Manitoba Provincial Road 247

Provincial Road 247 (PR 247) is a 68.2-kilometre-long (42.4 mi) east-west highway in the Central Plains and Eastman regions of Manitoba, Canada. It serves to connect the hamlets of Elm Creek, Sanford, La Salle, and Howden, including two crossings of the La Salle River. The majority of the highway is gravel.

Provincial Road 247 marker
Provincial Road 247
Route information
Maintained by Department of Infrastructure
Length68.2 km (42.4 mi)
Existed1966–present
Major junctions
West end PTH 2 in Elm Creek
Major intersections PTH 3 / PR 334 in Sanford
PR 330 in La Salle
East end PTH 75 in Howden
Location
CountryCanada
ProvinceManitoba
Rural municipalitiesGrey, Macdonald, Ritchot
Highway system
PR 246 PR 248

Route description

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PR 247 begins along the eastern edge of Elm Creek at an intersection with PTH 2 (Red Coat Trail) in the Rural Municipality of Grey. It heads south as a gravel road along the eastern edge of Elm Creek for a couple kilometres before leaving town and making a sharp left turn. The highway travels through rural farmland for several kilometres, having an intersection with PR 248 just south of Fannystelle before entering the Rural Municipality of Macdonald. PR 247 has an intersection with Allison Road 10W, which leads to nearby Starbuck Airport, before crossing the Morris River, making a sharp left turn, and having a short concurrency (overlap) with PR 332 just south of Starbuck. The highway becomes paved and concurrent with PR 334 as it enters Sanford, crossing a railroad track and passing through downtown along Mandan Drive. They make a sharp right turn at an intersection with Main Street before PR 247 joins PTH 3, with PR 334 continuing south towards Domain.

PR 247 formerly continued along Mandan Drive to cross its own bridge over the La Salle River and meet PTH 3 at its own intersection prior to 2016, when that bridge (built in 1921) was suddenly closed and later demolished without prior announcement.[1][2][3]

PTH 3 / PR 247 cross the La Salle River, leaving Sanford with PR 247 splitting off and heading east as a gravel road shortly thereafter. It travels through rural farmland for several kilometres, crossing a small creek before becoming paved as it goes through a switchback to cross the La Salle River a second time. Entering the town of La Salle, the highway travels through neighbourhoods before having a short concurrency with PR 330 (Rue Principale) in downtown. PR 247 leaves town to travel through a switchback before entering the Rural Municipality of Ritchot. The highway comes to an end shortly thereafter at an intersection with PTH 75 (Lord Selkirk Highway) along the western edge of Howden. The entire length of Provincial Road 247 is a two-lane road.[4][5]

Major intersections

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DivisionLocationkmmiDestinationsNotes
GreyElm Creek0.00.0  PTH 2 (Red Coat Trail) – Elm Creek, WinnipegWestern terminus
0.50.31Church Avenue E – Elm Creek
16.410.2  PR 248 – Fannystelle
Macdonald23.014.3  Allison Road 10W – Starbuck Airport
27.517.1Bridge over the Morris River
29.618.4  PR 332 north – StarbuckWestern end of PR 332 concurrency
32.920.4  PR 332 south – BrunkildEastern end of PR 332 concurrency
41.125.5  PR 334 north – SpringsteinWestern end of PR 334 concurrency
Sanford42.326.3Mandan Drive / Main StreetPR 247 formerly continued along Mandan Drive until 2016
43.126.8  PTH 3 west – Brunkild
  PR 334 south – Domain
Eastern end of PR 334 concurrency; western end of PTH 3 concurrency
43.3–
43.4
26.9–
27.0
Bridge over the La Salle River
44.627.7Mandan DriveFormer PR 247
46.428.8  PTH 3 east – WinnipegEastern end of PTH 3 concurrency
La Salle55.234.3Bridge over the La Salle River
57.735.9  PR 330 south (Rue Principale) – MorrisWestern end of PR 330 concurrency
58.336.2  PR 330 north (Rue Principale) – WinnipegEastern end of PR 330 concurrency
RitchotHowden68.242.4  PTH 75 (Lord Selkirk Highway) – Winnipeg, EmersonEastern terminus
1.000 mi = 1.609 km; 1.000 km = 0.621 mi

References

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  1. ^ Global News. "Sudden and permanent bridge closure leaves Sanford residents frustrated". Retrieved 26 June 2024.
  2. ^ Canadian Broadcasting Corporation (CBC). "'Expanding deterioration' shuts down LaSalle bridge". Retrieved 26 June 2024.
  3. ^ Winnipeg Free Press (6 April 2018). "Local residents support bridge replacement". Retrieved 26 June 2024.
  4. ^ Government of Manitoba. "Official Highway Map of Manitoba section 2" (PDF). Retrieved 26 June 2024.
  5. ^ Government of Manitoba. "Official Highway Map of Manitoba section 3" (PDF). Retrieved 26 June 2024.