New Westminster Bridge
The New Westminster Bridge is a swing bridge that crosses the Fraser River and connects New Westminster with Surrey, British Columbia, Canada.
The bridge is owned by the Government of Canada. Since 1992, the Canadian National Railway has operated and maintained the bridge. The Southern Railway of British Columbia, Canadian Pacific Kansas City, and BNSF Railway have track usage rights. Passenger rail service over the bridge is offered by Amtrak's Cascades, Via Rail's The Canadian, and Rocky Mountaineer.
History
Construction of the New Westminster Bridge began in August 1902, and the new bridge was formally opened on July 23, 1904 by the Lieutenant governor of British Columbia. It was originally built with two decks; the lower deck was used for rail traffic while the upper deck was used for automobile traffic. The rail part of the bridge initially connected Great Northern Railway tracks south of the river to Canadian Pacific tracks north of the river.Before the New Westminster Bridge was built, crossing the river required boarding the K de K or Surrey ferry, which docked at the present day neighbourhood of South Westminster located in the city of Surrey.
The toll for the upper bridge was 25 cents and created quite an uproar for farmers who found out quickly that by taking their livestock across on foot would cost them a quarter a head but if they put them in a truck it cost a quarter for the whole load.
After March 1910, passenger and vehicle tolls were no longer charged.
By the 1930s, the bridge was judged inadequate to handle the increased demand in road traffic over the Fraser River. In January 1936, the Canadian Department of Public Works, which was responsible for the marine navigation safety of the country's navigable waters, determined that a dedicated new road crossing could be built under certain conditions. The new crossing would have to be located as close as possible downstream of the current bridge, and British Columbia province would have to either replace the swing span of the current bridge with a vertical-lift span that allowed of horizontal clearance and of vertical clearance above the freshet level, or remove the existing upper-deck road portion of the bridge and transfer bridge ownership to the Public Works department. The latter alternative was recommended to reduce the number of involved parties, because the federal government already handled marine navigation safety and controlled CNR, which had become the primary user of the rail portion of the bridge. British Columbia Premier Duff Pattullo quickly declared that the province would take the latter option. The Pattullo Bridge road crossing subsequently opened in November 1937. The upper deck of the New Westminster Bridge was removed, the bridge was converted exclusively for rail use, and in October 1939, ownership of the bridge was given to the federal government.
Although CNR typically accounted for 85% or more of annual traffic, Burlington Northern Railroad performed train dispatching for the bridge through at least the mid-1970s, making final decisions from its Seattle, Washington office.
In December 1991, CNR announced that it would be granted a deed of entrustment to the bridge from Public Works Canada, and that it would spend on bridge repairs. This entrustment agreement specified that the Canadian federal government would transfer operational and maintenance control, but not ownership, of the bridge to CNR. The $15 million bridge rehabilitation would add 25 years to the usable life of the crossing.
In 2004, CNR and Canadian Pacific Railway began some coordinated operations in Greater Vancouver to address rail capacity issues caused by Canada's growing trade volumes with Asia. These new operations helped to reduce traffic pressures at the bridge. In January 2006, CNR entered an agreement with BNSF to gain operational, dispatching, and maintenance control of BNSF track from the bridge northward and westward to central Vancouver and the South Shore of the Burrard Inlet in exchange for CNR assets in Illinois and Tennessee, such as similar control of interlockers in Chicago, Illinois and Memphis, Tennessee and other trackage rights. Because of this agreement, CNR gained contiguous control of its main line corridor from the North Shore of the Burrard Inlet, its Second Narrows Rail Bridge across Burrard Inlet, and Thornton Tunnel by connecting them through the BNSF track to the New Westminster Bridge and CNR's main line track south of the Fraser River. A week later, CNR used its greater control of the BNSF track to expand the scope of its coordinated rail operations with CPR throughout the Lower Mainland. By 2014, the implementation of coordinated rail operations was considered a success in preserving available rail capacity at the bridge, at least on a short-term basis.
The bridge is a heavily used single-track railway that supports only low train speeds and is swung open for marine traffic for a significant portion of each day. Because of this situation, studies have been conducted to relocate the northern terminus of Amtrak's Cascades passenger train service from Pacific Central Station in downtown Vancouver southeast by to Surrey. The proposed new terminus at the Skytrain rapid transit system's Scott Road Station is about from the bridge. The location would allow additional round trips from Seattle, Washington to be added by avoiding the need to cross the Fraser River.
In the early 2020s, CNR completed seismic upgrades to the bridge.
Description
The bridge crosses the Fraser River at about upstream of the location where the river empties into the Strait of Georgia. It is situated upstream of the original Pattullo Bridge road crossing, but will be about downstream of the new Pattullo Bridge, which is scheduled to open in 2025 as the replacement for the 1937 road crossing.The bridge was constructed with five fixed truss spans of in length near the south bank of the river. The width of these spans were. North of these shorter spans was the, and then a fixed truss span that was also in length. These two longer spans had a width of. The final truss span had a length of, but its width expanded from to as it neared the north bank of the river. This unusual feature was designed to accommodate the splitting and turning of the bridge's rail track into eastbound and westbound tracks, which would merge with the existing CPR track along the New Westminster shoreline.
The bridge's lower-deck rail track was vertically aligned with the base of all eight truss spans. The upper-deck road was placed on top of the five shorter truss spans, and was aligned at mid-height on the three longer truss spans. The horizontal clearance was for both the rail and road decks.
, the speed limit for trains was, which had been increased from.
The bridge opens for marine traffic about 20 times each day. It takes about 7 minutes for the bridge to swing open or closed. When opened, the swing span provides of horizontal clearance at a river control depth of for the New Westminster side of the opening, and it provides of horizontal clearance at a river control depth of for the Surrey side. The deepest part of the river actually flows under the, where the water depth under ordinary conditions was at the time of construction.
Proposed changes
There have been several other proposals to renovate or replace the current swing bridge with a vertical-lift bridge span, because a lift bridge opens and closes faster than a swing bridge, and a lift bridge does not cut the maximum width of the navigation channel in half. Lumber company Crown Zellerbach had requested a lift bridge conversion from 1936 into the late 1960s, because the tides, freshets, river channel currents, and limited horizontal clearance of the swing bridge prevented oceangoing ships from directly reaching its lumber exporting site upstream at Fraser Mills, British Columbia. In 1964, William George Swan, who designed the original Pattullo Bridge and the replacement Second Narrows road bridge, lobbied the federal government to build a wider, vertical-lift bridge in place of the current bridge.In 1965, after CNR announced plans to replace the Second Narrows Bridge, there was speculation that the original bridge's lift span, which had a horizontal clearance, would be used to replace the swing span on the New Westminster Bridge. This transfer would help retain the estimated 75–100 commercial ships that the Fraser River Harbour Commission was losing to Vancouver because of insufficient navigation width through the swing span. The transfer never occurred, as the old Second Narrows Bridge was sold for scrap metal in 1970. In 1976, when the bridge was out of service after having a span destroyed by a ship collision, a conversion to a lift bridge mechanism was suggested again. However, the estimate of 18 months required to build a lift span was considered too much time to sustain a functioning rail network without a working bridge.
By 2003, the bridge handled 46 train crossings per day, and it was identified as a first-priority rail infrastructure project in Greater Vancouver. Three improvement scenarios were studied in 2004. The first scenario kept status quo operations between rail carriers but replaced the bridge with a new $110 million,, single-track vertical-lift bridge replacement that supports higher speeds, has a higher when closed, and is expandable to a double-track bridge. The second scenario maintained status quo operations but replaced the bridge with a new $420 million,, single-track tunnel to replace the existing bridge. The third scenario implemented coordinated rail operations between rail carriers but retained the existing bridge. The study recommended that coordinated rail operations be undertaken.
In 2010, as part of investigations to replace the original Pattullo Bridge road crossing adjacent to the New Westminster Bridge, Transport Canada studied two possible options to replace the rail crossing: a double-track, single-deck bridge at the same elevation for $360 million, and a double-deck bridge for $470 million. CNR advocated its own option, which was a triple-track, single-deck vertical-lift bridge at the same elevation for $600 million. The upstream and middle bridge tracks would connect the CNR-controlled BNSF main line tracks north of the river to the CNR main line tracks south of the river, while the downstream bridge track would be accessible from all 5 approaches, like the lone track on the current bridge.
In the early 2020s, the Canada Infrastructure Bank funded a study to examine freight traffic needs over the New Westminster bridge. The study narrowed down to two options to address traffic growth. The first option was to simply replace the current single-track bridge with a new double-track bridge in the existing location. The second, preferred option was to maintain the existing bridge with structural upgrades, while also building an additional, double-track bridge upstream from the current bridge.
Incidents
On December 26, 1975, the bridge was damaged when a log barge drifted into and through the structure, ripping out the. The bridge was repaired and returned to service in late April 1976. The relatively quick fix was helped by modifying a recently completed design for a span that was just shorter, created by the Howard, Needles, Tammen & Bergendoff design firm of Kansas City, Missouri for the Rulo Rail Bridge over the Missouri River in Rulo, Nebraska.On May 29, 1982, a significant fire broke out on the New Westminster Bridge. The fire put the bridge out of service for almost a month. The bridge reopened on June 23, 1982.
On November 28, 1987, a barge struck the swing span of the bridge. While out of service, the swing span was hit again by a different barge on December 17. The bridge reopened on December 24. Repairs to the bridge cost about $2 million. The resulting legal action of Canadian National Railway Co. v. Norsk Pacific Steamship Co. became a leading Supreme Court of Canada decision.