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TwitterOpen Government Licence - Canada 2.0https://open.canada.ca/en/open-government-licence-canada
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Notice - Replacement of the English and French Web services (WMS and ESRI REST) with a bilingual one. The NRN product is distributed in the form of thirteen provincial or territorial datasets and consists of two linear entities (Road Segment and Ferry Connection Segment) and three punctual entities (Junction, Blocked Passage, Toll Point) with which is associated a series of descriptive attributes such as, among others: First House Number, Last House Number, Street Name Body, Place Name, Functional Road Class, Pavement Status, Number Of Lanes, Structure Type, Route Number, Route Name, Exit Number. The development of the NRN was realized by means of individual meetings and national workshops with interested data providers from the federal, provincial, territorial and municipal governments. In 2005, the NRN edition 2.0 was alternately adopted by members from the Inter-Agency Committee on Geomatics (IACG) and the Canadian Council on Geomatics (CCOG). The NRN content largely conforms to the ISO 14825 from ISO/TC 204.
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TwitterOpen Government Licence - Canada 2.0https://open.canada.ca/en/open-government-licence-canada
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The Atlas of Canada National Scale Data 1:1,000,000 Series consists of boundary, coast, island, place name, railway, river, road, road ferry and waterbody data sets that were compiled to be used for atlas large scale (1:1,000,000 to 1:4,000,000) mapping. These data sets have been integrated so that their relative positions are cartographically correct. Any data outside of Canada included in the data sets is strictly to complete the context of the data.
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TwitterOpen Government Licence - Canada 2.0https://open.canada.ca/en/open-government-licence-canada
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The Road Network File is a digital representation of Canada's road network, containing information such as street names, types, directions and address ranges.
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TwitterAttribution 4.0 (CC BY 4.0)https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
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This shape file was used to develop the network analysis necessary to perform this analysis in ArcGIS Pro v 3.0.3
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TwitterThe 2021 Road Network File depicts the digital road line coverage for Canada. It contains information such as street arc unique identifier (UID), name, type, direction and address range, as well as rank and class. It also includes province and census subdivision (CSD) information for each side of a street arc (where applicable).The Road Network File is portrayed in Lambert conformal conic projection (North American Datum of 1983 [NAD83]). The 2021 Road Network File is available as a national file.
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TwitterThe North American Roads dataset was compiled on October 27, 2020 from the Bureau of Transportation Statistics (BTS) and is part of the U.S. Department of Transportation (USDOT)/Bureau of Transportation Statistics (BTS) National Transportation Atlas Database (NTAD). This dataset contains geospatial information regarding major roadways in North America. On March 31, 2025, the errant records with a value of 2 in the "NHS" field were corrected to have a value of 7 (Other NHS). The data set covers the 48 contiguous United States plus the District of Columbia, Alaska, Hawaii, Canada and Mexico. The nominal scale of the data set is 1:100,000. The data within the North American Roads layer is a compilation of data from Natural Resources Canada, USDOT’s Federal Highway Administration, and the Mexican Transportation Institute. North American Roads is a digital single-line representation of major roads and highways for Canada, the United States, and Mexico with consistent definitions by road class, jurisdiction, lane counts, speed limits and surface type.
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TwitterOpen Government Licence - Canada 2.0https://open.canada.ca/en/open-government-licence-canada
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The geobase is a filamentary network of straight segments commonly called “sections”, which are generally digitized at the center of the street. A section is then a portion of road with homogeneous characteristics described mainly by the following attributes: an official and current toponym, address ranges and a reference to administrative boundaries (boroughs, municipal boundaries, neighborhoods as the case may be). Pathway classification table: - class 0 - Local streets - class 1 - Certain pedestrian routes - class 2 - Business seats - class 3 - Dock - class 4 - Private - class 5 - Collectors - class 6 - Secondary arteries - class 7 - Main arteries - class 8 - Highways - class 9 - Projected street Related data sets: - Geobase double - street sides of the road network - Geobase - poles - Geobase - destroyed sections - Geobase - section management - Geobase - nodes Warnings - The data released (Geobase - road network) must be used in accordance with the City of Montreal's open data policy and license. - The data disseminated (Géobase - road network) are those that are in our possession and are not necessarily up to date throughout the country. - The data disseminated (Geobase - road network) is provided for information purposes only and should not be used for the purposes of designing or carrying out the works, nor for the purpose of locating assets. - The City of Montreal and the Geomatics Division cannot be held responsible for the inaccuracies or inaccuracies of the data disseminated (Geobase - road network). This third party metadata element was translated using an automated translation tool (Amazon Translate).
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TwitterThe 1.1 million kilometres of roads shown on the map form a national road network that connects people and goods from one community to another in Canada and to the rest of the continent. On the map, roads are classified based on the population of the communities the roads connect; combined, the communities on the map represent 78% of the total population in 2001. Principal road corridors connect major cities with a population greater than 49 999 and major ports of entry into and out of the country. Secondary road corridors connect medium-sized populated places (of between 10 000 and 49 999) to the principal road corridor. Major roads connect the smaller-sized populated places (of between 1000 and 9999) to the principal and secondary road corridors. Minor roads connect populated places with a population less than 1000 to the principal and secondary road corridors, and to major roads. Minor roads also include roads connecting Indian Reserves. Local roads include all other roads not directly connected to the network by the population between two populated places. Winter roads serve remote and northern communities in the winter or when weather conditions permit travel.
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TwitterThe Road Network File is a digital representation of Canada´s national road network, containing information such as major roads, street names, types, directions and address ranges. Address ranges are dwelling-based and occur mainly in large urban centres of Canada.
Intercensal Road Network Files do not replace the Road Network File that is released with every Census, which is a similar product part of the suite of geography products used in conjunction with products and services from the Census.
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TwitterContained within the 5th Edition (1978 to 1995) of the National Atlas of Canada is a map that shows the network of roads in three classes (national and major provincial roads, other provincial roads and frontier roads) with each class subdivided based on width and type of surface. The map also shows major ferry routes and transport nodes, and settled regions using three population density classes.
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TwitterSaskatchewan Highway Network map contains current Highway Network layer with highway classification based on varied criteria
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TwitterThe Road Network File is a digital representation of Canada's road network, containing information such as street names, types, directions and address ranges.
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TwitterThe 2025 Road Network File depicts the digital road line coverage for Canada. It contains information such as street arc unique identifier (UID), name, type, direction and address range, as well as rank and class. It also includes province or territory (PR) and census subdivision (CSD) information for each side of a street arc (where applicable). The Road Network File is portrayed in Lambert conformal conic projection (North American Datum of 1983 [NAD83]) and is available as a national file.
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TwitterThe Road Network File is a digital representation of Canada's road network, containing information such as street names, types, directions and address ranges.
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TwitterWeb Map contains all layers of Saskatchewan Upgraded Road Network (SURN).
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TwitterThe Ontario Road Network (ORN) Composite product is a segmented derivative of the ORN Road Net Element (ORNELEM) data class. You can use it for mapping and general spatial analysis. Road segment information includes: * addressing * full street name * alternate street name * speed limit * number of lanes * pavement status * road class * jurisdiction * route number * direction of traffic flow * shield type information The ORN is a provincewide geographic database of over 250,000 km of: * municipal roads * provincial highways * resource and recreational roads The ORN is the authoritative source of roads data for the Government of Ontario. This product is derived from the ORN Road Net Element data class. It combines three types of geometry: * road elements * ferry connections * virtual roads This product also includes additional road feature layers including: * blocked passages * underpasses * toll points * structures
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TwitterThe entire road network of the City of Rouyn-Noranda. Only public roads with an odonym are included.This third party metadata element was translated using an automated translation tool (Amazon Translate).
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TwitterInformation system(s) usage for management of provincially, territorially, regionally and municipally owned roads for all provinces and territories.
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TwitterThe Road Network File is a digital representation of Canada's road network, containing information such as street names, types, directions and address ranges.
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TwitterOpen Government Licence - Canada 2.0https://open.canada.ca/en/open-government-licence-canada
License information was derived automatically
The Road Network File is a digital representation of Canada's road network, containing information such as street names, types, directions and address ranges.
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TwitterOpen Government Licence - Canada 2.0https://open.canada.ca/en/open-government-licence-canada
License information was derived automatically
Notice - Replacement of the English and French Web services (WMS and ESRI REST) with a bilingual one. The NRN product is distributed in the form of thirteen provincial or territorial datasets and consists of two linear entities (Road Segment and Ferry Connection Segment) and three punctual entities (Junction, Blocked Passage, Toll Point) with which is associated a series of descriptive attributes such as, among others: First House Number, Last House Number, Street Name Body, Place Name, Functional Road Class, Pavement Status, Number Of Lanes, Structure Type, Route Number, Route Name, Exit Number. The development of the NRN was realized by means of individual meetings and national workshops with interested data providers from the federal, provincial, territorial and municipal governments. In 2005, the NRN edition 2.0 was alternately adopted by members from the Inter-Agency Committee on Geomatics (IACG) and the Canadian Council on Geomatics (CCOG). The NRN content largely conforms to the ISO 14825 from ISO/TC 204.