Winnipeg Manitoba - A 121-year-old bridge in Winnipeg may have seen its final passengers on
it.
The City of Winnipeg announced Tuesday that it is closing Arlington Bridge to all traffic immediately.
The closure is indefinite, the city says, and dependent on the results of a city assessment.
"In 2016, engineers identified the bridge as nearing the end of its lifespan and undertook the Better Bridge for
Arlington Study. The study resulted in a preliminary design for a new bridge, which was in 2019 approved by City
Council for future consideration and placed on a list of unfunded capital projects," the city said in a news
release.
The bridge has been closed annually over the years for maintenance.
This year, the city issued a contract for a study to determine if long-term rehabilitation is possible, or if the
bridge should be decommissioned.
The study showed steel corrosion has sped up in recent years and is widespread.
The city says the corrosion has progressed to the point where "it is no long viable to make annual reactive
safety repairs."
Vehicles, cyclists, pedestrians, scooters, and all other modes of transportation are now required to detour across the
rail yards via either the McPhillips Street Underpass, or the Slaw Rebchuk Bridge on Salter Street.
The city adds drivers are encouraged to get onto the routes as soon as possible to avoid bottlenecks at Logan Avenue
and Dufferin Avenue.
The study will continue, and depending on the results, the bridge will either be decommissioned and removed or
long-term rehabilitation work will take place.
Repairs will still take place to ensure the safety of people in the rail yards below the bridge.
Charles Lefebvre.
(likely no image with original article)
(usually because it's been seen before)
provisions in Section 29 of the
Canadian Copyright Modernization Act.