Skip to main content

BC awards last Kicking Horse contract

Phase Four includes 4km of new highway in Canada’s mostly westerly province.
By David Arminas November 20, 2020 Read time: 2 mins
The Cut along the Trans-Canada Highway through Kicking Horse Canyon, a popular tourist route, including for cyclists (photo courtesy BC Ministry of Transportation and Infrastructure)

The British Columbia government has awarded the contract for the final phase of the Kicking Horse Canyon Project to Kicking Horse Canyon Constructors, KHCC.

Phase Four, the last phase of the overall project, includes 4km of new highway through the difficult canyon section between the West Portal and 5-Mile Yoho Bridge in Canada’s mostly westerly province.

The KHCC group - Aecon Group, Parsons and Emil Anderson Construction – picked up the US$338 million design and build deal – the fourth of the four construction phases - this autumn. The award completes the competitive procurement process that began last December.

Phase 4 will bring the remaining 4.8km of narrow, winding two-lane Trans-Canada Highway up to a modern four-lane 100kph standard, according to a BC government statement. It is expected to be substantially complete by the winter 2023-24.

The project has a budget of $461 million, with $296 million from the provincial BC government and $165 million from the federal government.

Other works include the realignment of 13 curves and the construction of median barriers and wider shoulders to accommodate cyclists – an international known tourist route. There will also be mitigation of rock-fall hazards and avalanches protection along with wildlife fencing and highway passages.

The Kicking Horse Canyon, located just east of the town of Golden, is one of the most rugged and scenic sections to be found on the Trans-Canada Highway. As a tourist and commercial transportation corridor, the highway carries more than 10,000 vehicles daily during the summer and up to 30% of traffic is commercial.

The Kicking Horse Canyon Project’s first three phases transformed 21km of the Trans-Canada. Work on Phase Four is expected to start before the end of this year.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Possible delays for Gordie Howe Bridge
    November 15, 2022
    The tolled six-lane cable-stayed bridge over the Detroit River will connect the city of Windsor in the Canadian province of Ontario with Detroit in the neighbouring US state of Michigan.
  • I Lift NY crane places first girder on New York’s Tappan Zee Bridge
    June 25, 2015
    One of the world’s largest cranes has placed the first steel girder assembly for the approach span of the new NY Bridge, often called the Tappen Zee Bridge in New York. The barge-mounted I Lift NY super crane with its nearly 100m boom slowly picked up the 125m unit from its delivery barge and gently lowered it onto concrete pedestals in the Hudson River, near the Rockland County side of the bridge. The super crane will install even larger sections of the new bridge, some of which weigh around 907tonne
  • Economic gains from widening the A453 in Nottingham, England
    August 12, 2014
    Work is well underway on turning a busy just over 11km two-lane link road from the city of Nottingham to Junction 24 of the M1 in Leicestershire, England into a four-lane highway. The widened highway will relieve considerable peak-time congestion for travellers to Nottingham, the M1 and East Midlands Airport while also making journeys safer and more reliable. Guy Woodford reports Used by up to 30,000 vehicles a day, the A453 is renowned for congestion at peak travel times. But years of day-to-day commuter a
  • THIS is a Paving Project– The I-15 CORE
    December 20, 2012
    Provo, Utah – The scope of the I-15 Corridor Expansion Project (I-15 CORE) in the state of Utah is nearly unprecedented because of the size of the project and the short completion deadline. Twenty-four miles (38.6 km) of removal and replacement of Interstate 15 between Lehi and Spanish Fork, widening the number of traveling lanes by two, for up to six lanes in each direction in 35 months. The new 364 lane miles (586 km) of concrete roadway will be slipformed 12 or 12.5 inches (305 or 318 mm) thick for a tot