Designated as Highway 16 in all four provinces it traverses, the Yellowhead Highway is an interprovincial route that runs from the Pacific coast of
British Columbia through Alberta and
Saskatchewan into
Manitoba, ending in Winnipeg. It enters Alberta at Yellowhead Pass, travelling east into the
Edmonton Capital Region as a four-lane rural divided highway that adopts the name "Yellowhead Trail" at 231 Street, marking the western Edmonton city limit. The first interchange within the city is a
diamond interchange at Winterburn Road; the divided highway then meets the
Anthony Henday Drive ring road at a large
combination interchange. Widening to six lanes, Yellowhead assumes the unsigned designation of northbound
Highway 2 from Henday and passes underneath 184 Street and over the
Canadian National Railway, veering slightly northeast into the Armstrong Industrial Area. It intersects
170 Street at another diamond interchange, then bends east past the Hawin Park Estate, and Dominion industrial areas of northwest Edmonton. After an interchange at 156 Street, a pair of one-way service roads begins, providing access to 149 Street and St. Albert Trail from both directions and 142 Street from eastbound, and the highway curves east. At the interchange with St. Albert Trail, the
concurrency with Highway 2 ends, carrying it north into
St. Albert; the western freeway-grade segment also ends there. East of St. Albert Trail, an expressway-grade segment ensues north of the
Sherbrooke and
Prince Charles neighbourhoods and the highway intersects 127 and 121 Streets at-grade, running between Canadian National's Walker Yard and a large area formerly occupied by the
Edmonton City Centre Airport. Following the railway corridor, it descends slightly to
single-point urban interchanges at 97 and 82 Streets. At
Elmwood Park the route curves southeast to intersect Wayne Gretzky Drive and
Fort Road; the former is an expressway that proceeds south across the river toward downtown while the latter becomes Manning Drive and later
Highway 15 to the north. Meanwhile, Yellowhead Trail crosses 66 Street at-grade prior to a diamond interchange at 50 Street. A freeway section ensues; the speed limit increases to as the road curves slightly southeast past
Beacon Heights en route to an interchange at
Victoria Trail before descending across the
North Saskatchewan River near
Beverly on the
Clover Bar and Beverly Bridges, each three lanes wide. Climbing from the river valley, the expressway crosses into Strathcona County which officially ends the Yellowhead Trail designation immediately west of a second large combination interchange with Anthony Henday Drive. Highway 16 continues past Sherwood Park toward
Lloydminster at the Saskatchewan border. ==History==