Local news delivered daily to your email inbox. Subscribe for FREE to the rdnewsNOW newsletter.
L-R: Minister Randy Boissonnault, Elder Lyle Keewatin Richards, and Mayor Ken Johnston. (rdnewsNOW/Ashley Lavallee-Koenig)
$19 MILLION TOTAL

CPR pedestrian bridge to be rehabilitated through combined government investments

Jun 26, 2024 | 3:20 PM

The Canadian Pacific Railway (CPR) pedestrian bridge will be receiving significant upgrades to preserve and extend the life of the structure as part of a federally funded, province-wide infrastructure upgrade initiative.

On June 26, Randy Boissonnault, minister of employment, workforce development and official languages, joined Mayor Ken Johnston and others from city council and administration at the bridge to announce $11.1 million in funding from the federal government. The City of Red Deer will be contributing $8.6 million to the project.

“It’s a lifeline for our community; it’s an artery that connects our downtown to Riverside Meadows, providing essential access to services and support. Imagine a Red Deer where every resident, regardless of their circumstances, can navigate our city safely and with ease: that is the vision we’re working towards with this project,” said Johnston.

The bridge was first built as a CPR crossing in 1908 and used until 1990, when the rail line was relocated. It was then set to be demolished until citizens intervened and advocated to have it repurposed as an active transportation structure. In 1991, city council designated the structure as a Municipal Historic Resource.

Parks and Public Works Manager Greg Sikora said that from an engineering standpoint, the bridge deck was on track to reach structural failure in the next five years. Structural limitations have been in place on the deck for about three years, requiring events like the Long Table Dinner, which was typically held on the bridge, to relocate.

“We were on a really tight timeframe to get this, because if you talk about running an investment to the end of its life cycle, we’re at the end of its life cycle,” he said.

The bridge has three main components: the supporting piers, the deck, and the superstructure. Sikora said that consultation with engineers and construction professionals conveyed that the most cost-effective approach to repairs would be to build the new piers adjacent to the existing structure, add a new deck, and then transfer the superstructure over. This will cause the bridge to shift about 15 metres downstream.

“The bridge will be rotated slightly and translated a little downstream, so it’s going to be taking a little bit of a different alignment, but it will be true to its core values,” Sikora explained.

Portions of the superstructure will be replaced to maintain integrity and the wooden deck with a concrete deck for durability and performance. The goal is for the structure to last another 100 years.

As part of the rehabilitation project, the City intends to install an entertainment plaza at the north end of the bridge with seating and landscape features for residents to enjoy. This project is still in the design phase.

Related: CPR bridge repair and Centennial Plaza Park redevelopment among proposed in Red Deer’s capital budget

Related: City says a Capstone Pedestrian Bridge could cost up to $50 million

The bridge rehabilitation is in the tender phase, meaning the City is determining who will take the project on. Officials intend to finalize this phase by Q4 this year and are aiming to have the project complete by Q1 of 2026.

The funding announcement is one component of a larger partnership with more than 50 municipalities across the province. The Government of Canada is contributing to 48 active and rural public transportation projects with a combined investment of $60 million.

Municipalities are contributing $24,892,275 to the various projects, and the federal government is contributing $36,301,698. The federal investment is supported through the Active Transportation Fund, the Rural Transit Solutions Fund, and the Public Transit Infrastructure Stream of the Investing in Canada Infrastructure Program.

“Active transportation is defined very broadly and we’re a government that believes municipalities should decide what active transportation looks like for them,” Boissonnault said. “In the case of Red Deer, city council was very clear that this is such a major corridor, getting across the bridge, and such an important community renewal initiative that it just made sense for us.”

Boissonnault added that considering the context of Bill 18, now the Provincial Priorities Act, future funding for projects like this may be difficult for municipalities to secure.

“Bill 18 would make a day like today impossible. The federal money would go to the province and the province would decide if this project would get funded or not,” he said.

READ MORE:

Subscribe to our FREE newsletter, and download the rdnewsNOW mobile app on Google Play and the Apple App Store for all the latest updates on this and other stories.