General Information
Other name(s): | CNR Bridge; Fraser River Swing Bridge |
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Beginning of works: | August 1902 |
Completion: | 23 July 1904 |
Status: | in use |
Project Type
Structure: |
Swing bridge |
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Material: |
Steel bridge |
Structure: |
Through truss bridge |
Support conditions: |
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Plan view: |
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Material: |
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Function / usage: |
upper deck: Road bridge lower deck: Railroad (railway) bridge |
Location
Location: |
New Westminster, British Columbia, Canada Surrey, British Columbia, Canada |
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Coordinates: | 49° 12' 29.40" N 122° 53' 39.13" W |
Technical Information
Dimensions
main span | 120 m | |
total length | 731.5 m | |
number of tracks | 1 | |
track gauge | 1 435 mm |
Excerpt from Wikipedia
The New Westminster Bridge (also known as the New Westminster Rail Bridge (NSRW) or the Fraser River Swing Bridge) is a swing bridge that crosses the Fraser River and connects New Westminster with Surrey, British Columbia, Canada.
The bridge is owned by the Government of Canada, operated and maintained by the Canadian National Railway, with the Southern Railway of British Columbia (SRY), Canadian Pacific Railway, and BNSF Railway having track usage rights, as do Amtrak's Cascades (with service to Portland and Seattle) and Via Rail's The Canadian (with service to Toronto).
History
The New Westminster Bridge was constructed in 1904 and was originally built with two decks. The lower deck was used for rail traffic while the upper deck was used for automobile traffic.
Crossing the river prior to the construction of the New Westminster Bridge required using the K de K ferry which would dock at the present day neighbourhood of South Westminster (formerly the historic community of Brownsville) located in the city of Surrey.
The toll for the upper bridge was 25 cents and created quite an uproar for farmers who found out quickly that by taking their livestock across on foot would cost them a quarter a head but if they put them in a truck it cost a quarter for the whole load.
The bridge was the preferred method of transport across the Fraser until the opening of the Pattullo Bridge in 1937. The upper deck was removed and the bridge was converted exclusively for rail use.
Around 1979-80 There was a significant fire on the New Westminster Bridge, aka The Train Bridge. Photos of the fire are inserted.
Text imported from Wikipedia article "New Westminster Bridge" and modified on July 23, 2019 according to the CC-BY-SA 4.0 International license.
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data sheet - Structure-ID
20029397 - Published on:
24/07/2007 - Last updated on:
09/11/2024