Skip to main content

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.

The Canadian Broadcasting Corporation reported last June that the BC government announced the project nearly three years ago. But the CBC noted that a consultation meeting with local residents failed to address many of their concerns.

"We're basically doing the same height as the Alex Fraser [bridge], but we're also factoring in a little bit of potential sea level change because of climate change. So that distance is about 57m," said Pam Ryan, planning director of the George Massey Tunnel Replacement Project.

Some technical studies have yet to be completed before the plan is finalised, but the timetable remains intact - construction start in 2017 and completion by 2022, the CBC reported.

It is still not clear if the George Massey Tunnel, also known as the Deas Island Tunnel, under the Fraser River will be decommissioned after the new bridge is opened. The government’s project group, George Massey Tunnel Replacement Project, has said the tunnel now carries its limit of 80,000 vehicles a day.

Extensive renovations to the tunnel and attempts to improve access roads have been done over the years, buy the group says only about 10 years of life is left in the tunnel itself. A video of the tunnel being constructed in the late 1950s is %$Linker: 2 External <?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-16"?><dictionary /> 0 0 0 oLinkExternal available here Visit Youtube video page false https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=A1igKk8eK0M false false%>.

Related Content

  • CDE’s new German focus
    January 6, 2017
    CDE Global has formed CDE GmbH trading as CDE Deutschland, which has developed from a distribution agreement for southern Germany that was in place between CDE Global and Jurgen Kolsch. The move sees Stefan Kolsch and Sean McCusker assume roles as directors in the new company, which will have exclusive responsibility for the sales, distribution, project management and after sales and service elements of the CDE business in Germany.
  • CDE’s new German focus
    February 13, 2013
    CDE Global has formed CDE GmbH trading as CDE Deutschland, which has developed from a distribution agreement for southern Germany that was in place between CDE Global and Jurgen Kolsch. The move sees Stefan Kolsch and Sean McCusker assume roles as directors in the new company, which will have exclusive responsibility for the sales, distribution, project management and after sales and service elements of the CDE business in Germany.
  • Nice in 2018: The Pavement Preservation & Recycling Summit (PPRS)
    November 17, 2017
    Siobhan McKelvey, president of the Paris-based International Bitumen Emulsion Federation (IBEF), explains the importance for attending next year’s Pavement Preservation & Recycling Summit. The event will be held in Nice in southern France from 26-28 March at the Nice Acropolis. One of the highlights for me that is provided by the PPRS platform is the opportunity to exchange on communication experiences throughout the world and how the challenges of promoting the role of a good road network are met.
  • Missouri’s Blanchette Bridge gets smaller and smaller
    December 10, 2012
    Missouri’s Blanchette Bridge is now even more abridged. Just a few weeks after explosives took out the West Struss Span, the remaining steel truss on the bridge’s westbound lanes was blown up by demolition crews on Tuesday December 5, 2012. More than 2,000tonnes of steel dropped over 300m into the Missouri River. A 107m section of the Blanchette Bridge was brought down last month. The Blanchette Bridge blasting is part of a US$63 million, year-long project to replace the westbound span.