Skip to main content

Pattullo Bridge deck near completion

For several weeks, crews have been installing concrete deck panels, steel girders and stay cables outward from the towers of the bridge that spans the Fraser River near Vancouver, Canada.
By David Arminas July 29, 2025 Read time: 2 mins
Crews are working on bridge finishes, including fencing, utilities, barriers and expansion joint installation, which will be followed by asphalt paving later this summer (image courtesy Transportation Investment Corporation/Partnerships British Columbia)

Deck panel installation for the US$1.03 billion Pattullo Suspension Bridge replacement project in the Vancouver area is nearing completion, with concrete pours being planned.

The bridge crosses the Fraser River and links the cities of New Westminster and Surrey in Metro Vancouver,

For several weeks, crews have been installing concrete deck panels, steel girders and stay cables outward from the bridge tower. The connection of the south approach and main span was recently completed, marking the creation of a continuous bridge deck from the bridge tower into Surrey.

Crews are working on bridge finishes, including fencing, utilities, barriers and expansion joint installation, which will be followed by asphalt paving later this summer.

When the four-lane toll-free bridge opens this autumn, the existing 1.3km-long four-lane old bridge will be removed. The bridge was opened in 1937 and had no median space between the opposing traffic flow, leading to many head-on crashes.

Fraser Crossing Partners – a joint partnership between Acciona Infrastructure Canada and Aecon Group – have designed and are constructing the bridge. The contract includes construction of road connections at the bridgeheads in New Westminster and Surrey. Its will include pedestrian access and allow for future widening from four to six lanes.

Construction of the new bridge was expected to take place between 2019 and 2023, with the CAN$1.3 billion funding finalised in 2018. However, work started at the beginning of the pandemic, in February 2020. According to the provincial British Columbia government, the project has faced significant challenges, including inflationary pressures and global supply issues related to the delivery of specialised components from around the world. In addition, the bridge tower construction took longer than expected, pushing back the completion date.

The official name of the bridge has yet to be decided, but the name will be in Halkomelem, the language of the local First Nations people upon whose land the bridge stands. The name will be decided jointly by Musqueam First Nation and Kwantlen First Nation groups.

The new bridge is funded and owned by the province of BC while the Transportation Investment Corporation (TI Corp) is responsible for managing the delivery of the Project. The BC Ministry of Transportation and Infrastructure will be responsible for, and maintain, the new bridge once completed.

For Videos and images of construction progress, click here.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Cowi wins Massey Tunnel design
    July 22, 2022
    Cowi has won a contract as owner's engineer for an eight-lane replacement immersed tunnel under the Fraser River near the Pacific coast city of Vancouver. Cowi said it will draw on its experience designing the original four-lane George Massey Tunnel in 1959 and whose removal the engineering firm will later oversee.
  • Canadian tower tops out on Gordie Howe
    December 21, 2023
    The six-lane cable-stayed bridge project includes new customs plazas in both Detroit and Windsor as well as a new link to the I-75 interstate highway in Detroit.
  • COWI wins Massey Tunnel design contract
    February 18, 2022
    COWI will develop an eight-lane immersed tunnel for the George Massey Crossing Project near Vancouver, Canada.
  • Replace bridge for Vancouver’s Massey Tunnel could aid congestion
    December 21, 2015
    Opponents of a proposed 10-lane bridge near Vancouver, Canada, said the structure will encourage urban sprawl in a region that is already struggling with a booming population. The British Columbia provincial government recently opened the final round of public consultation for the planned 3.3km toll bridge likely to cost around US$2.54 billion.