Skip to main content

Systra, Kiewit and Hatch to build third bridge in Kingston, Canada

Kingston, Canada, has selected Systra International Bridge Technologies, Peter Kiewit Sons and Hatch as the preferred consortium for the design and build Third Crossing project. Seven international teams answered the requests for proposals in February and 2018 with Systra, Kiewit and Hatch eventually chosen from a shortlist of three groups. The consortium will use an integrated project delivery model for the two-lane 1.2km bridge with a pedestrian and cycle path over the Cataraqui River will connect
August 31, 2018 Read time: 1 min
Kingston in the Canadian province of Ontario: the city’s Third Crossing Bridge will be the first in North America to use an integrated project delivery model
Kingston, Canada, has selected 5549 Systra International Bridge Technologies, Peter Kiewit Sons and Hatch as the preferred consortium for the design and build Third Crossing project.


Seven international teams answered the requests for proposals in February and  2018 with Systra, Kiewit and Hatch eventually chosen from a shortlist of three groups.

The consortium will use an integrated project delivery model for the two-lane 1.2km bridge with a pedestrian and cycle path over the Cataraqui River will connect John Counter Boulevard in the west to Gore Road in the east.

According to the consortium and Kingston, the integrated project design is similar to a design-build except that Kingston and the contracted design and construction partners will work within the US$140 million budget, sharing risk and reward.

The project is being jointly funded by the government of Canada, the province of Ontario and the Kingston – each financing a third of the cost.

Site preparation work will start this month and construction is expected to start in December 2019.

A name for the unofficially called Third Crossing will be chosen through public consultation later on. Meanwhile, more information about the Third Crossing Bridge is available on the city of %$Linker: 2 External <?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-16"?><dictionary /> 0 0 0 link-external Kingston's website false https://thirdcrossing.cityofkingston.ca/ false false%>.

Kingston’s other major crossing is the La Salle Causeway that carries Highway 2 over the Cataraqui River that separates Kingston's inner and outer harbours. Three bridges are incorporated into the causeway that was opened in 1917. The centre one is a trunnion bascule lift bridge designed by Joseph Strauss, designer of the Golden Gate Bridge in San Francisco. Around 23,000 vehicles cross the causeway daily.

The La Salle Causeway replaced the wooden Penny Bridge System that included three bridges: two at each end of the causeway and in the centre a bascule bridge. Of these, only the original centre lift bridge remains. A concrete bridge replaced the steel bridges at the east in 1962 and in the west end of the causeway in 1993.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Algeria gives go ahead for 63km Guelma-Annaba motorway
    December 11, 2014
    Work has started on Algeria’s 63km bypass motorway to connect Guelma with Annaba and the East-West motorway, which is set to be completed within two years. Algeria’s Minister for Public Works Abdelkader Kadi made the announcement, has announced the launch of work on the 63km bypass connecting Guelma with Annaba. Nearly $346 million has been set aside for the 35km part of the project within the province of Guelma. In the province of Annaba, Kadi said that work had started on another section of the mot
  • Bridge deck launched for the New Wear Crossing, Sunderland (Video)
    March 30, 2017

    The 300m bridge deck of Sunderland’s New Wear Crossing has been successfully launched across the river.

    The 4,750tonne concrete and steel deck was resting on the south side of the River Wear from where it was inched across to touch the north side in a 20-hour operation. It had to slide through the twin arched towers of the bridge’s double pylon on its way to its final position to connect the city regions of Pallion to the south and Castletown to the north.

  • Boral and Global Ecofuel enter the biofuel and bitumen arena
    May 9, 2019
    An Australian government agency has awarded around US$350,000 to two companies to investigate the production of bitumen and diesel from wood waste. If successful, Australia’s state of New South Wales could become home to the world’s first biorefinery turning sawmill residues into renewable bitumen and diesel, according to ARENA - the Australian Renewable Energy Agency. Under the $842,000 million study, Boral Timber, a major supplier of hardwood and softwood in Australia, will explore the technical and
  • Early opening for Arizona’s first P3 deal, South Mountain Freeway
    June 27, 2017
    Arizona's first highway public-private partnership will open in 2019, three years earlier than scheduled, the state transportation department said.