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Montreal

Montreal crews lift backhoe from gaping sinkhole

A backhoe was successfully lifted out of a giant sinkhole on Tuesday evening in the middle of one of Montreal's busiest thoroughfares.

City executive says infrastructure problems stem from decades of poor investments

RAW: Backhoe lifted from sinkhole

11 years ago
Duration 9:31
Watch as cranes lift a backhoe from a three-metre deep sinkhole.

A backhoewas successfully lifted out of a giant sinkhole on Tuesday eveningin the middle of one of Montreals busiest thoroughfares.

The sinkhole opened up Monday morning as city workers were readying to inspect a leaky sewer pipe under Ste-Catherine Street near Guy Street.

The backhoe and its operatorfell into the collapsed portion of the roadway. The driverescaped uninjured.

Earlier on Tuesday, Richard Deschamps,the member of Montreal's executive committee responsible for infrastructure, said he hoped to have the intersection open to traffic as soon as possible.

[IMAGEGALLERY galleryid=3909 size=small]

Crews used two cranes to lift the backhoe out of the three-metre deep sinkhole.

The sinkhole,just the latest in a series on Montreal streets,drew a steady stream of onlookers on Tuesday, though the area remained closed to vehicle traffic.

According to Deschamps, Montreal's infrastructure problems stem from underfunding.

He said there was a lack of investmentover the past 40 years, and now "were paying for it collectively."

Jean Fortier, an engineering consultant and former chair of the Montreal executive committee, said the city should be doing more to prevent this kind of thing from happening.

"Unfortunately I was not surprised it happened," he said. "I don't believe there is enough monitoring."

Guy Street is expected to reopen soon, but it could be several days before traffic is flowing on Ste-Catherine.Work on a similar-sized sinkhole that formed last year on Sherbrooke Streetcloseda portion of the busy roadwayfor more than two weeks.