Home | WebMail | Register or Login

      Calgary | Regions | Local Traffic Report | Advertise on Action News | Contact

Sign Up

Sign Up

Please fill this form to create an account.

Already have an account? Login here.

Manitoba

Wall collapses at Bomber stadium construction site

Strong winds are being blamed for another wall collapse at the construction site for the Bombers new stadium.
Construction at Investors Group Field has been slowed by delays and the stadium is expected to be open for the 2013 CFL season. (Trevor Hagan/Canadian Press)

Strong winds are being blamed for another wall collapse at the construction site for the Blue Bombers new stadium.

The project director with Stuart Olson Dominion, which is building Investors Group Field at the University of Manitoba, said high winds caused a bathroom wallto fall on Wednesday.

Mike Clynes said the three-metre tall wall is on the northwest side of the stadium. He said the company typicallyputs upa wall and then addstemporary bracing, which is eventually replaced by permanent bracing.

But in this case, the workers who put up the wall hadn't yet added thebracing.

Workplace Safety and Healthimmediately issued a stop-work order on the whole facility until all the walls were inspected.

The company is now waiting on one more inspection of the wall that fell and hopes to resume construction as soon as possible.

Wind problems in the past havecaused several construction delaysat the site,such as inMaywhen a section of brick wall belonging to the administration building fell over.

The stadium was originally slated to be ready for the July 26 Blue Bombers home opener.

Team officials then saidthey hoped to host the Sept. 9 Banjo Bowl game against the Saskatchewan Roughridersbut if that wasn't possible, it would certainly be ready by Sept. 21.

That was in May.

A month later, theteam announcedthat due to continued weather-related delays, thenew stadium wouldn't open until the start of the 2013 season.

The latest wall collapse is relatively minor and not expected to slow things down further, according to Clynes.