Autoroute 15 (also called the Décarie Expressway (English) or Autoroute Décarie (French) between the
Turcot and
Décarie Interchanges in
Montreal and the Laurentian Autoroute (English) or Autoroute des Laurentides (French) north of
Autoroute 40) is a
highway in western
Quebec, Canada. It was, until the extension of
Autoroute 25 was opened in 2011, the only constructed north-south autoroute to go out of Montreal on both sides. A-15 begins at the end of
Interstate 87 at the
United States border at
Saint-Bernard-de-Lacolle
Saint-Bernard-de-Lacolle is a municipality in Les Jardins-de-Napierville Regional County Municipality, Quebec, Canada, located in the administrative area of Montérégie. Saint-Bernard-de-Lacolle was established as a municipality officially in 1 ...
and extends via Montreal to
Sainte-Agathe-des-Monts
Sainte-Agathe-des-Monts is a town in the province of Quebec, Canada, in the regional county municipality of Les Laurentides in the administrative region of Laurentides, also known as the "Laurentians" or the Laurentian Mountains (in English). Sai ...
with an eventual continuation beyond
Mont-Tremblant. The total length of A-15 is currently , including a short concurrency () with Autoroute 40 (Boulevard/Autoroute Métropolitan) that connects the two main sections. This is one of the few autoroutes in Quebec that does not have any spinoff highways.
Road description
Southern section
The southern section of A-15 connects the
south shore suburbs of
Montreal and is also the primary trade corridor route between Montreal and
New York City linking Quebec Autoroute 15 to
Interstate 87 at the Canada-United States border at the
Champlain-St. Bernard de Lacolle Border Crossing. This was the former
Route 9, and connected with
US 9
U.S. Route 9 (US 9) is a north–south United States highway in the states of Delaware, New Jersey, and New York in the Northeastern United States. It is one of only two U.S. Highways with a ferry connection (the Cape May–Lewes Ferry, between ...
on the western shore of
Lake Champlain. In
Brossard, it joins up with
A-10 and
A-20 A20, A 20, A.20 or A-20 may refer to:
Vehicles
* A-20 Havoc, a U.S.-designed attack aircraft used in World War II
* A20 heavy tank, a British tank which did not enter production but of which a downsized version became the A22 Churchill tank
* A-20 ...
across the
Champlain Bridge into Montreal. The A-10 splits off almost immediately after crossing the bridge to head into downtown Montreal at the
Bonaventure Expressway and the A-20 splits off shortly after at the
Turcot Interchange (''échangeur Turcot''), leaving the A-15 to continue northward as Autoroute Décarie until the
Décarie Interchange
The Décarie Interchange is a highway interchange located on the island of Montreal, Quebec, Canada.
Geography
It is one of the busiest interchanges in Montreal as it connects Autoroute 40 ( Metropolitan Boulevard; also Trans-Canada Highway) wit ...
(''échangeur Décarie'') with the A-40 at the point where it turns from the
Trans-Canada
The Trans-Canada Highway (French: ; abbreviated as the TCH or T-Can) is a transcontinental federal–provincial highway system that travels through all ten provinces of Canada, from the Pacific Ocean on the west coast to the Atlantic Ocean on ...
into the Metropolitan Expressway.
The route is also connected to
Autoroute 30 in
Candiac which was completed to
Autoroute 20 in 2012 providing quick access to the south shore of Montreal, to southern communities located alongside Autoroute 15 and to the
Canada–US border in
Lacolle. It will also give quicker access from there to areas west of Montreal and also
Ottawa
Ottawa (, ; Canadian French: ) is the capital city of Canada. It is located at the confluence of the Ottawa River and the Rideau River in the southern portion of the province of Ontario. Ottawa borders Gatineau, Quebec, and forms the core ...
and
Gatineau
Gatineau ( ; ) is a city in western Quebec, Canada. It is located on the northern bank of the Ottawa River, immediately across from Ottawa, Ontario. Gatineau is the largest city in the Outaouais administrative region and is part of Canada's N ...
.
Décarie Autoroute

The Décarie Autoroute is a
sunken highway between the northbound and southbound lanes of Decarie Boulevard from the
Metropolitan Autoroute at its northern end to
Monkland Avenue and the
Villa Maria Metro station at its southern end. It was built on a wide expanse of vacant land, donated to the city by the Décarie estate on the condition that a streetcar line would be established. The decommissioning of the streetcar system in 1959 left the right-of-way as an obvious choice for a highway and so the Décarie Autoroute was dug there. South of
Queen Mary Road, however, were a significant number of houses that were demolished.
To avoid demolishing Notre-Dame-de-Grâce Church, the highway makes a slight westerly jog below
Côte-Saint-Luc Road and runs through a short
tunnel, before emerging between Addington and Botrel Streets and running down to
Sherbrooke Street and
Saint Jacques Street, where it spectacularly goes from being below the ground to well above the ground as it intersects with
Autoroute 20 and
Route 136 in the infamous
Turcot Interchange (dubbed "
Spaghetti Junction" by train crews operating the former CN Rail Turcot Yard). Following the conversion from streetcar line to the highway, the Décarie estate sued the city but was unable to prevail because it did not document its case well enough for the nevertheless sympathetic court.
Decarie Boulevard
Decarie Boulevard itself continues; from
Monkland Avenue south to Saint Jacques Street past the
McGill University Health Centre Glen Campus superhospital; and from
Autoroute 40 north into
Montreal past
Du College Station and
Côte-Vertu Station/
Norgate shopping centre to Poirier Street. Between Monkland Avenue and
A 40, Decarie Boulevard serves as sort of a service road on both sides of the autoroute.
Northern section
After its concurrency with
A-40, the northern section of A-15 is the main highway route to the
Laurentians or
Laurentides, until it downgrades to
Route 117. It also links up to the northern suburbs of Montreal, as well as provides a connection to the
A-440,
A-640 and the
A-50 in
Mirabel. The first section from A-40 to
Saint-Jérôme was opened on August 29, 1959 (source Montreal Star Aug. 29, 1959, page 3) as a toll road, although the tolls were removed in 1985. This section was also the first to be designed as an autoroute in the province. It was named Autoroute Montréal-Laurentides during the 1960s.
Over the next years, it was extended north to Sainte-Agathe-des-Monts as a new connection to touristic and skiing destinations in the Laurentides including in
Saint-Sauveur,
Sainte-Adèle and
Estérel. In the future, it is possible that the A-15 may continue even farther north, past
Mont-Tremblant, as Route 117 is already an at-grade expressway with a freeway bypass of Mont-Tremblant completed, and the name ''Autoroute des Laurentides'' is also recognized on the freeway bypass (and exit numbers continue). This section is numbered separately from the southern section as if it were a different route. The northern route is also part of the
Trans-Canada Highway.
Exit list
Exit numbering resets at the two interchanges with
Autoroute 40 in
Montréal.
Disasters
On February 19, 2020, white-out conditions caused a pile-up involving more than 200 vehicles in
La Prairie, a suburb of
Montreal. Two persons died and more than 70 were injured.
On June 18, 2000, the southern portion of the
Boulevard du Souvenir overpass in Laval (which crosses over Quebec Autoroute 15), under reconstruction, collapsed into the roadway, killing one and injuring two when cars were crushed underneath the structure. Sixteen beams weighing about each fell. The contractor was faulted for shoddy work. The arched
concrete beams were unsecured and tipped over like
dominoes, many of them breaking into pieces.
The expressway has also seen flooding. On July 14, 1987, a sudden torrential downpour caused by an HP
supercell thunderstorm dumped over of rain in just over one hour across the city. The Décarie Expressway, which is below-grade, was heavily flooded and became a river. At some locations, the water reached a maximum of in depth on the roadway. Over 300 vehicles were abandoned when they were submerged. Two people were killed by the storm. One 80-year-old man on the Expressway drowned and another one was killed by
electrical wires
Electrical wiring is an electrical installation of cabling and associated devices such as switches, distribution boards, sockets, and light fittings in a structure.
Wiring is subject to safety standards for design and installation. Allowable ...
(
electrocuted). On July 5, 2005, another torrential downpour flooded portions of the Expressway after several manhole covers blew open from the storm sewers below them being overloaded.
Canoe – Infos – Québec-Canada: 30 millimètres d’eau en deux minutes sur l’autoroute Décarie
/ref>
See also
* Decarie Boulevard
* Gibeau Orange Julep
The Gibeau Orange Julep restaurant (also known colloquially as OJ or The Big Orange or The Julep) is a roadside attraction and fast food restaurant in Montreal, Quebec, Canada. The building is in the shape of an orange, three stories high, wit ...
Notes
References
External links
A-15 at Exitlists.com
A-15 at Quebec Autoroutes
Steve Anderson's MontrealRoads.com: Decarie Autoroute (A-15)
Steve Anderson's MontrealRoads.com: Laurentian Autoroute (A-15)
Transports Quebec Map
{{Streets in Montreal
15
Quebec 015
Roads in Laval, Quebec
Roads in Montreal
Verdun, Quebec
Transport in Brossard
Former toll roads in Canada