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Portage and Main

Portage and Main
WinnipegPortageAndMain.jpg
Location
Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada
Coordinates: 49°53′44″N 97°08′18″W / 49.89545°N 97.13838°W / 49.89545; -97.13838
Roads at
junction:
Route 52 (Main Street)
Route 85 (Portage Avenue)
Route 57
Construction
Type: at-grade intersection
Opened: June 2, 1862 (1862-06-02)
Maintained by: City of Winnipeg Public Works

Portage and Main is an intersection in Winnipeg, Manitoba. It is located in the centre of downtown Winnipeg at the place where Portage Avenue (Route 85) and Main Street (Route 52) intersect. The corner is well-known across Canada as the "crossroads of Canada", due to its relative proximity to the longitudinal centre of Canada.

The land upon which Portage and Main sits was originally purchased by Henry McKenney on 2 June 1862. He chose land where the north-south and east-west ox cart paths crossed, in order to build a general store with his half-brother John Christian Schultz.

Portage and Main is now the hub of some of Winnipeg's main transportation routes. It was once the centre for the banking industry in Western Canada. The national banks have branches accessible from beneath Portage and Main. It has served as a temporary city square and meeting place for parades and events, including the Winnipeg General Strike of 1919.

In 1974, the intersection was featured on an 8-cent stamp.

In 1976, the City of Winnipeg signed an agreement with private developers to open an underground concourse linking shopping malls under the four corner properties. This included a 50-year deal to permanently close the pedestrian crossings at the intersection, which street works were completed around 1978. With that deal set to expire, city officials are negotiating an early re-opening of the intersection to pedestrians. The concourse and walkways are currently connected through the Winnipeg Skywalk. The Portage and Main Circus houses a concrete sculptural wall created by Bruce Head.

On 13 August 1981, Portage and Main was the place where Dale Hawerchuk signed his contract with the Winnipeg Jets and later was the location of the "Save the Jets" rallies in 1995 and 1996.


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Wikipedia

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