SURREY, B.C. - British Columbia's transportation minister says the business plan and funding for the Surrey-Langley SkyTrain project has been officially approved.
Rob Fleming says the project is expected to be completed by 2028, two years earlier than originally planned, and will cost $500 million less than was anticipated by building the line to Langley "all at once."
We're moving ahead with the first rapid transit project south of the Fraser River in 30 years! The Surrey-Langley SkyTrain will provide high-quality, low-cost, climate friendly transportation for people in this growing region & will be built 2 years faster than initially planned pic.twitter.com/u86gjsTDLR
— Rob Fleming (@Rob_Fleming) July 14, 2022
He says the capital cost of the link is $3.94 billion, which includes $2.4 billion from the province, $1.3 billion from the federal government and the remainder coming from local government.
Once complete, Fleming says it will take just 22 minutes to travel from Langley to King George station in Surrey, and just over an hour to get from Langley to downtown Vancouver.
The province says in a release that work on the project, including utility relocations and road widening, is already underway and major construction is expected to begin in 2024.
Fleming says the province will also be providing another $60 million for active transportation routes for biking and walking along the Fraser Highway to "complement" the SkyTrain line.
Photos courtesy of BC Government (Flickr)