Close X
Monday, November 18, 2024
ADVT 
National

Two busy roads could be history by 2020, following Vancouver council vote

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 28 Oct, 2015 11:57 AM

    VANCOUVER — Councillors in Vancouver have narrowly approved removal of two elevated roadways moving traffic in and out of the city's downtown core.

    In a 5-4 vote, councillors approved plans to demolish the Georgia and Dunsmuir viaducts, replacing them with a ramp to Georgia Street and a two-way, six lane Pacific Boulevard.

    A release from council estimates construction could start in late 2017, and be complete by 2020, but also notes detailed planning is still needed.

    Mayor Gregor Robertson says demolishing the viaducts will sidestep $65 million in seismic upgrades, reconnect several downtown and east side neighbourhoods, create new affordable housing opportunities and clear space for a five hectare park.

    He calls the removal a "once-in-a-generation building opportunity."

    City staff have 18 months or less to update council on any progress.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    $2 An Hour: Indian Hoteliers Face Jail Term For Underpaying Workers In New Zealand

    $2 An Hour: Indian Hoteliers Face Jail Term For Underpaying Workers In New Zealand
    Joti Jain and Rajwinder Singh Grewal jointly pleaded guilty to a total of 20 immigration and exploitation charges at the Auckland district court

    $2 An Hour: Indian Hoteliers Face Jail Term For Underpaying Workers In New Zealand

    Donald MacLean, Nova Scotia Bus Driver Emotional As He Speaks Of Student's Death

    Donald MacLean, Nova Scotia Bus Driver Emotional As He Speaks Of Student's Death
    SYDNEY, N.S. — The driver of a school bus that ran over and killed a student outside a high school in Sydney, N.S., last winter says he didn't know something had happened until someone banged on the door of his bus.

    Donald MacLean, Nova Scotia Bus Driver Emotional As He Speaks Of Student's Death

    Mom And Baby Whale Number 5 Doing Well Off B.C. Coast As Population Rebounding

    Mom And Baby Whale Number 5 Doing Well Off B.C. Coast As Population Rebounding
    SOOKE, B.C. — Scientists say a fifth baby has joined an endangered population of killer whales off British Columbia's coast.

    Mom And Baby Whale Number 5 Doing Well Off B.C. Coast As Population Rebounding

    Woman Arrested, Police Seek Details Following Suspicious Death Involving Truck In Fort St. John

    Woman Arrested, Police Seek Details Following Suspicious Death Involving Truck In Fort St. John
    A woman is in custody as RCMP in Fort St. John, B.C., investigate what they are calling a suspicious death.

    Woman Arrested, Police Seek Details Following Suspicious Death Involving Truck In Fort St. John

    Muslim Flight Attendant Suspended For Refusing To Serve Alcohol Files Complaint

    Muslim Flight Attendant Suspended For Refusing To Serve Alcohol Files Complaint
    Charee Stanley, a Detroit-based flight attendant for ExpressJet, filed a discrimination complaint Tuesday with the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission.

    Muslim Flight Attendant Suspended For Refusing To Serve Alcohol Files Complaint

    RCMP Lay Charges In Fire That Destroyed School In Nunavut

    RCMP Lay Charges In Fire That Destroyed School In Nunavut
    Police have laid charges in a fire that destroyed the only school for junior and senior high students in the Arctic community of Cape Dorset.

    RCMP Lay Charges In Fire That Destroyed School In Nunavut