Girish Mahajan (Editor)

St. Louis Bridge

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Carries
  
Traffic (Hwy 2)

Material
  
Steel

Construction started
  
1906

Total length
  
381 m

Province
  
Saskatchewan

Official name
  
St. Louis Bridge

Construction end
  
1915

Opened
  
April 1915

Location
  
St. Louis

Bridge type
  
Truss bridge

Crosses
  
South Saskatchewan River

Locale
  
St. Louis / Prince Albert No. 461, Saskatchewan, Canada

Similar
  
South Saskatchewan River, Senator Sid Buckwold, Skytrail, University Bridge, Grand Trunk Bridge

The St. Louis Bridge is a Canadian traffic bridge (and former railway bridge) that spans the South Saskatchewan River in St. Louis, Saskatchewan. It crosses the river from St. Louis into the Rural Municipality of Prince Albert No. 461.

The bridge was built by the Grand Trunk Pacific Railway opening to rail traffic in 1915. In March 1928 work was completed on the attachment of two roadways onto the bridge, opening to traffic on May 9, 1928. The bridge continued to support the Canadian National Railway use until 1983 when the rail line was abandoned. The bridge was subsequently modified to carry road traffic on the former rail bed.

Construction of a new bridge to carry Highway 2 over the river is underway 1.6 km east of the old bridge. It is possible that this bridge will be demolished after the new one is completed. The new bridge is expected to be completed in the fall of 2014 at a cost of $30 million.

References

St. Louis Bridge Wikipedia