From the Herald (
http://www.thechronicleherald.ca/Front/9006038.html):
Halifax council considers tunnel or third bridge to ease congestion
By AMY PUGSLEY FRASER City Hall Reporter
Tue. Mar 25 - 7:18 PM
It could be three’s company for the twin spans across Halifax Harbour.
With Halifax’s population growth and the associated traffic congestion, the A. Murray MacKay and the Angus L. Macdonald bridges need help from a new south-end bridge or tunnel as early as 2016, the bridge commission said Tuesday.
The existing bridges – built in 1970 and 1955 respectively – aren’t going to be able to handle the growing traffic much longer.
With 32 million crossings a year, up from about 24 million in 1981, the bridges are going to need some help accommodating the daily commuters, bridge commission chairman Tom Calkin said Tuesday.
And while the argument between a $1.1-billion six-lane bridge and a $1.4-billion four-lane tunnel has yet to be played out, the best place for the third crossing has already been selected.
The new connector could link Woodside, at Highway 111, with the CN Rail cut in the south end at the container terminal.
The province has already announced its plans to pave the south-end rail cut to accommodate trucks servicing the container pier as part of the Atlantic Gateway.
A study, done four years ago, revealed that the cost to pave and widen that could reach as high as $50 million.
In addition to the cost of the construction for the new crossing and its approaches, there are also issues of land ownership to be played out.
However, Mr. Calkin said that they have the “option to expropriate land.”
He hosted a media briefing Tuesday afternoon, in advance of a presentation to regional council at its regular weekly meeting Tuesday night.
City hall asked the commission for a “needs assessment” study on the bridges back in 2006. The tender for the early-stage analysis – at a cost of about $375,000 – was awarded by the commission last March to MRC Delphi.
Their report outlines that, at one point, 23 different crossings were contemplated as possible choices. However, they streamlined that number to six.
In addition to the Woodside-south-end bridge and tunnel, the ideas also include twinning the MacKay bridge on its north or south side.
Traffic patterns show, however, that the desired crossing would be located closer to the institutions that daily commuters are trying to reach, including the hospitals, universities and the financial sector in downtown Halifax.
Another option showed two tunnels to accommodate bus rapid transit only.
The combined seven lanes on both bridges represent almost 30 per cent of the 22 lane entryways onto the Halifax peninsula. Growing commuter congestion is clogging those arteries, the report finds.
Back in 1999, the bridges experienced only 25 days when cross-harbour trips were over 100,000.
Last year, there were 164 such days, the commission’s chief engineer told reporters Tuesday.
It may not seem like a lot, Jon Eppell said, but when you take out weekends, holidays and summer vacation, it represents 85 per cent of possible peak-traffic days.
“We are approaching the ceiling,” Mr. Eppell said.
“It’s an inevitable reality that an additional crossing has to be considered.”
(apugsley@herald.ca)