Manitoba Provincial Road 328 Explained

Province:MB
Type:PR
Route:328
Length Km:63.5
Established:1966
Direction A:West
Terminus A: in Waterhen
Direction B:East
Terminus B: near Gypsumville
Rural Municipalities:Grahamdale
Previous Type:PR
Previous Route:327
Next Type:PR
Next Route:329

Provincial Road 328 (PR 328) is a 63.5adj=midNaNadj=mid east–west highway in the Interlake and NorMan regions of Manitoba, Canada. It connects the town of Waterhen with PTH 6 and the town of Gypsumville while running along the northern coast of Lake Manitoba.

Route description

PR 328 begins in Waterhen at an intersection with PR 276 on the western edge of town. It heads east, immediately crossing a bridge over the Waterhen River and passing straight through the centre of town, where it has an intersection with North Mallard Road, which leads to the hamlet of Mallard. The highway turns from asphalt to gravel as it leaves Waterhen and begins following the northern coastline of Lake Manitoba, travelling through a mix of swamp and woodlands to cross a couple creeks and the Basket River. PR 328 has an intersection with an access road to Peonan Point (Peonan Point Road) before traveling through Homebrook, where it enters both farmland and the Rural Municipality of Grahamdale. Pulling away from the lake, the highway comes to an end shortly thereafter at an intersection PTH 6, with the road continuing east towards PR 513 as Batten Road (Road 188N).[1]

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Official Highway Map of Manitoba section 4. Government of Manitoba. October 15, 2024.