Mission Railway Bridge
Mission Railway Bridge | |
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Coordinates | 49°07′33″N 122°18′00″W / 49.1258°N 122.3°W |
Carries | Trains (shared with automobiles between 1927 and 1973)[1] |
Crosses | Fraser River |
Locale | Between Mission, BC and Abbotsford, BC |
Owner | Canadian Pacific Railway |
Characteristics | |
Design | Swing bridge |
Total length | 533 m (1,749 ft) |
Longest span | 70 m (230 ft)[2] |
No. of spans | 10 |
Clearance below | 4.9 m (16 ft) |
Rail characteristics | |
No. of tracks | 1 |
History | |
Construction end | 1909 |
Statistics | |
Daily traffic | 31 freight trains (2026 projection) 50 freight trains (2030 projection)[3] |
Location | |
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The Mission Railway Bridge is a Canadian Pacific Railway bridge spanning the Fraser River between Mission, and Abbotsford, British Columbia, Canada.
Replacing an earlier bridge built in 1891,[4] which was the first and only bridge crossing of the Fraser below Siska in the Fraser Canyon until the construction of the New Westminster rail bridge in 1904, it was constructed in 1909 by the Canadian Pacific Railway (CPR). The Mission Railway Bridge is supported by 13 concrete piers and is approximately 533 metres (1,749 ft) in length. Before completion of the Mission highway bridge, highway traffic to and from Matsqui and Abbotsford with Mission used the bridge as a one-way alternating route, with traffic lights at either end to control direction. Rail traffic often held up car crossings, causing long and often very lengthy waits, which were a part of daily life in the Central Valley until the new bridge was completed.
Beneath the bridge's north abutment is an important river-level gauge monitored during the annual Fraser freshet. The bridge is also the location of the end of the Fraser's tidal bore - downstream from the bridge the river is increasingly influenced by tidal influences from the Georgia Strait.
The bridge has a speed limit of 10 kilometres per hour (6.2 miles per hour).[1]
Swing span
[edit]The Mission Railway Bridge has a swing span which has a vertical clearance of 4.9 metres (16 ft) above the water when closed. The swing span is fitted atop a circular concrete pier, the tenth from the north bank of the river. This pier is protected from shipping traffic by two 46-metre wood piers (151 ft) extending upstream and downstream, respectively, perpendicular to the bridge which are tapered at both ends. The navigation channel past the bridge is 30 metres (98 ft) in width. At night, a fixed white light is displayed on piers 9 and 11 as well as at the upriver and downriver ends of the protection pier.
The majority of marine traffic consists of log tows and gravel barges, which are permitted to use the navigation channel beneath the fixed span between piers 5 and 6. The swing span is used for wood chip barges and other vessels which cannot navigate beneath the span between piers 5 and 6.
CPR maintains a bridge tender 24 hours per day at an office on the north bank of the bridge. Vessels requesting passage through the swing span contact the bridge tender on marine VHF radio, whereby the tender walks the bridge to a control booth situated on the swing span.
Usage
[edit]Although the Mission Railway Bridge is not a part of the nearby CPR main line, it has important roles in preserving and increasing the capacity of the British Columbia rail network. The bridge is at the southern endpoint of the 249-kilometre Fraser Canyon (155 mi) directional running zone (DRZ). The DRZ converts the bidirectional, mostly single-track transcontinental main lines of CPR and Canadian National Railway (CNR) into a pair of one-way railways that run in opposite directions. The CPR and CNR main lines are located primarily on opposite sides of the Fraser River and Thompson River throughout the DRZ, exchanging sides at the Cisco Bridges in Siska. Loaded trains carrying freight for export to the Port of Vancouver run southbound (westbound) through Matsqui/Abbotsford on the flatter CNR line near the eastern bank of the river. Empty trains and lighter cargo (intermodal containers and automobiles) go back northbound (eastbound) through Mission on the hillier CPR line near the western bank of the river.[5][6] Northbound CNR trains leaving the Greater Vancouver area cross the bridge to join the CPR tracks in the Fraser Canyon, while southbound CPR trains use the CNR tracks in the Fraser Canyon before crossing the bridge to rejoin the CPR tracks heading toward Greater Vancouver.[7] This arrangement more than triples the train capacity over the Fraser Canyon corridor.[5]
See also
[edit]References
[edit]- ^ a b Mills, Kevin (January 25, 2017). "Barge strikes Mission Railway Bridge, forces closure". The Abbotsford News. Retrieved January 2, 2024.
- ^ "Canadian Pacific Railway Train Bridge". Heritage Places. Retrieved January 2, 2024.
- ^ Chan, Kenneth (March 19, 2024). "BC government study identifies potential West Coast Express extension and regional rail options between Metro Vancouver and the Fraser Valley". Daily Hive. Retrieved March 28, 2024.
- ^ "CP Railway Bridge, Mission Community Museum and Archives website". Archived from the original on 2015-01-10. Retrieved 2015-01-10.
- ^ a b Cotey, Angela (June 2006). "Shared interest: Class I collaboration & capacity". Progressive Railroading. ISSN 0033-0817. Retrieved March 11, 2025.
- ^ Stephens, Bill (May 2024). "The DRZ: Where CN and CPKC cooperate. Directional running in British Columbia keeps Canada's trade-based economy moving". Trains. Vol. 84, no. 5. pp. 20–31. ISSN 0041-0934. OCLC 1430564789. ProQuest 2954922511.
- ^ "Grinding to a halt: A look inside the Fraser Valley's rail system". Fraser Valley Current. December 2, 2021. Retrieved March 13, 2025.
Bibliography
[edit]- Cambie, H. J. (December 27, 1890). "Fraser River bridge. Canadian Pacific Railway, Mission branch". Transactions of the Canadian Society of Civil Engineers (published October 22, 1891). hdl:2027/aeu.ark:/13960/t3126hf5b – via HathiTrust.