Quote:
Originally Posted by q12
Nova Scotia is the second most-densely populated province in Canada with 17.4 inhabitants per square kilometre.
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Ontario conveniently has vast tracts of uninhabitable swamp taking up the majority of the province's landmass.
What I meant with the comment more so is that Nova Scotia and New Brunswick have masses of federally / provincially owned crown land along the major highway corridors that have 0 acquisition cost. Any time you want to build a new highway in southern ontario you have to buy up tracts of privately held farmland, housing, etc. This can cost literally hundreds of millions of dollars, especially surrounding growth areas (i.e. where the highways are needed), where the farmland is seen as having strong development potential.
The lower levels of agricultural and occupation means that you can get away with fewer interchanges and bridge structures as well. the 22km Highway 103 project would pass only 3 bridge structures for example, while 22km on a portion of the Highway 69 twinning passes 7. The northernmost 22km of the 417 passes by 10, and the 22km of the 401 through toronto probably passes through over 50 including several complex high capacity freeway-freeway interchanges.
Northern Ontario is similar in the respect of readily available crown land, but is typically more rugged in terrain.
And yes, Northern Ontario has around 200km of highway with funding commitments right now, more than the Maritimes. The maritimes however did a very large buildout in the 1990's and 2000's at a rate far above that of Northern Ontario.