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Ottawa

Province designs new Barrhaven interchange, but has no money for it

The Ministry of Transportation has presented its preliminary design for a new Highway 416 interchange to meet the needs ofbooming subdivisions in Barrhaven, but hasno timeline and no funding set aside for its $80 million construction.

Fixes for transportation woes in south Barrhaven still years away

A city councillor smiles as he points to a map of his ward.
Barrhaven West Coun. David Hill points to the location of a future interchange for the quickly expanding subdivisions south of the Jock River in Barrhaven. (Kate Porter/CBC)

The Ministry of Transportation has presented its preliminary design for a new Highway 416 interchange to meet the needs ofbooming subdivisions in Barrhaven, but hasno timeline and no funding set aside for its $80 million construction.

In fact, it was the City of Ottawa and not the province that pushed to get a study done that canpave the way for a Barnsdale Roadinterchange, and the cost of the work was even covered by a local developer.

Residents who have bought the thousands of homessouth of the Jock River have long complained about how hard it is to get around and the area continues to grow quickly. Barrhaven has added about 3,500 people, or 1,500 households a year, according to the city's most recent annual report on development.

"It's needed desperately," said Barrhaven West Coun. David Hill, after a presentation by the ministry and its consultant at the City of Ottawa'stransportation committee on Thursday. He was picking up on an issue long championed by his predecessor Jan Harder.

Hillpointed to how Ottawa's other suburban communities have multiple interchanges: Orlans has Highway 174 and four interchanges, while Kanatahas five along Highway 417.

Barrhaven has only the one: ramps atFallowfield Road give access toHighway 416. A second exit atBankfield Road further south predominantly serves Manotick.

Built in stages

Consulting firm Morrison Hershfield looked at several configurations and settled onramps in all directions, with loops on the south side of Barnsdale Road.

The interchange would bebuilt instages aspopulation and traffic increase,and as money becomesavailable. The surrounding road network would change over time, too.

The ultimate design, which is not foreseen to be in place for many years, would see Borrisokane Road closed at Barnsdale, ending in a cul-de-sac. That traffic would instead usea futureextension ofKilbirnie Drive.

A map showing the future interchange at Barnsdale and Highway 416.
The recommended design for a future Barnsdale interchange would see Borrisokane Road eventually closed and ending in a cul-de-sac. Traffic would eventually use a future extension of Kilbirnie Drive, seen in the top right corner. (Morrison Hershfield)

Another key piece in the future transportation network in south Barrhaven is a different alignment for Greenbank Road.Many developments were given the go-ahead on the premise they would use a new four-lane artery complete with rapid-transitlanes, but a decision was made many years ago todelay that work so Strandherd Drive could be widened instead.

Hill wants Greenbank Road, with anew bridge over the Jock River and roadway south to Cambrian Road, to be at the top of the list when the City of Ottawa approves its next transportation master plan, which is anticipatedin 2025.

Ideally, he wants to see theGreenbank Road project sped up to also include a sectionsouth to Barnsdale that can link up withthis future highway interchange.

That's a long way off, however. The MTO'sstudy for the highway interchange will first have a 30-day consultation this summer before going to final design work.

The study was initiated by the City of Ottawa itself, but paid for by the South Barrhaven Development Corporation, orCaivan Homes. Amotion presented by Harder backin 2021 had said it would contribute up to $2 million to the study.