CNR Bridge
The Canadian Northern Railway (CNoR) had planned to lay track from the north end of the New Westminster Bridge and cross the Fraser at the 1931 location. However, when the CNoR opened the Lulu Island branch line in 1917, it connected with the British Columbia Electric Railway (BCER) Queensborough terminus. Since the original BCER Queensborough bridge was designed for trams, not heavy locomotives, the CNoR westward route 12.02 miles (19.34 km) to Steveston was an isolated branch line. After the CNR absorption of the bankrupt CNoR, the money-losing branch, and damage to trestles from a 1918 muskeg fire at Mile 4, terminated all services.
In July 1930, work began on sinking piers for the 4,200-foot-long bridge with a 240-foot central span. On completion in November 1931, work trains carried the steel rails across the bridge to lay 14 miles (23 km) of track for the Lulu Island industrial branch line. This comprised two north–south lines from west of the new bridge to connect with the remnants of the original east–west line at the south arm, with a scheduled completion date for the $2m project before yearend.
Owing to the proximity of several bridges on the Fraser, the unique signal for the opening of the Lulu Island Bridge was four long blasts on the vessel's horn.
In 2013, CN removed the observer-operator from the Lulu Island bridge, and now monitors river traffic by camera from the Fraser River Bridge in New Westminster.
^a . The former BCER "Y" at today's Branscombe Court.
See also
References
- ^ "The Daily Colonist, 11 Jul 1930". www.archive.org.
- ^ "The Daily Colonist, 6 Nov 1931". www.archive.org.
- ^ Keen, Mary. "Time and Tide: The Settlement of Lulu Island's South Arm Shore" (PDF). www.richmond.ca. pp. 35–37.
- ^ "The Daily Colonist, 9 Dec 1934". www.archive.org.
- ^ "North Shore News, 17 Jul 2013". www.nsnews.com.
- ^ "BC Department of Railways 1911–1916". www.open.library.ubc.ca. p. D15.