Skip to main content

Foran Equipment helps Kananaskis kayakers construct course

In the Canadian Rocky Mountains, there was a window of opportunity of only several days before these excavators had to be out of the Kananaskis River ahead of nearby Barrier Dam releasing its water. The provincial Alberta Whitewater Association hired local contractor Foran Equipment to bring in their equipment in to re-work the riverbed after severe flooding in June 2013 washed out the kayaking courses.
April 27, 2016 Read time: 3 mins

In the Canadian Rocky Mountains, there was a window of opportunity of only several days before these excavators had to be out of the Kananaskis River ahead of nearby Barrier Dam releasing its water.

The provincial Alberta Whitewater Association hired local contractor Foran Equipment to bring in their equipment in to re-work the riverbed after severe flooding in June 2013 washed out the kayaking courses.

Southern parts of Alberta province suffered severe storms and massive flooding that month which devastated several small foothills towns and even the city of Calgary.

Provincial authorities held back water at the Barrier Dam while communities got to work repairing riverside and riverbed damage and beefed up flood protection systems.

Meanwhile, the Alberta Whitewater Association took the opportunity to rebuild a favourite kayaking course. “We had to work fast and efficiently because that dam’s water was going to be released no matter what,” said Chuck Lee, executive director of the Alberta Whitewater Association and in charge of the riverbed reconstruction.

Excavators arrived on flatbeds and slipped onto the river’s bed where the banking was low. They quickly set about rearranging boulders, shifting mountains of rock and mud and setting down new reinforced concrete blocks.

Objects had to be laid out so the rushing waters would create eddies, washes and currents suitable for kayak training and racing courses.

Since finishing the work, the section of the river has been used numerous times for training and races, and is also a popular weekend destination for campers.

It was June 21, 2013, when rain runoff raged down several mountains engulfing floodplains and swept away everything in its path. Especially hard hit was the small resort town of Canmore, about a 45-minute drive west of Calgary, which also suffered severe flooding to its city centre.

In Canmore, felled trees and giant boulders in the Cougar River did most of the damage, carving out an estimates 130,000m2 of the creek bed and banks. The river cut a swath through an expensive housing estate, carving out and carrying away entire million-dollar houses.

In the aftermath, the Canadian federal and Alberta provincial government poured millions of dollars into the Canmore area to improve flood protection schemes. As one Canmore land surveyor told World Highways at the time, local construction companies had never been so busy.

%$Linker: 2 External <?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-16"?><dictionary /> 0 0 0 oLinkExternal Click here false http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Pu2dTg9pdHg false false%> to see the Cougar River nibbling away at a luxury home and a lone excavator, in the pouring rain, desperately trying to shore up a small road bridge despite the raging waters.

Related Content

  • Video: Chinese cars levitate at crossroads
    December 23, 2015
    Watch as the vehicles appear to be grabbed by some invisible power, tossed around and chucked backwards up in the air. Startled onlookers stare at the van drivers struggle to get out of their cabs.
  • Vancouver’s 10-lane bridge replacement for Massey Tunnel remain undecided
    October 23, 2015
    Construction of a 10-lane bridge to replace a congested river tunnel in Vancouver, Canada, is still on target to start in 2017, despite details remaining sketchy.

    The bridge will replace the 60-year-old George Massey Tunnel between the local cities of Richmond and Delta along the provincial Highway 99. But the cost and – importantly – whether it will be a toll bridge have not been declared by the British Columbia provincial government.
  • Video: Passenger car gives a lift to a white van in Spain
    December 23, 2015
    Maybe the driver of the Ford Focus passenger vehicle didn’t notice at first that he had a white van on the roof of the car. Or maybe he did, as the video, taken this year, shows. However, police in the Spanish town didn’t take kindly to either the driver of the passenger car or the person taking the video, according to media reports.
  • VIDEO: Rollerman Blondeau takes to the hills, Grimsel Pass
    July 26, 2016
    Sure, it’s a spectacular run down a mountain road. But it’s also an extremely visual reminder that highway infrastructure is important for work and play. Let’s not forget that the road - in this case Switzerland’s Grimsel Pass, 2,164m - has to be smooth enough for Jean Yves “Rollerman” Blondeau to reach those speeds without being chucked over edge and down a cliff. The pass is a driver’s delight as it crosses the continental divide in the Alps where rivers flow one way towards the North Sea and the ot