Close X
Thursday, November 28, 2024
ADVT 
National

Burrard Skytrain station in Downtown Vancouver to remain closed for 2 years as of early 2022

Darpan News Desk Translink, 13 Jul, 2021 03:30 PM
  • Burrard Skytrain station in Downtown Vancouver to remain closed for 2 years as of early 2022

TransLink today announced that it will be proceeding with a major upgrade to Burrard SkyTrain Station beginning in early 2022. The project will take approximately two years to complete and will require the closure of the station to allow the work to be done safely and more efficiently than were it to remain partially open during construction.

Burrard SkyTrain Station was originally built in 1985 and has not had a significant upgrade in its 36 years of operation. It is the fourth busiest station on the SkyTrain system and at peak times it is congested with only three escalators and one elevator to move people in and out. Station entrances are hard to access and the station will require upgrades to the electrical equipment in order to meet the power demands of the new station.

The upgrades to Burrard Station will:

  • Double the number of escalators and elevators to provide greater accessibility and relieve congestion on platforms and at the concourse level;

  • Relocate the Burrard Street entrance to align with the pedestrian crossing making it easier to get in and out of the station, and provide better access to buses along Dunsmuir;

  • Redesign the station’s outdoor plaza to put pedestrian needs at the forefront; and,

  • Upgrade the station’s power supply and mechanical systems.

“These significant upgrades are necessary to keep our transit system operating effectively and efficiently for our customers,” said TransLink Interim CEO Gigi Chen-Kuo. “With more than 7.6 million annual boardings in 2019, Burrard Station is the fourth busiest station on our SkyTrain network. These upgrades will greatly improve the customer experience and as the region prepares to welcome one million new residents by the year 2050, this important project allows us to be prepared for additional future demand.”

To best manage construction during these important upgrades, we will be closing Burrard Station for approximately two years starting in early 2022. Closing the station during construction:

  • Improves customer and worker safety by eliminating the risks of customer movement through a major, underground, active construction site;

  • Minimizes confusion associated with multiple changes to customer travel patterns through numerous complex phases of construction;

  • Reduces overall construction time for the project and therefore shortens impacts to customer travel by approximately two and a half years; and

  • Provides cost savings of approximately $35 million.

TransLink will work with the City of Vancouver, and local businesses and residents to minimize impacts while we complete these upgrades.

Based on pre-Covid ridership data, Waterfront and Granville Stations can accommodate the additional passenger flow during the Burrard Station closure. Additional bus service will also be added in the area to help minimize passenger impact.

To minimize impacts on our bus and HandyDART customers, bus service will remain largely the same throughout the construction period and HandyDART customers connecting to the Expo Line will have access at Waterfront Station.

As plans are finalized later this year, we will provide more details to help ready our customers for the start of construction in early 2022.

MORE National ARTICLES

Report on grocery pay finds cartel-like practices

Report on grocery pay finds cartel-like practices
The report comes a year after Canada's big three grocers — Loblaw Companies Ltd., Metro Inc. and Sobeys parent company Empire Company Ltd. — all cut temporary pandemic-related pay bonuses within a day of each other last June.

Report on grocery pay finds cartel-like practices

Commons committee calls for overhaul of EI system

Commons committee calls for overhaul of EI system
Today's report also asks whether special benefits, such as maternity and parental leave, should be hived off into their own program, and recommends extending sickness benefits to 50 weeks.    

Commons committee calls for overhaul of EI system

Ottawa pledges $115 million in aid for Venezuelans

Ottawa pledges $115 million in aid for Venezuelans
The continued departure of refugees and migrants from Venezuela is one of the largest external displacement crises in the world with over 5.6 million people leaving the country in the last few years according to the UN refugee agency.

Ottawa pledges $115 million in aid for Venezuelans

Canada accepting 1M Moderna doses from U.S.

Canada accepting 1M Moderna doses from U.S.
Canada will receive a donation of 1 million doses of Moderna's COVID-19 vaccine from the United States today. The doses are part of the U.S. promise to donate 80 million doses of vaccines by the end of June.

Canada accepting 1M Moderna doses from U.S.

Freeze promotions for top brass: Committee

Freeze promotions for top brass: Committee
The request is one of several from the House of Commons committee on the status of women, which recently finished a months-long study of military sexual misconduct sparked by allegations against several senior commanders.

Freeze promotions for top brass: Committee

Green leader asks party execs, PM for 'space'

Green leader asks party execs, PM for 'space'
Green Leader Annamie Paul is asking party brass and the prime minister to give her "the space to unify" the party ahead of a general meeting that could serve as a referendum on her leadership.

Green leader asks party execs, PM for 'space'