Samiksha Jaiswal (Editor)

Charles de Gaulle Bridge

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Carries
  
Quebec Autoroute 40

Official name
  
Pont Charles de Gaulle

Opened
  
1965

Province
  
Québec

Crosses
  
Rivière des Prairies

Maintained by
  
Transports Québec

Location
  
Montreal

Body of water
  
Rivière des Prairies

Charles de Gaulle Bridge httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

Locale
  
between Montreal and Terrebonne

Similar
  
Le Gardeur Bridge, Louis Bisson Bridge, Médéric Martin Bridge, Papineau‑Leblanc Bridge, Galipeault Bridge
For the bridge in Paris see Pont Charles-de-Gaulle

Map of Pont Charles-De Gaulle, Montr%C3%A9al, QC, Canada

The Charles de Gaulle Bridge is a bridge that links the eastern tip of the island of Montreal, Quebec over the Rivière des Prairies to the Lanaudière region near the city of Charlemagne. The bridge is named after President of the Republic of France Charles de Gaulle who inspired the sovereignty movement in Quebec during the 1960s with his Vive le Québec libre speech in Montreal in 1967 the same year the bridge was built.

The bridge is part of Quebec Autoroute 40 and is only one of two bridge crossings from Montreal to the Repentigny/Charlemagne region with the other being the Pierre Le Gardeur Bridge on Notre-Dame Street. As being by far the fastest link to downtown Montreal, the road is often very congested during rush hours with traffic backing up as far as Repentigny in the morning with heavy congestion eastbound during the afternoon. The bridge is also part of the fastest travel link between Montreal and the cities of Trois-Rivières and Quebec City both located on the northern shores of the Saint Lawrence River.

The bridge has three lanes of traffic in each direction. The six-lane segment on A-40 eastbound continues until after the Quebec Autoroute 640 junction.

References

Charles de Gaulle Bridge Wikipedia