Reinforcement work wraps up on Champlain Bridge - Action News
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Reinforcement work wraps up on Champlain Bridge

The Champlain Bridge should be secure enough to last until the new one opens, now that crews have installed the last of the trusses meant to reinforce the bridge.

Last of 94 steel trusses installed under bridge spanning St. Lawrence River Friday morning

Crews installed the final reinforcement truss underneath the Champlain Bridge Friday morning. (Radio-Canada)

The Champlain Bridge should be secure enough to last until the new one opens, now that crews have installed the last of the trusses meant to reinforce the bridge.

This story begins in 2013, after crews discovered a crack in one of the bridge's support beams during a routine inspection.

At the time, officials said they weren't expecting the beams to start showing signs of stress so early. The bridge opened in 1962.
The "super-beam" was assembled on Nuns' Island before it was hoisted under the bridge using barges.

The crack prompted the challenging installationof a"super beam" to reinforcethe damaged beam.

The super beam was removed in 2014 and replaced by 94 modular trusses. The trusses weigh56 tonnes each and are 4.7 metres high and 53 metres long.
The last Champlain Bridge truss in its final few hours of unattached freedom. (Arian Zarrinkoub/CBC)

The steel trusses are meant to support the 100 edge girdersalong the sides of the bridge, which have been damaged by road salt over the bridge's lifetime.

The federal government set aside a total of $378 million to reinforce the old bridge.

Work on the new bridge is underway.It is slated to open to traffic in December 2018.

With files from Arian Zarrinkoub