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Which concept do you prefer?

  • Echo

    Votes: 6 85.7%
  • Motion

    Votes: 1 14.3%
  • Rendez-Vous

    Votes: 0 0.0%

  • Total voters
    7
My initial thoughts on the three options:

Echo:
- Really love the truss design. I feel like this is a good way to respect the heritage look of the old bridge, but now reimagined with a more modern design.
- Appreciate the lower height profile.
- I like the physical separation between the bike lane, roadway, and pedestrian path.

Motion:
- Reminiscent of the Vimy Memorial Bridge in Barrhaven, which I've always liked.
- I find it quite wide and "busy" looking, but I appreciate the swooping arches going above and below the deck.
- Not sure if I like how wide open the space is between the roadway, bike path, and pedestrian path. It makes it feel like a wide noisy boulevard.

Rendez-Vous:
- Basically a slimmer version of the Motion design. It has a more simplistic arch design with less elegant swooping than the Motion design.
- I again appreciate the separation between the roadway, bike path, and pedestrian path.
- The thinner cables do allow more see-through to the Gatineau side, but the height of the arches seem so imposing.

In the end, I quite like all three options and would be happy with either of them, but I would rank my preference as follows:
1. Echo, 2. Rendez-Vous, 3. Motion

I fail to see how either design could be tweaked in the future to accommodate a tram or light rail?
According to previous presentations, trains would either share lanes with cars or replace them entirely,
 
...

I fail to see how either design could be tweaked in the future to accommodate a tram or light rail?

I believe the idea is that the two traffic lanes could be for cars, buses, or trams. There's no reason they couldn't accommodate car as well as trams: a queue jump lane at either end, signals, and street-car style tracks, and you're in business.

I think Echo will prove the most popular, since its basic shape will remind folks of the old bridge, and it is a little more unique than the arch concepts.
 
I definitely prefer Echo. The silhouette of the Alexandra bridge, and it's reimagining seem so much more interesting and unique than the other two. I feel like I've seen lots of suspension bridges that look just like Motion or Rendez Vous.
 
A nicely formatted summary from u/Rocketphish on SSP Ottawa:

NCC reveals 3 options to replace Alexandra Bridge
Officials reject restoration of existing bridge, calling it a 'health and safety' issue

Arthur White-Crummey · CBC News
Posted: Oct 01, 2024 3:16 PM EDT | Last Updated: 2 hours ago


The National Capital Commission (NCC) has unveiled three potential designs to replace the Alexandra Bridge, as officials say there's no going back on the planned demolition of the existing 123-year-old structure.

The concept designs — entitled Echo, Rendez vous and Motion — now go to public consultation, with an online survey launching Tuesday and open meetings scheduled for Wednesday and Thursday.

Public Services and Procurement Canada (PSPC) is soon starting the procurement process to select a company to design and construct the new bridge, with a winning design expected early next year. Construction is expected to run from 2028 to 2032.

Each of the concept designs provides separate lanes for bicycles and vehicles, plus a pedestrian walkway with views of Parliament Hill.

echo-2.jpg


Introducing the designs, architect Martin Knight said Echo is intended as a "reinterpretation" of the existing bridge, though not a replica.

"The Echo bridge concept draws inspiration from the historic Alexandra Bridge, combining heritage with modern design," he said.

Rendez vous is defined by two "grand arches meeting at a single pier in the river." Knight said the bridge appears to "step lightly" on the water, and amplifies views to provide a feeling of openness.

rendez-vous.jpg


"The transparent arches enhance visual connection between previously separated areas on either side of the river," he said.

Finally, the design known as Motion is inspired by the flow of the Ottawa River and the rippling form of one of its native species.

bridge.jpg


"The motion design is a tribute to the dynamic, ever-changing motion of the river, inspired by the eel," he said. "The bridge's graceful form reflects the eel's motion."

Knight explained that each design has a gathering place, and the vehicular lanes can be closed to create even larger public spaces for special occasions.

motion.jpg


Gatineau Mayor Maude Marquis-Bissonnette watched the design presentation and said her community has a strong attachment to the bridge. She said consultations will be essential and asked why the bridge must be replaced.

"I don't think it's something we should take for granted during the public consultation," she said in French.

But Stefan Dery, PSPC's director general of infrastructure asset management, said the government has ruled out saving the existing bridge.

motion.jpg


"Fundamentally from our perspective, this is a health and safety issue," he later told reporters. "The state of the existing bridge is such that it has a finite life, it has reached the end of service, so we're not in a position to simply repair the bridge."

According to a PSPC report, the existing Alexandra Bridge is suffering from 17 different issues affecting its strength and integrity, including rust, cracks and buckling.

But critics have questioned those conclusions and pushed to save the bridge. The Alexandra Bridge Coalition has argued that converting it to a "green bridge" closed to motor vehicles could lengthen its life.

Josiah Frith, who handles the Alexandra Bridge file for the Lowertown Community Association also still believes the bridge can be saved. He said it would cost substantially less than building new.

"We love this bridge," he said. "We would like to see it preserved and restored, and we have always been asking for a fourth option to be put forth which is that restoration."

alexandra-bridge-ottawa-gatineau-january-21-2024.JPG


He sees the Echo concept as the only design that captures some elements of the historic structure.

Built by the Dominion Bridge Company of Lachine, Que and opened in 1901, the Alexandra Bridge is considered an engineering asset of national historic importance, according to PSPC.

The first open meeting, at Gatineau's Canadian Museum of History, is scheduled for Wednesday, Oct. 2, from 4 p.m. to 9 p.m. The second, at the Shaw Centre in Ottawa, is slated for Thursday, Oct. 3, from 4 p.m. to 9 p.m.

echo.jpg


rendez-vous.jpg


motion.jpg


https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/ottaw...idge-1.7339080


Reply With Quote
 
Echo is the nicest from purely an on-bridge experience. The way the truss wraps the bike lane and separates car traffic from pedestrians is really nice.

Motion is the best looking as a sculptural piece but the on-bridge experience looks terrible.
Didn't really notice, but you're right. Echo nicely separates all modes of transportation, while Motion feels very close to cars. Rendez-Vous is somewhere in the middle, but more like Motion.
 
I went to the open house today. Echo seemed to be popular there too, although there was appreciation for Motion. A bridge engineer (not part of the design team or NCC staff) explained to me that the unusual design of Echo involves both truss and stressed ribbon elements. I didn't catch whether the latter is in the deck, the superstructure, or both. It would be interesting to know more about the engineering of all the proposals, but the NCC is much more concerned about whether they are inspired by an eel or a canoe 😏
 

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