This page contains present day photos (Year 2000 to date) of Ontario's King's Highway 5, arranged by location from
Paris to Waterdown. All photographs displayed on this page were taken by the Webmaster (Cameron Bevers), unless specifically noted otherwise. Click on
any thumbnail to see a larger image!
Please note that all photographs displayed on this
website are protected by copyright. These photographs must not be reproduced, published,
electronically stored or copied, distributed, or posted onto other websites without
my written permission. If you want to use photos from this website, please
email me first for permission. Thank-you!
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Page 2: Present Day King's Highway 5 Photographs (Paris to Waterdown)
Left - Facing east along Hwy 5 approaching the Peters Corners Roundabout at the Junction of Hwy 8 & Hwy 52 near Dundas. (Photograph taken on October 4, 2012 - © Cameron Bevers) Right - Close-up of the guide sign on Eastbound Hwy 5 at the Peters Corners Roundabout. As a result of the new roundabout and corresponding highway realignments, the route of Hwy 8 was extended easterly for a few hundred metres, concurrently with Hwy 5. This was done to provide continuity in the route of Hwy 8 between Cambridge and the City of Hamilton-owned leg of Hwy 8 East leading to Dundas. (Photograph taken on October 4, 2012 - © Cameron Bevers)
Left - Entering the Peters Corners Roundabout on Eastbound Hwy 5. To follow Hwy 52 South to Copetown, motorists must stay in the right lane, while motorists
wishing to follow Hwy 8 West to Cambridge must stay in the left lane. Motorists heading to Dundas or Waterdown on Hwy 5 East & Hwy 8 East can utilize either
approach lane. Traffic entering the roundabout must first yield to circulating traffic in both lanes of the roundabout before proceeding. (Photograph taken on October 17, 2012 - © Cameron Bevers) Right - Facing west along Hwy 5 towards Paris from the central island of the new Peters Corners Roundabout. The roundabout was officially opened to traffic only minutes before this photo was taken on October 4, 2012. The new Peters Corners Roundabout is actually the Ministry of Transportation's third modern roundabout constructed on a provincial highway, but it is the first one to feature multiple entry lanes. See an Enlarged Photo Here. (Photograph taken on October 4, 2012 - © Cameron Bevers)
Left - The circulatory roadway at the Peters Corners Roundabout on Hwy 5 at Hwy 8 & Hwy 52 has been striped with two circulating lanes. Some North American
jurisdictions paint circulatory road zone markings within the roundabout, while others do not. (Photograph taken on October 17, 2012 - © Cameron Bevers) Right - Entering the Peters Corners Roundabout on Northbound Hwy 52. To follow Hwy 5 West to Paris, motorists must stay in the left lane, while motorists heading to Dundas or Waterdown on Hwy 5 East & Hwy 8 East must stay in the right lane. Motorists wishing to follow Hwy 8 West to Cambridge can utilize either approach lane. Traffic entering the roundabout must first yield to circulating traffic in both lanes of the roundabout before proceeding. See an Enlarged Photo Here. (Photograph taken on October 4, 2012 - © Cameron Bevers)
Left - Facing south along Hwy 52 towards Copetown from the central island of the new Peters Corners Roundabout. See an
Enlarged Photo Here. (Photograph taken on October 4, 2012 - © Cameron Bevers) Right - Green-and-white lane guidance sign on Westbound Hwy 5 at the Peters Corners Roundabout. The Ministry of Transportation elected to use green and white signs for lane indications on provincially-owned roundabouts, as they are not considered to be regulatory signs. Note the temporary Hwy 5 & Hwy 52 crown signs installed below the lane guidance sign. These two crown signs are technically not correct installations, but are merely in place temporarily to guide motorists until the permanent roadway identification guide sign is installed. At the time this photo was taken, the guide sign on the Westbound Hwy 5 & Hwy 8 approach had not yet been installed. It will be placed onto a large overhead sign structure. The channelized right turn lane on this approach carries traffic to Hwy 8 West. It is marked with a standard green turn-off guide sign. See an Enlarged Photo Here. (Photograph taken on October 17, 2012 - © Cameron Bevers)
Left - Facing east along Hwy 5 & Hwy 8 towards Waterdown from the central island of the new Peters Corners Roundabout. The concurrent route of Hwy 5
& Hwy 8 ends at the new traffic signal being installed in the background. At this point Former Hwy 8 East turns right towards Dundas, while Hwy 5 continues
east towards Waterdown and Burlington. Prior to the reconstruction of Peters Corners in 2012, Hwy 8 West and Hwy 8 East were one continuous roadway, crossing Hwy 5
at a badly-skewed intersection. Immediately adjacent to that intersection were two other crossroads which experienced frequent right-angle vehicle collisions. The new
Peters Corners Roundabout effectively eliminates the risk of a right-angle collision, in addition to providing much-needed capacity improvements at this busy highway
junction. See an Enlarged Photo Here. (Photograph taken on October 4, 2012 - © Cameron Bevers) Right - Turn-off to Hwy 8 West at the Peters Corners Roundabout. For capacity reasons, the through movement on Westbound Hwy 5 (at left) only required a single lane. (Photograph taken on October 17, 2012 - © Cameron Bevers)
Left - Facing west along Hwy 8 towards Cambridge from the central island of the new Peters Corners Roundabout. See an
Enlarged Photo Here. (Photograph taken on October 4, 2012 - © Cameron Bevers) Right - Circulating around the Peters Corners Roundabout, approaching the Hwy 5 West departure leg. The red paved area at left is a "truck apron", which was designed so that even oversized loads could be accommodated through the roundabout. Trucks carrying the giant windmill blades will be able to pass through, but will have to pass over the red truck apron in order to circulate around the central island. Truck operators carrying regular 53-foot trailers should not ordinarily have to use this truck apron. (Photograph taken on October 4, 2012 - © Cameron Bevers)
Left - Entering the Peters Corners Roundabout on Eastbound Hwy 8. To follow Hwy 52 South to Copetown or Hwy 5 West to Paris, motorists must stay in the right
lane. Motorists heading to Dundas or Waterdown on Hwy 5 East & Hwy 8 East can utilize either approach lane. Traffic entering the roundabout must first yield to
circulating traffic inside the roundabout before proceeding. The narrow space between the approach lanes is intended to give trucks more room to manoeuvre. It will
be striped out with diagonal chevron "hatch" markings before the construction contract is completed. (Photograph taken on October 17, 2012 - © Cameron Bevers) Right - Facing west along Hwy 5 towards Peters Corners at the Spencer Creek Bridge. (Photograph taken on October 21, 2005 - © Cameron Bevers)
Left - Northern side of the Spencer Creek Bridge. This bridge was originally built in the 1920s by the County of Wentworth, and was later assumed by the
Department of Highways when Hwy 5 was extended westerly from the Hwy 6 Junction at Clappison's Corners to the Hwy 8 Junction at Peters Corners in 1927. The bridge
was widened to its current width in 1954. (Photograph taken on October 21, 2005 - © Cameron Bevers) Right - Close-up of railing design on the Spencer Creek Bridge. Note the unusual concrete parapets at left. (Photograph taken on October 21, 2005 - © Cameron Bevers)
Left - Facing east along Hwy 5 towards Waterdown at the Spencer Creek Bridge. (Photograph taken on October 21, 2005 - © Cameron Bevers) Right - Southern side of the Spencer Creek Bridge on Hwy 5 near Peters Corners. (Photograph taken on October 21, 2005 - © Cameron Bevers)
Continue on to King's Highway 5 Photos: Waterdown to Toronto
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King's Highway 5 History /
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