Skip to main content

Heavy going for heavy loads in Canada’s Alberta province

Canada’s Alberta province is considering a US$1.2 billion upgrade to its High Load Corridor that recently saw transportation of an 820 tonne petrochemical pipe. The 96m long tower – equivalent to a football pitch in length and about two lanes wide - was made in the capital city Edmonton, loaded onto a special trucking unit and driven the 38km to Fort Saskatchewan, mostly along provincial Highway 14 and then 21. The journey took four days and the tower, a polypropylene-propane splitter - will be instal
January 9, 2019 Read time: 2 mins

Canada’s Alberta province is considering a US$1.2 billion upgrade to its High Load Corridor that recently saw transportation of an 820 tonne petrochemical pipe.

The 96m long tower – equivalent to a football pitch in length and about two lanes wide - was made in the capital city Edmonton, loaded onto a special trucking unit and driven the 38km to Fort Saskatchewan, mostly along provincial Highway 14 and then 21.

The journey took four days and the tower, a polypropylene-propane splitter - will be installed at the Heartland petrochemical plant, one of many such facilities in Fort Saskatchewan.

Planning for the trip took the Edmonton officials more than a year and included guide vehicles and safety personnel accompanying the load. Care was taken to distribute the load over several trailers and multiple wheels. Any damage to road infrastructure is to be paid by the pipe owner, InterPipeline, noted newspaper reports.

This was the heaviest load to be transported on Alberta roads that are designated as part of the High Load Corridor, according to reports by local media.

It comes after a recent study by the provincial government that looked into upgrades to the 3,500km of the province’s High Load Corridor. Improvements would include bridge strengthening, road widening and the creation of staging and rest areas for overnight parking during a journey.

The Alberta government has defined the corridor as roads which have had their overhead utility lines raised to accommodate loads up to 9m high unless noted otherwise. Initial corridor construction was funded by the province’s department of transportation with the cost recovered from the users of the corridor in the form of permit fees.

Related Content

  • Accurate weigh-in-motion technology
    June 21, 2016
    Weigh-in-motion technology is ensuring increasingly accurate, and flexible, weighing stations. Weigh-in-motion specialist manufacturer Axtec says that its space-saving dynamic weighbridge is accurate to within ±0.5% and is the most precise system in the world. From its Runcorn, UK manufacturing facility, Axtec undertakes research and development of new technologies, as well as software testing, fabrication, construction and installation of WIM products. Axtec’s axle weighing platform design is intended f
  • Fluor and ACS Infrastructure Canada win Gordie Howe Bridge deal
    October 2, 2018
    Bridging North America will build the Gordie Howe Bridge, named after a famous Canadian ice hockey player and leading scorer A partnership including Fluor Canada and ACS Infrastructure Canada has been chosen to design, build, finance, operate and maintain the Gordie Howe International Bridge project. The client, Windsor-Detroit Bridge Authority (WDBA), announced the appointment of Bridging North America group in the Canadian city of Windsor, across the Detroit River from Detroit in the US state of Michig
  • Melbourne picks PPP deal for roads between Werribee and Footscray
    November 14, 2016
    The Australian city of Melbourne has laid out plans for a US$1.4 billion public-private partnership to revamp major city streets. Melbourne is the capital and most populous city in the state of Victoria, and, with around 4.6 million people, the second most populous city in Australia. Some areas of Melbourne are growing by up to 6% a year. More than 700km of suburban roads will be upgraded by 2022 as part of the 20-year construction and maintenance package, said state premier Daniel Andrews. Eight h
  • Danube bridge takes shape
    February 10, 2012
    A new bridge over the River Danube between Bulgaria and Romania is expected to benefit to the economies of both nations. Krasimir Krastanov reports