The southern section continues into Sherwood Park as Broadmoor Boulevard, a major arterial road.
17 Street NW is a major arterial road in east Edmonton, and west Strathcona County.
The boundary between the City of Edmonton and Strathcona County runs on the west side of this right-of-way from Sherwood Park Freeway to Baseline Road.
66 Street is located in east Edmonton and is divided into two major (northern and southern) segments.
The southern segment begins at 41 Avenue SW and travels north through Mill Woods and becomes 75 Street at Whitemud Drive.
It is part of a 39 km (24 mi) continuous roadway that runs from 41 Avenue SW to 33 Street NE (Edmonton's northeastern city limit) and includes portions of 75 Street, Wayne Gretzky Drive, portions of Fort Road, as well as Manning Drive.
It is part of a 39 km (24 mi) continuous roadway that runs from 41 Avenue SW to 33 Street NE (Edmonton's northeastern city limit) and the southern portion of 66 Street, Wayne Gretzky Drive, portions of Fort Road, as well as Manning Drive.
82 Street is a major arterial road in north Edmonton; it provides an alternate route from the downtown (where it continues as Jasper Avenue) to the northern neighbourhoods.
83 Street begins at Argyll Road and travels north, alongside the Valley Line LRT tracks.
On the north side of the Bonnie Doon Shopping Centre, it intersects 85 Street and 90 Avenue, formerly the site of a five exit roundabout.
The roadway turns northeast as Connors Road towards downtown, diverging from the light rail tracks.
[3] 91 Street is part of a cancelled freeway plan where it would run from Highway 2 near Gateway Park to downtown Edmonton via the Mill Creek Ravine.
It begins as Parsons Road at 91 Street in the Ellerslie area and travels north past the eastern edge of South Edmonton Common.
[5] There were two proposals to rename 99 Street after Wayne Gretzky, who wore #99 and played for the Edmonton Oilers.
99 Street was later chosen as the location of a mural dedicated to Joey Moss, the now-deceased longtime dressing room attendant for the Oilers and Canadian Football League's then-Edmonton Eskimos (now Elks), with the mural's location being a recognition of Gretzky's role in persuading the Oilers to hire Moss.
Calgary Trail (known as 104 Street north of 54 Avenue) and Gateway Boulevard (formerly named 103 Street north of 54 Avenue) are a pair of major arterial roadways in Edmonton; Gateway Boulevard carries northbound traffic while Calgary Trail carries southbound traffic.
The northern segment of 106 Street begins at Kingsway and 111 Avenue, passing through the east side of Kingsway Mall and serving the Northern Alberta Institute of Technology (NAIT), before becoming 107 Street between 120 Avenue and Yellowhead Trail.
The Metro Line LRT runs on the east side of 106 Street between Kingsway and Princess Elizabeth Avenue, where it veers west to NAIT/Blatchford Market station.
It passes through the South Campus of the University of Alberta where it meets Fox Drive and turns east becoming Belgravia Road.
There are long-term plans to realign and extend 127 Street northwest of Anthony Henday Drive, following the northern city boundary of St. Albert, to Highway 2; no timeline is set for construction.
[10] As of November 2018, 127 Street north of Anthony Henday Drive has partially opened up in the new alignment of the road, long term plans extending it to Valour Avenue.
142 Street is the designated name of two major arterial roads in west Edmonton, Alberta, Canada, separated by the Yellowhead Corridor.
The north street used to be a rural grid road, but as the suburbs have expanded, it has been separated from the subdivisions by a rail line at 153 Avenue.
Plans have the street realigned, to meet with Henry Singer Park, and make room for development.
West Edmonton Mall is located on the west side of 170 Street between 87 Avenue and 90 Avenue, while the Misericordia Community Hospital is located on the east side of 170 Street – a pedestrian footbridge connects the hospital grounds to the mall.
The portion of 170 Street between Whitemud Drive and Yellowhead Trail is part of Edmonton's Inner Ring Road.
West of Anthony Henday Drive, Lessard Road ends The Grange developing residential area.
It is a rural grid road that earned the name 215 Street when Edmonton expanded westward.
[15] The boundary between the City of Edmonton and Parkland County runs on the west side of the right of way from Howard Road (33 Avenue SW), where it continues south as Range Road 260, to Highway 627 (Maskêkosihk Trail; formerly 23 Avenue NW), and between the City of Edmonton and the Enoch Cree Nation (Enoch) from Highway 627 (Maskêkosihk Trail) to Whitemud Drive (formally 79 Avenue).