Highway 129 (Ontario)
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| Highway 129 |
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| Maintained by the Ministry of Transportation | |||||||||||||
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| North end: | Chapleau | ||||||||||||
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Highway 129 is a provincial highway in the Canadian province of Ontario. Located in the Algoma and Sudbury districts, the highway extends for 221 kilometres (137 miles) from a junction with Highway 17 at Thessalon to the township of Chapleau just north of Highway 101.
The highway is one of the most isolated in Ontario and among the least-used of the King's Highways. Although the highway is an important access route for several isolated communities, including Little Rapids, Sultan, Kormak and Nemegos, as well as provincial parks such as Aubrey Falls, Five Mile Lake and Wakami Lake, the only community located directly on the highway's route between its termini is Wharncliffe. Services are few and far between on the highway.
Highway 129 is quite substandard in many areas, resembling a secondary highway or low-volume county road with narrow pavement, sharp corners, steep vertical grades and even uncontrolled one-lane bridges. However, due to very low traffic volumes, there is no real demand for upgrades.
Until the early 1980s, this road was also given the Trans-Canada Highway designation, as the "Chapleau Route", being an alternate route to Highways 17, 101, and 144.
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