses to Brandon, as well as commuters and tourists and campers. The speed limit is mostly in the suburban area, and in the rural areas. The length of the highway is . Large trucks travelling eastbound are not permitted to travel on the rural section of PTH 1A between Brandon and the
Trans-Canada Highway near
Kemnay due to a very low
Canadian Pacific Railway bridge which passes over the highway just east of the small community; oversized trucks travelling westbound are rerouted on to a gravel road connecting PTH 1A and the Trans-Canada Highway less than east of the underpass. Not only is the height of the bridge over the highway substandard with an overhead clearance of , there is no shoulder on either side of the highway. These factors make for a very tight entry into this area for both eastbound and westbound motorists. Despite the efforts of the Manitoba government to prevent oversized trucks from attempting to travel under this bridge (which include flashing overhead signs alerting overheight vehicles of the bridge and other signs directing these vehicles to either turn around and/or detour), there are still numerous incidents of trucks either crashing into the bridge or getting stuck in the opening, causing extended closures of the route. Eastbound traffic on the Trans-Canada Highway encounters a sign advising vehicles above the 3.7m limit requiring access to Brandon to continue traveling on PTH 1 approximately before the junction. The highway received its current designation when PTH 1 was configured around Brandon in 1959. ==References==