Skip to main content

Province halts planned Vancouver bridge to replace Massey Tunnel

Canada’s province of British Columbia has stopped procurement for a proposed 10-lane US$2.8 billion bridge to replace the ageing George Massey Tunnel near Vancouver. Local media said the province would pay $1.65 million to two of the three shortlisted consortia which had already submitted bids for what is officially called the George Massey Tunnel Replacement project.
September 14, 2017 Read time: 3 mins
BC government puts the brakes on the George Massey Tunnel Replacement project

Canada’s province of British Columbia has stopped procurement for a proposed 10-lane US$2.8 billion bridge to replace the ageing George Massey Tunnel near Vancouver.

Local media said the province would pay $1.65 million to two of the three shortlisted consortia which had already submitted bids for what is officially called the George Massey Tunnel Replacement project.

One consortium is headed by Spanish company ACS and its local subsidiaries and includes Star America Infrastructure Partners and Aecon. Another of the competing consortia comprises Kiewit, Macquarie and Vinci. The third is made up of Fluor, John Laing and SNC-Lavalin.

A winner to build the 3km cable stay bridge over the Fraser River was to have been chose October 24. Instead, provincial transportation minister Claire Trevena said the newly elected New Democratic Party government will start an “independent technical review”, to be completed in the spring, of the best solution for replacing the aging George Massey tunnel.

Trevena said there will be more consultation and research to get buy-in from the community and regional mayors. “We’re not going back to square one, we’re going back to a thorough consultation with the community,” the minister reportedly said.

The Vancouver Sun newspaper reported that previous Liberal government had already spent more than $54 million on engineering and geotechnical work, public consultation, land procurement and site clearing, including preparations for eventual widening of Highway 99 which the bridge would carry.

The proposed bridge has faced continued criticism by many of Vancouver’s nearby regional city mayors, many of whom have urged the money to be put into other transportation infrastructure projects. These include replacing the 1.2km Pattullo Bridge. The through arch structure, opened in 1937, crosses the Fraser River and links the city of New Westminster to the city of Surrey.

Other suggestions are a subway along Vancouver City’s central Broadway Street corridor and a rapid transit system in Surrey.

The proposed bridge is planned directly above the George Massey Tunnel which was opened in 1959 but which suffers increasing traffic congestion. Keeping it open as an alternate route or as a route for cycling and pedestrians was mooted but the cost of maintaining an ageing structure would be prohibitive.

The plan has been to demolish the tunnel after the a new bridge is opened, although some mayor still advocate upgrading and twinning the Massey Tunnel - originally called the Deas Island Tunnel when it was opened by Queen Elizabeth in 1959. It carries a four-lane divided highway under the south arm of the Fraser River estuary, joining the City of Richmond to the north with the municipality of Delta to the south.

The George Massey Tunnel is the only road tunnel in Canada below sea level.

Related Content

  • East End Crossing Project—Availability payment P3 in action
    July 14, 2017
    Indiana exercised its authority to use a P3 contract when it partnered with Kentucky for new bridges across the Ohio River. Barney Allison and John Smolen* explain the groundbreaking availability payment deal. Earlier this year, traffic began rolling over the new tolled Lewis and Clark Bridge spanning the Ohio River from northern Kentucky to southern Indiana. The cable-stayed bridge is part of the award-winning Ohio Bridges Project to untangle traffic within the greater metropolitan area of Louisville, Kent
  • Indonesia cancels Sunda Strait Bridge connecting Java and Sumatra
    November 11, 2014
    Indonesia pulls back from Sunda Strait Bridge connecting Java and Sumatra Indonesia appears to have shelved construction of a 30km bridge that would have connected the islands of Sumatra and Java – a US$23 billion project. The structure -- a dream of Indonesia's political elite since the 1960s -- was to have three lanes of traffic in each direction, twin rail tracks and cabling for telecommunications and electricity. But the Jakarta Post newspaper reported that recently elected President Joko Widodo had
  • Highway 407 Revisited – smart tollroad extension
    June 7, 2016
    In the late 1990s, World Highways published a supplement on construction of Canada’s Highway 407, the world’s first all-electronic toll road. But how successful has it been? David Arminas reports from Toronto The head office for 407 ETR Concession Company is a low-rise building next to exit 59, just north of Toronto, Canada’s economic powerhouse. The building may be non-descript but inside is the advanced technical heart of Highway 407 ETR – Express Toll Route. It houses the latest toll monitoring techno
  • Curved girders for the Gaasperdammerweg A9 section in Amsterdam
    May 22, 2018
    Dutch authorities recently needed to add traffic lanes to two flyovers at the Holendrecht junction on the Gaasperdammerweg section of the A9 motorway in Amsterdam It was in November 2014 that the Directorate-General for Public Works and Water Management of the Netherlands Rijkswaterstaat awarded the A9 Gaasperdammerweg public-private-partnership project to IXAS Zuid-Oost, a consortium consisting of Ballast Nedam, Fluor, Heijmans and 3i Infrastructure. The A9 Gaasperdammerweg project is the third section