Hurontario Street Main Street Centre Road |
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Highway 10 Simcoe County Road 124 |
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Hurontario St. within Mississauga
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Route information | |||||||
Maintained by City of Mississauga City of Brampton Ontario Ministry of Transportation Town of Orangeville Town of Mono Township of Mulmur Simcoe County Town of Collingwood |
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Existed: | 1818 – present | ||||||
Major junctions | |||||||
South end: | Lakeshore Road in Missisauga | ||||||
Queen Elizabeth Way Queensway Dundas Street Burnhamthorpe Road Highway 403 Eglinton Avenue Highway 401 Highway 407 Steeles Avenue Queen Street Bovaird Drive Highway 410 Highway 9 Highway 89 ------ Name/Course break ------ Resumes at/as Simcoe Road 124 near Glen Huron Simcoe Road 91 Highway 26 (First/Huron Streets) |
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North end: | Side Launch Way in Collingwood | ||||||
Location | |||||||
Divisions: |
Peel Dufferin Simcoe |
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Major cities: |
Mississauga Brampton |
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Towns: |
Caledon Orangeville Mono Collingwood |
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Highway system | |||||||
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Hurontario Street is a roadway running in Ontario, Canada between Lake Ontario at Mississauga and Lake Huron's Georgian Bay at Collingwood. Within the cities of Mississauga and Brampton, it is a major urban thoroughfare, which serves as the divide from which street numbering is split into east and west except at its foot in the historic Mississauga neighbourhood of Port Credit. Provincial Highway 10 utilizes the road through the rural Town of Caledon as far north as Orangeville. The highway designation formerly continued south through Brampton and Mississauga, but the highway was downloaded through both cities in 1997 due to its increasingly urbanized nature and the presence of the 400-series Highways 410 and 403.