Potholes in Beauceville, QC

Population 6,185 · Quebec

This page shows pothole reports submitted in Beauceville, Quebec. RoadRot is a free, independent platform — anyone can report a pothole, and reports get forwarded to the responsible municipality.

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Why Beauceville gets potholes

Beauceville sits in the Chaudière-Appalaches region, where winters bring sustained cold, heavy snow, and a real exposure to freezing rain events. Southern Quebec's geography funnels cold air in ways that let rain hit the ground below freezing, coating roads in ice and seeping into pavement cracks before the next freeze locks the damage in. Freeze-thaw cycles that hover near zero and cross the freezing mark repeatedly are especially hard on asphalt, and Beauceville's springs tend to deliver exactly that kind of prolonged, punishing thaw.

How to report potholes in Beauceville

Beauceville doesn't have a 311 service. For non-urgent road issues, the city has an online form at ville.beauceville.qc.ca through the Travaux Publics request system. For urgent problems, call the city's 24-hour line at 418-774-9137. If the pothole is on Boulevard Renault (Route 173), Route 108, or Autoroute 73, those roads are provincial, and you'll want to report through the Ministère des Transports du Québec instead. RoadRot sits alongside those official channels: you can drop a pin on the public map, let neighbours confirm the report, and use the built-in email-your-rep tool to send a message directly to your elected representative. RoadRot doesn't forward anything automatically, but a public report with community confirmations creates visible pressure that a quietly submitted web form usually doesn't.
Guides

Hit a pothole in Beauceville and damaged your vehicle? Read the Quebec pothole damage claim guide — deadlines, where to file, and what evidence you need. New to RoadRot? See how to report a pothole.

Common questions

Who is responsible for fixing potholes in Beauceville?

It depends on the road. City streets and gravel rang roads are maintained by Ville de Beauceville's Travaux Publics (Public Works). Provincial routes running through town, including Boulevard Renault (Route 173), Route 108, and Autoroute 73, are the responsibility of the Ministère des Transports du Québec. If you're not sure which category your road falls under, the city's public works office at 418-774-9137 can usually point you in the right direction.

Does Beauceville have a 311 service for pothole reports?

No. Beauceville doesn't have a 311 line. For non-urgent road requests, use the online form on the city's website at ville.beauceville.qc.ca. For anything urgent, the city's 24-hour phone line is 418-774-9137.

When does Beauceville start fixing potholes in spring?

The city typically begins pothole filling in early spring, with grading starting around mid-April and paving work following a couple of weeks later depending on weather. The city has noted publicly that rang roads need several consecutive dry days before heavy equipment can work safely, since repairing soft ground too early does more damage than good. Spring load restrictions also apply on provincial routes from March 16 through May 15, which limits how quickly some work can move.

What's the worst time of year for potholes in Beauceville?

Spring thaw is the peak season. Once temperatures start crossing the freezing mark repeatedly, water trapped in pavement cracks expands and contracts, breaking up the road surface quickly. Beauceville's exposure to late-winter freezing rain, as seen in significant verglas events that have forced road closures, adds another layer of pavement stress on top of the normal freeze-thaw cycle.

Can I claim compensation for vehicle damage caused by a pothole in Beauceville?

You can submit a claim to the city if the pothole is on a municipal road and you believe negligence in maintenance caused the damage. In Quebec, this typically means filing a written notice with the municipality and documenting the damage, the location, and when it occurred. If the pothole is on a provincial highway, the claim would go to the Ministère des Transports du Québec. Quebec's civil liability rules require you to show the city or province knew or should have known about the hazard, so a dated, geolocated report on RoadRot can serve as useful supporting documentation.