Close X
Sunday, September 22, 2024
ADVT 
National

Montreal's New Samuel De Champlain Bridge Officially Inaugurated

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 28 Jun, 2019 11:55 PM

    Montreal's new Samuel de Champlain Bridge was officially inaugurated today, and will fully open to traffic on Canada Day.


    Today's inauguration comes 57 years to the day the first Champlain Bridge opened on June 28, 1962.


    The bridge — one of Canada's largest infrastructure projects — opened to northbound traffic towards Montreal on Monday, and southbound traffic will begin next Monday.


    It was originally scheduled to open last December, but various delays pushed back the opening and added another $235 million to the original $4.2 billion price tag.


    A pedestrian and bike path will open later this summer on the new 3.4 kilometre span.


    The old Champlain bridge will close permanently later this evening and deconstruction work on the 57-year-old bridge is scheduled to begin next year and will take about three years to complete at an estimated cost of $400 million.


    Federal Infrastructure Minister Francois-Philippe Champagne and Quebec Transport Minister Francois Bonnardel, as well as the mayors of Montreal and Brossard, were on hand for the opening, which included an Aboriginal blessing and the singing of the national anthem.


    Also on hand were some of the more than 2,000 people who worked on the new span, devoting more than eight million work hours in freezing or scalding temperatures.


    The new bridge is expected to last 125 years.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    B.C. Needs Goals, Timeline For Potential Money Laundering Inquiry: Wally Oppal

    Wally Oppal said he believes his inquiry had an impact after it wrapped in 2012. Police now investigate these cases far differently than they did when serial killer Robert Pickton was preying on vulnerable women, he said.

    B.C. Needs Goals, Timeline For Potential Money Laundering Inquiry: Wally Oppal

    Global Affairs Says One Canadian Among Four Killed In Float Plane Crash In Alaska

    VANCOUVER — A Canadian killed Monday in a mid-air collision involving two sightseeing planes in Alaska is one of two people still missing, Princess Cruises says in a statement.

    Global Affairs Says One Canadian Among Four Killed In Float Plane Crash In Alaska

    Small Communities Grapple With 'Huge Challenge' Of Opioid Crisis

    OTTAWA — In the small town of Arnprior, nestled into the Ottawa Valley, at least five suspected opioid overdoses in the span of week prompted police to issue a public warning.    

    Small Communities Grapple With 'Huge Challenge' Of Opioid Crisis

    Scientists Challenge Claim That Labrador Is Site Of Planet's Oldest Life

    A team of geological researchers is challenging claims that some of the earliest forms of known life existed in northern Labrador.    

    Scientists Challenge Claim That Labrador Is Site Of Planet's Oldest Life

    Alberta Premier Says Provincial Carbon Tax Will Die May 30

    EDMONTON — Alberta's premier says the province's carbon tax will no longer exist as of May 30.

    Alberta Premier Says Provincial Carbon Tax Will Die May 30

    Police To Crack Down On Mafia After Man's Slaying In Crowded Quebec Hotel

    Police To Crack Down On Mafia After Man's Slaying In Crowded Quebec Hotel
    MONTREAL — A Quebec police force is cracking down on organized crime after this month's brazen organized crime-linked slaying inside a popular hotel.

    Police To Crack Down On Mafia After Man's Slaying In Crowded Quebec Hotel