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The Champlain Bridge and Bonaventure Expressway Construction
Construction
Cost
Piers and Abutments on the Montreal Side, Temporary Dams (1958) In 1958, three contracts were awarded for construction of temporary dams, fill work on Nuns' Island and construction of the piers and abutments on the Montreal side. Unlike the approach taken for most bridge piers, none of the pneumatic caissons for the Champlain Bridge were built on land. Instead, they were assembled in the St. Lawrence itself. They rest on a bed of shale at an average depth of 39 feet 4 inches (12 m) below the high water mark and are between 11 feet (3.35 m) and 85 feet 3 inches (26 m) in height. The circular shape of the piers and their size were dictated by resistance to ice pressure, which is 30 tons per linear metre of pier width measured perpendicular to a direction forming a 30° angle with the longitudinal axis of the section. Piers and Structure, Sections 5 and 7 (June 25, 1959) The largest contract ($8.319 million) was awarded for the construction of the piers and the 8,096-foot (2,468-m) structure in sections 5 and 7 to three companies that formed a partnership known as MKD: McNamara (Quebec) Limited, The Key Construction Inc. and Deschamps & Bélanger Limitée. The contract included 46 spans, each with seven prestressed concrete girders roughly 176 feet (53.6 m) long and supported by T-shaped piers resting on a bed of shale. The time required to build the piers varied considerably. The easiest ones could be constructed in 15 days, while the most difficult ones required 49 days, with an average of 28 days of work per pier. They were built at an average rate of 6.5 per month. At the time, using prestressed concrete to build bridge beams was a recent development and this contract was the most significant application of prestressed concrete in the country, both in terms of scope and quantity of work. Work under the contract began in July 1959 and was completed in November 1961, one day before the scheduled completion date, for a total of 22.5 months of activity, after subtracting the winter months of 1960 and 1961, when all work at the site was suspended. Bridge Girders - a Canadian First For the first time on a major structure in Canada, prestressed concrete girders with Freyssinet tension cables, which give the structure great additional strength, were used. A yard was set up on Nuns' Island to build 476 prestressed concrete girders, 322 of which were used in sections 5 and 7. The site included a handling area housing eight bases for pouring concrete, and an area to build reinforcements. It took 10 hours of work per day to build three girders. A tower crane moved between the different activity areas on the site. Because of the size of the job, a mechanical facility was set up for building the prestressed cables. The girders were then transported 1.5 miles (2.5 km) by two travelling cranes on rails. A 370-foot 7-inch (113-m) long gantry crane weighing more than 250 tons was used to install the girders. At the peak of the work, the contractor was installing two complete girders a week.
The last girder was solemnly put in place on Thursday, September 21, 1961. Using a giant crane and enormous hydraulic levers, the 15-ton steel girder was first raised to the top of the steel structure and then bolted in place. All the assembly work, which required great precision, was synchronized by telephone from a central control post. Two workers then raised the Union Jack to the top of the steel structure. The following day, the Honourable Léon Balcer, federal Minister of Ports, visited the bridge. Lighting, Buildings, Toll Booths (1961 and 1962) Contracts for lighting, buildings, toll booths and signalling systems were awarded in 1961 and 1962.
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