Carp Road

Carp Road (Ottawa Road #5) is an arterial road in Ottawa, Ontario, Canada that runs between Fitzroy Harbour and Stittsville, through the village of Carp. The road is located in the city's west end, beginning in Fitzroy Harbour at Galetta Side Road and ending in Stittsville at Stittsville Main Street. Most of the route is rural with the exception of Stittsville where the road travels in a residential development. Ottawa Regional Road #5 continues as Stittsville Main Street south of Carp Road, then becomes Huntley Road south of Stittsville toward the town of Richmond.

Carp Road
Ottawa Road #5
Maintained byCity of Ottawa
Length43.6 km (27.1 mi)
South endStittsville Main Street
North endGaletta Side Road

A curious artifact of pre-amalgamation Ottawa is the inconsistent numbering of addresses on Carp Road, divided at the intersection of Rothbourne Road, the boundary of the former townships of Goulbourn and West Carleton: Addresses begin at 1000 and run south toward Stittsville in Goulbourn, but begin at 2000 and run north toward Fitzroy Harbour in West Carleton.

Among notable landmarks along the road are:

  • Carp Road Landfill run by Waste Management - 142 hectare facility with a 35 hectares landfill site[1]
  • Carp Fair - home to annual fall fair since 1863[2]
  • Irish Hills Golf and Country Club - a 9 and 18 hole course with banquet facilities[3]
  • Carp Airport - former military airfield (World War II British Commonwealth Air Training Plan field) and now private general aviation facility
  • Diefenbunker former bomb shelter from the 1950s (closed 1994) and now Cold War museum
  • Carp Hills - upland extension of the Canadian Shield running along Carp Road

Major Intersections

From north to south:

  • Galetta Side Road
  • Kinburn Side Road
  • Thomas A. Dolan Parkway
  • Craig Side Road
  • Donald B. Munro Drive
  • March Road
  • Highway 417
  • Hazeldean Road
  • Stittsville Main Street
gollark: It's called 5G because it's fifth generation because it comes after 4G.
gollark: No.
gollark: I don't like it. We use a BT router with that "feature" at home and I cannot figure out how to turn it off and it *annoys me slightly*.
gollark: Self-driving cars should probably not be using the mobile/cell network just for communicating with nearby cars, since it adds extra latency and complexity over some direct P2P thing, and they can't really do things which rely on constant high-bandwidth networking to the internet generally, since they need to be able to not crash if they go into a tunnel or network dead zone or something.
gollark: My problem isn't *that* (5G apparently has improvements for more normal frequencies anyway), but that higher bandwidth and lower latency just... isn't that useful and worth the large amount of money for most phone users.

References

  1. http://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/ottawa/story/2010/04/13/ottawa-carp-landfill.html
  2. http://www.carpfair.ca/
  3. "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 2012-06-04. Retrieved 2012-07-06.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)

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