Lewvan Drive & Pasqua Street
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| Maintained by | City of Regina |
|---|---|
| Length | 13.1 km (8.1 mi)[1] |
| Location | Regina |
| South end | Ring Road S |
| Major junctions | Saskatchewan Drive Dewdney Avenue Ring Road N |
| North end |
Lewvan Drive and Pasqua Street is a major north–south roadway in west Regina, Saskatchewan. The roadway functions as the western portion of Ring Road; however, unlike Ring Road, it is an arterial road with no interchanges.[1]
Pasqua Street

Pasqua Street is divided into two sections. The northern section is a four lane arterial road that runs north from Sherwood Drive, past Ring Road, to an interchange with Highway 11A. North of Highway 11A, it leaves Regina and passes through the Sherwood Industrial Park before downgrading to a country road. The southern section of Pasqua Street begins at 3 Avenue N (one block south of Sherwood Drive), and is residential street that continues south to Wintergreen Estates (located just north of the Trans-Canada Highway), where it becomes Koester Road. The southern section is discontinuous, divided by two railways and Evraz Place (formerly known as Regina Exhibition Park).[1] Pasqua Street is named after Chief Joseph Pasqua, a Plains Cree chief of the Qu'Appelle Valley in the mid-19th century. Pasqua is a Cree word for prairie.[2]
Lewvan Drive
Lewvan Drive is a four lane arterial road that begins at an interchange with the Trans-Canada Highway (Highway 1), travels north past the Regina International Airport, and ends at Sherwood Drive where the roadway continues as the northern section of Pasqua Street. Downtown Regina can be accessed via Saskatchewan Drive.[1] Lewvan Drive is named after Lew Van Ostrand, an early settler south of Regina. When the Grand Trunk Pacific Railway arrived in 1911, the company purchased the townsite from Ostrand and combined the first two parts of his name to name the railroad in his honour.[2]
History
Pasqua Street originally ran continuous as a collector road through western Regina,[3] but as the city grew it did not have the capacity to function as a major north–south artery. The Lewvan Expressway (later renamed Lewvan Drive) was constructed along a former CN rail line which ran parallel to Pasqua Street, allowing for limited access and grade-separated railway crossings, and was completed in 1984.[4] As part of the project, at-grade railway crossings along Pasqua Street were closed resulting in it being segmented.[3] The section of Pasqua between 9th Avenue South and Victoria Avenue was removed and replaced by an expansion of the city's exhibition grounds and development of Saskatchewan Drive, a major east–west thoroughfare which provided key access between downtown and Lewvan.