Highway 14 | ||||
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West Coast (Sooke) Highway | ||||
Route information | ||||
Length: | 103 km (64 mi) | |||
Existed: | 1953 – present | |||
Major junctions | ||||
East end: | BC 1 in Langford | |||
West end: | Government Wharf in Port Renfrew | |||
Highway system | ||||
British Columbia provincial highways
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British Columbia provincial highways
Highway 14, named the West Coast (Sooke) Highway, is the southernmost numbered route in the province of British Columbia. An east-west highway on the southwestern coast of Vancouver Island in the Capital Regional District, it is sometimes known as the Juan de Fuca Highway, as well as Sooke Road, Sooke being one of the largest communities that the highway passes through. Highway 14 first opened in 1953, extending west from Colwood, a suburb of Victoria, to the coastal community of Jordan River, and was extended all the way west to the remote community of Port Renfrew by 1975. The highway's eastern terminus was relocated to northern Langford in 2002.
Outside of urban areas the route has exceptionally winding, curving and hilly stretches. Some of the sharper corners have oversized, freeway-style, jersey barriers instead of the more typical steel crash rails, mostly to prevent an out-of-control vehicle from falling off a cliff into the Pacific Ocean. These crash barriers show signs of many collisions, occasionally decorated with "X crashed here!" or a target painted around a particular collision mark on the wall. Some bridges are single lane and were built corduroy road style.