darwink
Senior Member
It would be a multi-month process, like when the SW Ring Road was repaired/replaced in Edmonton.Interesting. I wonder if there are any paving machines out there that both pick up and grind concrete while laying asphalt?
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It would be a multi-month process, like when the SW Ring Road was repaired/replaced in Edmonton.Interesting. I wonder if there are any paving machines out there that both pick up and grind concrete while laying asphalt?
When it was concrete, the expansion joint seals seemed to need replacement every year or two. Calgary's freeze-thaw cycle exact a tollThe biggest problem with that stretch of Deerfoot is that it was originally concrete. Every expansion joint across the road lifted and was horrendous to drive on. maybe 15 years ago they put approximately 12 inches of asphalt on top of the concrete. It didn’t seem to bond very well because the seams split between the lifts and pot holes seemed appear within a few years. Not sure what they can do besides a complete rebuild
In 2014 Chestermere approved the "Waterbridge" ASP with plans to extend Memorial to Rainbow road, with a jog north to avoid wetlandsI'm curious how Memorial will work when it gets to Chestermere, will it just die at Rainbow Road?
The Yoho section isn't all that busy and traverses mostly gentle terrain. The ugly parts on the TCH are Rogers and Eagle Passes.Would be nice to have a twinned TCH all the way to Golden.
The Yoho section isn't all that busy and traverses mostly gentle terrain. The ugly parts on the TCH are Rogers and Eagle Passes.
Fed liberals have funded quite a bit of work in the parks so far. Its more, the funding cycles have to align with some political will and construction capacity. Now that Kicking Horse Canyon is wrapping up, there is more slack in the market again in the area.Yoho twinning is designed and Detailed Impact Assessment is complete so it’s pretty much ready to go once funding is approved.
Not likely to happen under the current Liberal-NDP government but maybe if the conservatives win the next election.
Here are a couple of websites:
Trans-Canada Highway Improvements
Trans-Canada Highway improvements, highway twinning, detailed impact assessment, public engagement, wildlife crossing structures, and highway fencing.parks.canada.ca
Thanks for posting the links!Yoho twinning is designed and Detailed Impact Assessment is complete so it’s pretty much ready to go once funding is approved.
Not likely to happen under the current Liberal-NDP government but maybe if the conservatives win the next election.
Here are a couple of websites:
Trans-Canada Highway Improvements
Trans-Canada Highway improvements, highway twinning, detailed impact assessment, public engagement, wildlife crossing structures, and highway fencing.parks.canada.ca
Snoqualmie pass in Washington state seems like a good example to follow for Rogers pass improvements. They went with avalanche resistant bridges instead of larger snow-sheds, similar capital cost but cheaper to maintain.Yoho would be easy except for the Big Hill and the 4km section of fill leading into Field. I'm unsure if additional fill to accomidate 4 lanes would pass environmental review. The Big Hill would take considerable blasting.
I have no idea how they would widen through the snow sheds in Rogers. Maybe build new sheds that encompass the old ones and new lanes then demolish the old ones. Maybe build as much as possible for the new sheds, demolish the old ones and leave sections unprotected for a year or two while the new sheds are completed. Maybe build the new lanes elevated above the avalanche paths, shift traffic to them, demolish sheds and then build new elecated lanes as replacements,