Only buses, not cars or trucks, will be able to use 3rd link exit to downtown Quebec City - Action News
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Only buses, not cars or trucks, will be able to use 3rd link exit to downtown Quebec City

The Legault government is now committing to barring cars and trucks from using the proposed "third link" tunnel in order to access downtown Quebec City. Only buses will be able to exit near the downtown core, while cars and trucks will exit north of the area onto major thoroughfares.

Residents' concerns about traffic were heard, transport minister says

The two-tiered tunnel, also known as the third link, is expected to cost between $7 billion and $10 billion. (Quebec government)

The Legault government is making a major change to its plan to build a tunnel connecting Quebec City and the south shore municipality ofLvis, as it now agrees that cars and trucks should not be able to exit onto the provincial capital's downtown streets.

The news was initially reported by Radio-Canada. It was later confirmed by Franois Bonnardel, the province's transport minister, when he met with reporters at the National Assembly on Tuesday.

The tunnel project, which is commonly referred to as the third link,was first unveiled last spring and is expected to cost between $7 billionand $10 billion.

For months,the CAQ has insisted that cars and trucks would be able to exit the tunnel onto Charest Boulevard in Quebec City's Saint-Roch neighbourhood.

However, residentsexpressed concern about the plan, saying it would lead to a huge increase intraffic.

"I measured and understood the worries of people in Saint-Roch in the last weeks, months," Bonnardeltold reporters on Tuesday.

The shift came a day afterPremier Franois Legault acknowledged the third link project wasn't perfect and said hewas "open to solutions" about downtown traffic.

A man is speaking at a news conference.
Quebec Transport Minister Franois Bonnardel says cars and trucks will not be able to access downtown Quebec City through the proposed tunnel that would connect the provincial capital to the south shore municipality of Lvis. (Ryan Remiorz/The Canadian Press)

Downtown exit reserved forbuses

In order to make it easy for public transit users to access the city's future tramway network,only buses will be able to access downtown Quebec Cityfrom the tunnel.

Cars and truckswill be directed toward the Laurentienne and Dufferin-Montmorency highways.

The tunnel's main exit is still expected to be located north of downtown Quebec City, leading drivers to the Laurentian highway near ExpoCit.

Barring cars and trucks from heading downtown through the tunnel will make public transportation a more attractive option, Bonnardel said, adding that public transit is "the future."

The CAQhadasked the federal government to fund 40 per cent of the tunnel's cost.

Last August, however, Treasury Board presidentJean-Yves Duclossaid "the Canadian government does not finance highway projects,"but said Ottawa was open to financing the public transit portion of the project.

Construction of the third linkis expected to be completed by 2031.

Based on a report by Radio-Canada's Olivier Lemieux