Suvarna Garge (Editor)

Canadian Northern Railway Bridge (Prince Albert)

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Carries
  
Carlton Trail Railway

Design
  
Truss bridge

Total length
  
341 m

Province
  
Saskatchewan

Materials
  
Steel, Wood, Concrete

Maintained by
  
Carlton Trail Railway

Opened
  
April 1909

Location
  
Prince Albert

Bridge type
  
Truss bridge

Crosses
  
North Saskatchewan River

Locale
  
Prince Albert, Saskatchewan, Canada

Official name
  
Canadian Northern Railway Bridge

Similar
  
CPR Bridge, Diefenbaker Bridge, Traffic Bridge, Groat Bridge, Quesnell Bridge

The Canadian Northern Railway Bridge is a Canadian railway bridge that spans the North Saskatchewan River in Prince Albert, Saskatchewan.

Overview

The bridge was built by the Canadian Northern Railway between 1907 and 1909 with the superstructure supplied by the Hamilton Bridge Company. Originally designed as a joint railway and road bridge the bridge consisted of a centre rail line with 12-foot (3.7 m) extensions on each side for traffic. These traffic lanes remained in use until 1960 when the nearby Diefenbaker Bridge opened. The layout of the bridge consisted of three 146-foot (45 m) steel trusses, a 256-foot (78 m) swing span truss and two additional 156-foot (48 m) fixed trusses. The centre swing span was used to permit the passage of steamboats on the river and movement of logs until 1918 when the downstream sawmill shut down operations and a dam was constructed downstream in 1937. In 1939 the Department of Transport granted the railway permission to convert the moveable span into a fixed span.

References

Canadian Northern Railway Bridge (Prince Albert) Wikipedia