British Columbia provincial highway 7BBritish Columbia provincial highway 7B the Mary Hill Bypass is a 9 km-long riverside east-west link between the cities of Coquitlam to the west and Port Coquitlam to the east. The Mary Hill Bypass gained its '7B' designation in 1996, when it was widened f, Mary Hill Bypass
British Columbia provincial highway 8British Columbia provincial highway 8 known as the Nicola Highway is an alternate route to Highway 97C between Highway 1 and the Coquihalla Highway. Highway 8 was first commissioned in 1953, and very little about the highway has changed since that year., Nicola Highway
British Columbia provincial highway 9British Columbia provincial highway 9 the Agassiz Highway is a north-south route in the eastern part of the Fraser Valley. It acts as the last connection between Highways 1 and 7 eastbound before Hope, and is the main access to the resort village of Harri, Agassiz Highway
British Columbia provincial highway 10British Columbia provincial highway 10 known locally as the Ladner- Langley Highway is a minor east-west route through the southern portion of the Greater Vancouver Regional District. Highway 10 was first commissioned in 1953, following its current alignm, Ladner-Langley Highway
British Columbia provincial highway 11British Columbia provincial highway 11 known locally as the Abbotsford- Mission Highway is a 17 km-long mostly two-lane north-south highway that literally cuts the Fraser Valley in half. The highway was first given the '11' designation in 1958, and it ori, Abbotsford-Mission Highway
British Columbia provincial highway 12British Columbia provincial highway 12 opened in 1953, is a connection from the Trans-Canada Highway to the town of Lillooet. The highway originally went all the way to a junction with Highway 97 at Hat Creek, but when Duffy Lake Road was paved in 1992, t, Lillooet-Lytton Highway
British Columbia provincial highway 13British Columbia provincial highway 13 is a simple 12 km-long two-lane route through the eastern part of Langley. Highway 13 essentially serves the function of quick access from Washington State to the central Fraser Valley, and vice versa. Highway 13 fir, Aldergrove Highway
British Columbia provincial highway 14British Columbia provincial highway 14 is the southernmost numbered route in the province. An east-west highway on the southwestern coast of Vancouver Island, it is known locally as the West Coast Highway as well as Sooke Road Sooke being one of the large, Sooke Road
Highways 2, 3, and 7 in the northwest corner of the province are part of the Yukon territorial highway system and are not listed here or designated as BC highways.
3 Defunct route numbers
The first 2 freeways built in British Columbia were given 400-series numbers, much like the 400-Series Highways in Ontario. Highways 401 and 499 were renumbered 1 and 99 respectively in 1973.