Skip to main content

Replace bridge for Vancouver’s Massey Tunnel could aid congestion

Opponents of a proposed 10-lane bridge near Vancouver, Canada, said the structure will encourage urban sprawl in a region that is already struggling with a booming population. The British Columbia provincial government recently opened the final round of public consultation for the planned 3.3km toll bridge likely to cost around US$2.54 billion.
December 21, 2015 Read time: 3 mins
Will the planned bridge contribute to urban sprawl? (picture courtesy BC government)

Opponents of a proposed 10-lane bridge near Vancouver, Canada, said the structure will encourage urban sprawl in a region that is already struggling with a booming population.

The British Columbia provincial government recently opened the final round of public consultation for the planned 3.3km toll bridge likely to cost around US$2.54 billion.

It will replace the Massey Tunnel under the Fraser River. The tunnel is operating to its capacity of 80,000 vehicles a day, often causing heavy congestion during rush hour morning and night.

Construction of the new bridge, which is yet to be officially named, is expected to start in 2017 and be complete in 2022 when it will replace the tunnel, directly below it.

The tunnel will be closed due to the increasingly high cost of maintaining the structure that was opened in 1959 and also because it fails to meet the latest seismic requirements. Canada’s west coast is along the 1,000km Cascadia fault that stretches from Northern Vancouver Island to Cape Mendocino in northern California.

The 10-lane bridge will be the province's longest and feature a high-occupancy vehicle as well as cycle and pedestrian paths. Upgrades to the highway will include new interchanges on Westminster Highway, Highway 17A and Steveston Road.

Consultation opened in mid-December and focuses on a review of the provincial government’s 48-page Project Definition Report that states the province plans to fund the project at least in part through tolls. The government is also exploring other funding partnerships for the bridge which would connect key regional gateways including Vancouver International Airport and the several major border crossings with the United States.

Consultation ends on January 28, but critics quickly slammed the project, according to a report by the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation. "Ever since we turned our back to freeways in the late 1960s, we're not trying to build our way out of congestion," noted Ken Cameron, former manager of policy and planning at Metro Vancouver.

"Putting in a big new facility like this runs directly counter to all of those objectives [of] the city of Vancouver, the city of Richmond and the other municipalities… Inevitably, history tells us, over time … new roads go up, with new traffic, and more congestion, and sooner or later you're right back where you started from."
Cameron said the government is not looking at the bigger picture of integrated transportation in the region. Instead, politicians are seeking a quick fix using one major project.

He reportedly also claimed that "tolling is literally a medieval technology”. Toll prices have yet to be finalised but will be based on funding from the federal government, Port Metro Vancouver and the final construction contracts, all of which have yet to be negotiated.

A member of the provincial legislature warned that the toll would put people off from using the bridge and they would drive dozens of miles to reach a free crossing. This would in turn create massive congestion in places where none has existed, as happened when the new Port Mann Bridge opened in 2012, she said.
Less traffic volumes would cripple the business case for the project’s funding, she also said.

Before construction can begin, the project must pass environmental and agricultural land reviews.

To see a World Highways report on dismantling the old Port Mann Bridge project, %$Linker: 2 Internal <?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-16"?><dictionary /> 2 23103 0 oLinkInternal click here. Vidit Port mann bridge project article false /sections/key-projects/features/almost-gone-canadas-old-port-mann-bridge-deconstructed/ false false%>

Related Content

  • Egis Projects-Sanef consortium sign second major ORT operations contract in Canada
    April 4, 2012
    A consortium composed of Egis Projects and Sanef has signed a contract for the operation of the Port Mann Bridge open road tolling (ORT) project in the Metro Vancouver Area, Canada. The largest transportation infrastructure project in British Columbia history, it includes doubling the capacity of the bridge and widening the highway from Vancouver to Langley, a distance of 37km. Once complete, it will reduce travel times by up to 30%, and save drivers up to an hour a day. The new bridge will also provide for
  • Canada: dump truck slams into bridge, partially demolishing it
    February 12, 2015
    In Canada, the driver of a dump truck that slammed into a pedestrian bridge, partially collapsing it on to road below, may have to pay for his mistake. Highway 132 in a suburb of Montreal was closed overnight while a demolition crew hastily tore down the remaining section of walkway over the road. Police are questioning the driver of the snow-removal dump truck who reportedly was travelling down the highway with his dumper raised, hitting the bridge which was built in 1979 and had recently undergone a US$
  • Vancouver eyes bridge, tunnel options
    September 25, 2020
    The Burrard Inlet Rapid Transit Study has listed five potential crossings.
  • New international trade crossing linking Canada and US
    June 9, 2015
    The Detroit River is short, only 45km, and narrow in places, less than 1km. Around a quarter of the annual $658 billion Canada-US trade crosses over the river. That’s $160 billion worth of goods trucked each year between Detroit in the US state of Michigan and the Canadian city of Windsor in the province of Ontario - the Windsor-Detroit Corridor. There are several types of crossings, but the vast majority of commercial traffic must use the 2.3km Ambassador Bridge (see box). A new bridge was initially prop