Skip to main content

Pedestrian bridges go-ahead for US-Canada Gordie Howe project

The Windsor-Detroit Bridge Authority has selected the design for the five pedestrian bridges which will be part of the US$4.4 billion Gordie Howe International Bridge.
By David Arminas January 24, 2020 Read time: 2 mins
Michigan Interchange pedestrian bridges over the I-75, as part of the Gordie Howe International Bridge project between the US and Canada (photo courtesy of WDBA)

The curved steel arch precast concrete bridges will be constructed as part of the Michigan Interchange at the end of the US side of the bridge rising over the Detroit River and connecting Windsor in Canada and Detroit in the US.

The pedestrian bridges over Interstate 75 will include lighting features and be compliant with Americans with Disabilities Act. They will be around 10m above the roadway and have a 3m-wide wide walkway.

Bridging North America, the private-sector partner to design, build, finance, operate and maintain the Gordie Howe project, will construct the pedestrian bridges between 2020 and 2024.

The pedestrian bridge announcement comes just after media reported construction will begin this summer on the bridge’s two A-frame towers that will suspend road deck. The bridge will have the longest main span in North America at 853m.

The Gordie Howe International Bridge project – costing $5.7 billion - is expected to be open by the end of 2024.

Windsor-Detroit Bridge Authority (WDBA) is a not-for-profit Canadian corporation created to deliver the Gordie Howe Bridge through a public-private partnership. WDBA is responsible for overseeing and managing the construction and operation of the new crossing.

The Michigan Department of Transportation is working with WDBA on the US components of the Gordie Howe International Bridge project. The 2.5km-long six-lane bridge will have a cycle and pedestrian path.

Design work is by Moriyama & Teshima, a member of the Bridging North America consortium. Other firms include ACS Infrastructure Canada, Dragados Canada, Fluor Canada, AECOM and Smith-Miller+Hawkinson Architects.

Related Content

  • Final touches for Seattle’s SR520 floating bridge
    November 21, 2017
    Construction crews in the US state of Washington are finishing bicycle trails and pedestrian paths leading up to the award-winning SR 520 floating bridge. The Evergreen Point Floating Bridge - officially now the Governor Albert D. Rosellini Bridge - carries Washington State Route 520 across Lake Washington in Seattle. The 2.35km-long floating span is the longest floating bridge in the world and at 35m the world's widest. It opened in April last year as a replacement for the original 50-year-old four-lane
  • Testing and striping underway for Seattle’s Alaskan Way tunnel
    October 18, 2018
    Crews have been working flat out on the Alaskan Way Tunnel in Seattle to install and test thousands of components and 90 interconnected systems.The client, Washington State Department of Transportation, said that Seattle Tunnel Partners began installation inside the double-deck State Route 99 tunnel in March after crews completed construction of the upper and lower roadways. STP said that testing could be complete by late September and the tunnel could open as soon as this fall after an approximate three-w
  • Bold move aids Ironton-Russell bridge works in U.S.
    January 24, 2014
    The bold decision to go against the norm and build the back spans using falsework for the Ironton-Russell replacement bridge between Parkersburg, Kentucky and Cincinnati, Ohio allowed land access to build the main span which, along with the first use in the U.S. of precast stay anchor blocks, meant the new structure could get built.
  • Temporary bridge replacement in the US
    July 2, 2019
    A temporary bridge structure provided by Acrow Bridge is maintaining traffic flow for a key crossing in Vermont. The bascule bridge is allowing both vehicular and vessel traffic to pass during the reconstruction work to the North Hero-Grand Isle Drawbridge in Vermont. The US$60 million project involves replacing the historic twin leaf bascule bridge on Lake Champlain. This modular steel bascule bridge is allowing transport to continue to and from the Lake Champlain island towns of North Hero and Grand Isl