Skip to main content

Gordie Howe Bridge on schedule for 2024

Slowdowns over COVID but time to regain momentum, says WDBA.
By David Arminas June 19, 2020 Read time: 2 mins
Construction off footings on the Canadian side has progressed (photo courtesy WDBA)

Despite slower progress than hoped for due to COVID protection measures, completion for the Gordie Howe International Bridge is on schedule for late 2024.

Safety measures for workers include daily screening for virus symptoms, the wearing of face masks and physical distancing, said Bryce Phillips, chief executive of the Windsor-Detroit Bridge Authority.

“It’s been almost three months dealing with COVID-19 and we are working to understand the impacts and how can we mitigate those impacts,” said Phillips during an on-line update of progress this month. “The reason why we are still showing the end of 2024 [as completion] is because that is four years away and there is still a lot of opportunity…to mitigate against what’s happened with COVID-19.”

Phillips, however, acknowledged that challenges remain for continuing to work simultaneously on the project’s four components – the bridge, the Canadian and US ports of entry and the bridge’s Michigan Interchange.

The 2.5km-long six-lane bridge will have a cycle and pedestrian path.

Final design of the bridge is being reviewed by international experts, said Aaron Epstein, chief executive of Bridging North America, the consortium that won the $5.7 billion fixed-priced public-private partnership deal in 2018. It includes design-build, operation, maintenance and rehabilitation.

BNA include ACS Infrastructure Canada, Dragados Canada, Fluor Canada, Aecon, Aecom, RBC Dominion Securities, Carlos Fernandez Casado and FHECOR Ingenieros Consultores, Moriyama & Teshima and Smith-Miller+Hawkinson Architects.

Ongoing work includes the placing of around 150,000 wick drains. Bridge footing are finished and tower footings are under construction and “will be seen above ground later this year”, said Epstein.

A 4km perimeter access road around the Canadian port of entry is ready and hydro transmission lines are undergoing testing.

The Windsor-Detroit Bridge Authority 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 crossing.

Michigan state’s department of transportation is working with WDBA on the US components of the bridge project.

The bridge is named after Canadian professional ice hockey player Gordie Howe, who spent years playing for the US team Detroit Red Wings of the National Hockey League.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Stantec: coming to an infrastructure site near you
    April 13, 2017
    Acquisitive Canadian firm Stantec is snapping up more transportation expertise as it moves out of its home North American market. David Arminas reports. Last December, politicians from the US states of Kentucky and Indiana celebrated the opening of the second of two major bridges. A ribbon-cutting ceremony took place in cold wintry weather on the new 762m-long cable-stayed Lewis and Clark Bridge. The event marked the finish of the prestigious three-and-half-year Ohio River Bridges Project.
  • BC awards last Kicking Horse contract
    November 20, 2020
    Phase Four includes 4km of new highway in Canada’s mostly westerly province.
  • Champlain Bridge set to open by end of year, says SNC-Lavalin
    May 14, 2018
    The Canadian city’s replacement Champlain Bridge will open on schedule at the end of the year. Montreal, one of Canada’s largest cities, will have a well-earned Christmas present in December when the new Champlain Bridge opens after 42 months of construction. The new bridge, part of a six-lane 6km corridor including roads, is being built alongside the original bridge over the Saint Lawrence River and Seaway canal system. The new bridge, 3.4km long, runs from the île des Soeurs to Brossard, immediately dow
  • US$2 billion George Washington Bridge repair
    December 10, 2024
    A US$2 billion repair project is underway for the George Washington Bridge in the US.