Skip to main content

VIDEO: Saskatoon bridge demolition removes final span

November 18, 2016
The final section of a defunct bridge in Saskatoon has now been removed by demolition contractor Rakowski Cartage & Wrecking. Excavators fitted with hydraulic breakers were employed by the firm to break up the final span, which collapsed into the river as planned. Demolition work to remove the defunct structure commenced in 2012. Other sections of the bridge were removed using explosive demolition earlier this year.

Work to construct the Saskatoon Traffic Bridge, also known as the Victoria Bridge, commenced in 1906 and the link opened to traffic in 1907. The construction of the 290m long truss-type bridge was instrumental in the development of modern day Saskatoon as the link connected Nutan on the east bank of the South Saskatchewan River, with Saskatoon and Riversdale on the west bank. When the bridge was constructed it cost $106,000, however it closed to traffic in 2010 as it was no longer considered structurally sound. The old structure joined Victoria Avenue to 3rd Avenue South and Spadina Crescent and the new bridge taking its place will be complete in 2018.

Related Content

  • Increased spending for St Petersburg roads
    May 21, 2012
    The authorities in the Russian city of St Petersburg will spend some US$514.6 million on road construction and reconstruction during 2012. The city authorities will use public and private partnerships to push ahead with planned road infrastructure projects. Private investors will be invited to participate in construction of two highways with bridges across the Neva River, a highway with a bridge at the intersection of Fayansovaya and Zolnaya streets, and the Northern highway #7 connecting Arsenalnaya embank
  • Cape Cod bridge replacements planned
    May 30, 2022
    Key Cape Cod bridge replacement projects are planned.
  • England’s A14 project River Great Ouse Viaduct completed
    February 28, 2019
    Construction of the biggest bridge in Highways England’s €1.73 billion A14 Cambridge-to-Huntingdon upgrade has been completed. The River Great Ouse Viaduct stretches for 0.8km and when opened to traffic next year will take the new A14 road over the floodplain and the East Coast Mainline Railway line. Work began in November 2016 on the bridge that is part of a new 27.4km bypass under construction to the south of Huntingdon and away from the existing A14. The road is being widened to three lanes in both
  • Road transport key to Africa's trade links
    February 17, 2012
    Road transport is the key to improving Africa's links within its own territory, and further afield as Patrick Smith reports. Development of road transportation is the key to the future of the African economy, and countries on the continent are making great strides. According to a report by a transport infrastructure expert at the New Partnership for Africa's Development (NEPAD), within the next 15 years the value of trade in Africa could reach US$250 billion if a $32 billion investment is made to integrate