Skip to main content

Ontario’s Highway 407 East Phase 2B extension opens

The 23km final extension phase of the provincially-owned tolled freeway Highway 407 East near Toronto, Canada has opened.
By David Arminas January 23, 2020 Read time: 2 mins
Open for business: Highway 407 East near Toronto, Canada (photo courtesy 407 ETR)

Highway 407 East is part of the Ontario province’s Highway 407 project, a major Toronto bypass that includes the 108km 407 ETR – Express Toll Route – that is operated by concession to a private company, itself called 407 ETR Concession.

The 407 ETR company is owned by subsidiaries of the Canada Pension Plan Investment Board (50.01%), Cintra Global, a wholly owned subsidiary of Ferrovial (43.23%) and by SNC-Lavalin (6.76%).

Highway 407 East is connected to 407 ETR and allows drivers a speedy trip north of Toronto – Canada’s largest city and financial centre. The route runs through the Toronto suburb towns and cities of Burlington, Oakville, Mississauga, Brampton, Vaughan, Markham, Pickering, Whitby and Oshawa before ending in Clarington, north of Bowmanville.

Phase 1 of 407 East opened in Oshawa in 2016. The 9.6km Phase 2A opened in January 2018. The 14km Phase 2B just opened and includes another tolled north-south link between Highways 401 and 407 known as Highway 418.  The new stretch of Highway 407 and new Highway 418 is fully owned and operated by the province of Ontario.

Last September, 407 ETR opened 14 new lane-kilometres on Highway 407 ETR between Markham Road and York-Durham Line. This marks the second year in a row that 407 ETR has opened new lanes on the highway. Since 407 ETR was given the concession, it has doubled the footprint of its section of Highway 407 - adding over 567km of roadway since 2001 at a cost of around US$1.2 billion.

The company pays all costs of operating the 407 ETR, including the full cost of policing, snow removal, enforcement by the Ministry of Transportation and repairs and maintenance to the roadway.

According to the concession operator, average daily workday trips on 407 ETR increased 75% from 237,000 in 1999 to more than 415,000 in 2018. Also, 407 ETR is fully electronic tolling - barrier free. Motorists receive only one invoice for the use of Highway 407, 412, 418 and/or 407 ETR. This includes transponder leases, monthly account charges and video toll charges.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Parsons wins contract for busy California route
    June 13, 2018
    Parsons is now working on a project to improve the State Route 91 Freeway in California’s Orange County. Parsons has won an on-call consulting services agreement contract from the Orange County Transportation Authority (OCTA). The Orange County segment of the 91 Express Lanes consists of a four-lane toll facility located on the median of the State Route 91 freeway. The SR 91 route runs between the south side of Los Angeles, straight out of Compton, and the east of the city, to Riverside, where it becomes I-
  • LagoonHull project put on hold
    February 8, 2023
    The plan by the UK city of Kingston upon Hull is to transform the city centre and river frontage running from the 2.2km-long, single-span suspension Humber Bridge.
  • North Carolina deal for joint venture partners
    December 11, 2018
    Lane Construction and Blythe Construction are working in joint venture on a project to extend the Triangle Expressway in North Carolina. The US$403 million project will take until 2022 to complete and is complex as it includes building 29 bridges. The 13km highway stretch, NC 540, will link US 401 with Interstate 40 and will feature three lanes in either direction. The aim of the project is to lower traffic congestion around the city of Raleigh. The new highway stretch will be built using 290,000m2 of concr
  • Innovative machine control systems for Canadian slipforming work
    November 29, 2013
    Advanced machine control technologies are speeding site layout and construction operations Canadian house building firm Mattamy Homes has brought in a contractor that has used sophisticated equipment to build the roads around its new development in Oakville, Ontario. The site is just 30 minutes drive from Toronto. Phase 1-A of the project is under construction and nearly every one of the 550 homes that will be built there has been sold already. Additional phases will bring the total number of homes to 1,800