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Senator Sid Buckwold Bridge

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Maintained by
  
City of Saskatoon

Opened
  
28 October 1966

Province
  
Saskatchewan

Body of water
  
South Saskatchewan River

No. of spans
  
3

Location
  
Saskatoon

Material
  
Reinforced concrete

Construction end
  
1966

Senator Sid Buckwold Bridge httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

Carries
  
6 lanes of Idylwyld Drive/Expressway (Hwy 11/Hwy 16)

Crosses
  
South Saskatchewan River

Locale
  
Saskatoon, Saskatchewan, Canada

Official name
  
Senator Sid Buckwold Bridge

Similar
  
South Saskatchewan River, Traffic Bridge, Broadway Bridge, University Bridge, Gordie Howe Bridge

The Senator Sid Buckwold Bridge is a bridge that spans the South Saskatchewan River between west and east shore in Saskatoon, Saskatchewan, Canada. It was built in 1966, on the same site as the original Qu'Appelle, Long Lake and Saskatchewan (later CN Rail) bridge. The bridge is part of the Idylwyld Freeway, for which the former CNR Bridge was torn down. The act of dynamiting the original piers of the CNR Bridge became something of a spectacle as demolition experts were unable to completely destroy them. At the time, the new bridge cost $1.5 million to build.

Map of Senator Sid Buckwold Bridge, Saskatoon, SK, Canada

Construction of the bridge was one of several simultaneous, interconnected major projects that occurred in Saskatoon during the mid-to-late 1960s. Related projects included: the construction of the Midtown Plaza shopping centre and CN Towers office block which followed the demolition of the former CNR Station and the removal of the attending railyard and CNR Bridge; construction of the Saskatoon Centennial Auditorium (now called TCU Place) also on former railway land; and construction of the Idylwyld Freeway itself from 20th Street southwards to just south of Ruth Street where it joined with another late-1960s freeway project, the south east leg of Circle Drive.

Also known by its former name, the Idylwyld Bridge and, by locals, as the Freeway Bridge, the structure was renamed in honor of former mayor and senator Sidney Buckwold in 2001, following Buckwold's death.

References

Senator Sid Buckwold Bridge Wikipedia