The new Champlain Bridge will be open by December, consortium says
65% of project is complete, with the rest slated to be finished by the end of the year
The consortiumhired by the federal government to build the new Champlain Bridge is confident the job will be done by the December 2018 deadline.
That's good news because if it isn't, the consortium could face fines of up to $400,000 for every day it's late.
For the first week after the deadline, the federal government will charge Signature on the St. Lawrence $100,000 per day. After that, it's $400,000.
About 65 per cent of the project, which will connect Nuns'Islandto Montreal's South Shore,is complete, according to DanielGenest, the site manager.
He said he guarantees that corners aren't being cut, and that neither the bridge's quality nor the safety of the workers will be compromised in order to meet the deadline.
Signature on the St. Lawrence hired 200 extra workers last yearin an effort to meet the deadline.
The $4-billion project was behind schedule at the time, due in part to the public engineers'strike last spring, which lasted several weeks.
The company is once again hiring more workers to get the job done right now, there are 850 working on the project, but that number will increase, meaning the budget will, too.Genestdidn't sayby how much, however.
"We're not working quicker, we're investing more workers on site," saidGenest. "Obviously these additional measures have a cost associated with them."
If construction goes on past the deadline, there is a backup plan. The project's budget includes $10 million meant to ensure the current ChamplainBridge can be used for six months if need be, according to Glen Carlin, the current director of the bridge.
A ways to go
There are still major steps to completed before the project can be completed.
Pier caps are w-shaped lateral steel girders that the three traffic corridors will rest upon.
On top of that, there will be a corridor dedicated to public transit buses and the Rseau express mtropolitain(REM) commuter train line in the middle of the bridge.
Half of it will be built by Signature on the St. Lawrence, and the other half by provincial infrastructure subsidiary CDPQ Infra.
But it won't be finished in time for opening day. So in the meantime, there will be a fourth lane in either directionfor buses. Once the public transit corridor opens, the bridge will return to three lanes.
The new bridge's expected lifespanis 125 years.
With files from Navneet Pall