Manitoba Provincial Road 210

Manitoba Provincial Road 210 (PR 210) is a provincial road in southeastern Manitoba, Canada. Although numbered as a north-south route, PR 210 is both a north-south and an east-west route.

Provincial Road 210
Route information
Maintained by Manitoba Infrastructure
Length117 km (73 mi)
Major junctions
South end PTH 12
  PTH 52 at La Broquerie
PTH 12 near Ste. Anne
PTH 59 near Île-des-Chênes
West end PTH 75 near St. Adolphe
Location
Rural
municipalities
TownsSte. Anne
Highway system
Manitoba provincial highways
Winnipeg City Routes
PR 209PR 211

Route description

PR 210 begins at Provincial Trunk Highway (PTH) 12 approximately 14 kilometres (8.7 miles) northwest of Piney in the southeastern corner of Manitoba near . It runs north to Woodridge, then turns northwest, passing through the Sandilands Provincial Forest to La Broquerie, where it meets PR 302 and the eastern terminus of PTH 52. It runs through La Broquerie and then continues northwest to the town of Ste. Anne.

At Ste. Anne, PR 210 becomes an east-west route. It meets PTH 12 again just west of Ste. Anne before continuing west to Landmark, PTH 59, and St. Adolphe. PR 210 crosses the Pierre Delorme Bridge over the Red River at St. Adolphe and ends one kilometre west at PTH 75.[1]

PR 210 runs short concurrences with other provincial roads on three occasions: with PR 302 through La Broquerie, with PR 207 through Ste. Anne, and with PR 206 through Landmark. While the majority of PR 210 is now paved, the road south of Woodridge remains a gravel road.[2] PR 210 between PTH 59 and PTH 75 was formerly a separate route prior to 1985, designated as PR 429.

Between PR 206 and PTH 59, PR 210 has a Class A1 loading designation from the Manitoba highways department. This allows trucks to continue using this stretch of PR 210 even when springtime weight restrictions are in effect.[3]

gollark: See, there are exactly 16 registers, one of which, r0, always contains 0, and one of which, rf, is the program counter, and many of the instructions take a 4-bit value representing which register to pull from.
gollark: <@!330678593904443393> You would pass it 6 register indices.
gollark: 32 registers would probably allow room for more fun stuff, like the program metacounter register.
gollark: Unless I decide to upgrade to 32 registers, in which case it would only allow 5 max.
gollark: Very late, but PotatoASM can probably handle syscalls of up to 6 parameters, which is surely enough for ANY possible usecase, through passing a bunch of register indices as operands to the `SYSC` instruction.

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.