The Saint-Laurent Railway Bridge is a Canadian Pacific railway bridge linking LaSalle to the Kahnawake Mohawk Reserve, just upstream of the Mercier Bridge. It is used by the RTM Candiac commuter train.
Saint-Laurent Railway Bridge | |
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Coordinates | 45°25′8″N 73°39′34″W / 45.41889°N 73.65944°W |
Carries | Canadian Pacific Railway, RTM |
Crosses | St. Lawrence River and the Saint Lawrence Seaway |
Locale | Kahnawake, Quebec and Montreal, Quebec |
Official name | none |
Characteristics | |
Design | 2 Truss bridges, includes twin lift Bridges |
Rail characteristics | |
No. of tracks | 2, (1 per parallel spans) |
Track gauge | 4 ft 8+1⁄2 in (1,435 mm) standard gauge |
Structure gauge | AAR |
Location | |
History of the bridge
editTwo bridges have crossed the river at this location. The first bridge, erected in 1885–1887, was of all-steel construction that employed a flying cantilever design to cross the main channel. It carried a single track and was opened for passenger service at the end of July, 1887.
The second structure, the one standing today, was constructed between 1910 and 1913 and was completed by November 13, 1913. To build the bridge, the free ends of the main spans were floated across the water on a barge.[1] Construction of the new bridge was completed while keeping the old bridge in service. Extra piers were added and the design changed significantly.
Construction of the Saint Lawrence Seaway required the construction of twin vertical lift bridges replacing the existing fixed spans. This section has two elevator winches (functioning as a drawbridge) able to lift the section up to 70 feet (21 metres) above the initial level, in order to allow ships to pass.
Gallery
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1885 bridge
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Map showing the rail bridge, on the left
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Located only about 400 m (1,312 ft) south of the St-Laurent Railway Bridge, on the same line, is a pair of vertical-lift bridges to carry the rail line over the Saint Lawrence Seaway
See also
editReferences
edit- ^ Werry, S.D. (1997). "Rails across the river: the story of the St. Lawrence Bridge (1881-1915)". Can. J. Civ. Eng. 24 (3). NRC Research Press: 480–488. doi:10.1139/l96-131.