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MISSISSAUGA, ONT. – With the City of Mississauga slated to spend over $170 million on its transportation and stormwater system this construction season, crews are busy working on more than 30 new projects and seven ongoing projects from 2025.

Crews will repair and maintain existing roads, bridges and trails and will also work to restore creeks and stormwater ponds, a release states.

Some new projects will also begin, such as building a new pumping station, traffic signals and cycle paths.

Key projects include:

  • Upgrading traffic signals at Confederation Parkway and Square One Drive.
  • Adding a new left turn lane and signals, and general repairs to an intersection on Winston Churchill Boulevard.
  • Repairing the Aquitaine Avenue pedestrian bridge and retaining wall.
  • Adding new multi-use paths and boulevard cycle tracks across Mississauga at several locations.
  • Repairing sidewalks and adding tactile plates (raised surfaces) at intersections.

Flood protection projects are underway that include maintaining systems that control rainwater and fixing soil erosion areas.

This includes the following:

  • Building a new pumping station on Osprey Boulevard.
  • Dredging and restoring ponds at Dixie and Tomken Transitway, Osprey Marsh, Silken Laumann and Britannia Road and Central Parkway Station.
  • Fixing erosion along Cooksville, Credit River, Etobicoke, Mimico and Sawmill creeks.
  • Repairing the bridge at Burnhamthorpe West over Mullet Creek.

A major road widening project will also start in 2026 on Ninth Line. The road will be widened to four lanes, with new sidewalks, drainage and bike lanes, the release adds.

The city’s road resurfacing program includes replacing asphalt and repairing curbs and sidewalks when needed. This year, 38 roads will be resurfaced, totalling almost 21 kilometres.