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Route information | ||||
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Maintained by Nova Scotia Department of Transportation and Infrastructure Renewal | ||||
Length | 39 km[1] (24 mi) | |||
Major junctions | ||||
West end | Route 322 in Dartmouth | |||
Hwy 111 in Dartmouth Route 328 in Upper Lawrencetown | ||||
East end | Trunk 7 in Porters Lake | |||
Location | ||||
Country | Canada | |||
Province | Nova Scotia | |||
Highway system | ||||
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Route 207 is a collector road in the Canadian province of Nova Scotia. It is located in the Halifax Regional Municipality and connects Dartmouth to Porters Lake on the Eastern Shore.
Called Portland Street at its western end, the route starts at Alderney Drive (Trunk 7) across from the city hall of the former city of Dartmouth. There it proceeds where it intersects with Prince Albert Road (Trunk 7), Alderney Drive and Canal Street. Further along, Portland Street junctions with Route 322 at Pleasant Street, and Albert Street, an area in Dartmouth called "The five corners" . It passes through the Southdale area of Dartmouth, then expands to a four-lane street where it crosses the Circumferential Highway to the Portland valley area. it then extends up an incline named "Breakheart Hill " to the community of Cole Harbour.
In Cole Harbour, starting at Caldwell Road the road is named "Cole Harbour Road." At (Bissett Road) Route 207 narrows to two lanes. The road leads here to Lawrencetown Beach in Upper Lawerenceton. The route connects the communities of Dartmouth, Upper Lawrencetown, West Lawrencetown, Three Fathom Harbour, Seaforth, Grand Desert and West Chezzetcook, before ending in Porters Lake at Trunk 7 and Highway 107).