Harman Patil (Editor)

Cap Rouge trestle

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Carries
  
Rail

Locale
  
Quebec city, Canada

Total length
  
1,016 m

Body of water
  
Cap-Rouge river

Inaugurated
  
1908

Crosses
  
Cap-Rouge river

Height
  
173 ft (53 m)

Width
  
52 m

Owner
  
Canadian National Railway

Cap-Rouge trestle httpsiytimgcomvipSBHiDGHqzcmaxresdefaultjpg

Engineering design by
  
R.F. Uniacke, M.J. Butler E.A. Hoare, A.E. Doucet

Similar
  
Dorchester Bridge, Île d'Orléans Bridge, Pierre Laporte Bridge, Quebec Bridge, Laviolette Bridge

The Cap-Rouge trestle, or Tracel de Cap-Rouge, is a railway trestle bridge inaugurated in 1908 and still in use in Cap-Rouge, in the vicinity of Quebec City. It was commissioned in 1906 as a section of the National Transcontinental Railway to connect — over the valley of the Cap-Rouge river — the eastbound railway with the newly built and nearby Quebec Bridge. It was built as a steel structure with the Dominion Bridge Company in charge. The total cost was 800 000 canadian dollars.

At 173 feet (53 m), it is one of the highest structure on which trains are operated in the province of Quebec and as such, has become over the years an attractive location for trespassers. As a response, its points of access have been fenced and a video surveillance system installed. Nowadays, it is only used by freight trains, at the relatively slow speed of approximately 12 miles per hour (19 km/h).

References

Cap-Rouge trestle Wikipedia