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PEI's first freeway segment?

Started by froggie, August 14, 2018, 11:20:45 PM

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froggie

At least, that's what I'm calling it.

The province is in the process of building a bypass around Cornwall, to be completed later next year.  The bypass will run to the north of Cronwall and tie into the recently completed roundabout at TCH-1/PEI 248 at North River.

I found the EIS for the bypass and it's....interesting.  The way they describe the bypass, it is effectively a freeway segment.  There will be two interchanges along the bypass, a diamond at Cronwall Rd and a trumpet where it ties back into existing TCH-1 near Clyde River.  The remaining cross roads (including PEI 247) will be bridged.  These will be only the 2nd and 3rd interchanges on the island...the trumpet at TCH-1/PEI 1A being the only existing interchange.

The EIS notes the bypass will be a mix of 2 and 4 lanes but there are no maps or description stating where the transition from 2 to 4 will occur.  So it's possible the bypass will be mostly a Super-2 instead of a full 4-lane freeway.  But it will be fully-controlled access nonetheless.

(H/T yakra for the find)


Alps

There are a lot of recent bypasses west of there. Current Google satellite imagery shows the eastern stub of the new bypass and, past an image seam at New Haven, several alignments (with road layer on) that were not yet built at the time of the imagery.

ghYHZ

#2
Quote from: Alps on August 15, 2018, 12:52:20 AM
There are a lot of recent bypasses west of there. Current Google satellite imagery shows the eastern stub of the new bypass and, past an image seam at New Haven, several alignments (with road layer on) that were not yet built at the time of the imagery.

Yes.....a 6km section of TCH 1 was realigned between New Haven and Bonshaw to straighten and lessen grades on the highest point on the TCH on PEI at Strathgartney:

https://goo.gl/maps/3ANJtmPjhCq






ghYHZ

Quote from: froggie on August 14, 2018, 11:20:45 PM

...........So it's possible the bypass will be mostly a Super-2 instead of a full 4-lane freeway.  But it will be fully-controlled access nonetheless.

PEI might have had a "˜Super 2 Freeway' segment as far back as the late '60s when a Causeway (not a bridge) was proposed between New Brunswick and PEI. The alignment was graded between Borden and the TCH-1/PEI-1A interchange at Albany Corner and can still be followed in this Google view:

https://goo.gl/maps/XPxtuvXw9NE2

An overpass was even constructed to carry PEI-10 over this alignment at Carlton Siding and it's still there in the middle of a farmer's field:






But when the Confederation Bridge was built in the "˜90s....the new TCH alignment was kept closer to town passing near the new Gateway Village and Welcome Centre. It was thought that keeping traffic close would give the town a bit of an economic boost after the loss of the many ferry service jobs.



Beltway

Quote from: ghYHZ on August 16, 2018, 12:25:29 PM
PEI might have had a "˜Super 2 Freeway' segment as far back as the late '60s when a Causeway (not a bridge) was proposed between New Brunswick and PEI.

How would a causeway (earthen fill embankment in water body) construction have worked?  Isn't the water over 70 feet deep in places?  What about tides which are large in Northumberland Strait?
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froggie

^ The tides are not all that large.  At Borden, PEI, mean tidal range is 1.5m (~5ft) with a max tidal range of 2.3m (~7.5ft).  Tidal ranges are a little less on the New Brunswick side.

Water maxes out at around 100 feet deep...but that's in the middle of the channel so I imagine there would have been some high-level bridge there for ships to pass under.  Each end probably could have been done somewhat on embankment.  For almost a mile from the New Brunswick side (but only 1/4mi from PEI), the water is less than 30 feet deep.  The middle 2 miles of the channel has water 50 feet or deeper and that's where you'd probably need the bridge versus a causeway.

Beltway

#6
Quote from: froggie on August 16, 2018, 04:37:23 PM
^ The tides are not all that large.  At Borden, PEI, mean tidal range is 1.5m (~5ft) with a max tidal range of 2.3m (~7.5ft).  Tidal ranges are a little less on the New Brunswick side.

Still there are large volumes of waters flowing in and out of the strait twice a day, and a causeway even with a few gaps would constrict that water flow.

Quote from: froggie on August 16, 2018, 04:37:23 PM
Water maxes out at around 100 feet deep...but that's in the middle of the channel so I imagine there would have been some high-level bridge there for ships to pass under.  Each end probably could have been done somewhat on embankment.  For almost a mile from the New Brunswick side (but only 1/4mi from PEI), the water is less than 30 feet deep.  The middle 2 miles of the channel has water 50 feet or deeper and that's where you'd probably need the bridge versus a causeway.

Highway causeways are massive earthen structures.  Figure roadway at least 8 feet above mean high water, 50 feet on either side of the roadway and then 4:1 slopes down to the earthen bottom.

The locale in Florida where I grew up has lots of them over the Indian River and Banana River, and in waters up to maybe 8 feet deep in a few places but mostly no more than 5 feet deep.  The Indian River and Banana River have been classified as lagoons as while they are technically rivers their inlets/outlets are so small that the waters are nearly stagnant, i.e, no tides and very little flow.

NASA Causeway -- https://tinyurl.com/y7ddgsbj

Under today's environmental regulations it is almost impossible to build such a structure, and there would be a bridge all the way across the river.

For Northumberland Strait figure something like the CBBT manmade islands but 5+ miles long.


http://www.roadstothefuture.com
http://www.capital-beltway.com

Baloney is a reserved word on the Internet
    (Robert Coté, 2002)

ghYHZ

As far back as the 1880's...a rail tunnel to PEI was proposed. The 1960's causeway would have had road and rail with a tunnel portion to permit ship traffic to pass.

Politics killed both of those proposals.

Just east of PEI is the Canso Causeway (road and rail) linking mainland Nova Scotia to Cape Breton Island. Here's a link to the AARoads Forum with photos:

https://www.aaroads.com/forum/index.php?topic=16747.0





The Canso Causeway was built in the 1950's. At the centre, it's 200' deep with a 800' wide base on the seabed.

Environmental concerns today would never have allowed it to be constructed. The lobster fishery on the SE coast of Cape Breton was wiped out and tides were altered in the Strait requiring a Tidal Lock in the Causeway for ship traffic to pass.

The Causeway did create an ice-free deep water harbour on the south side that can handle any ship afloat today without restriction.   

Beltway

#8
Quote from: ghYHZ on August 17, 2018, 06:27:43 AM
The Canso Causeway was built in the 1950's. At the centre, it's 200' deep with a 800' wide base on the seabed.
Environmental concerns today would never have allowed it to be constructed.  The lobster fishery on the SE coast of Cape Breton was wiped out and tides were altered in the Strait requiring a Tidal Lock in the Causeway for ship traffic to pass.
The Causeway did create an ice-free deep water harbour on the south side that can handle any ship afloat today without restriction.   

The Canso Causeway looks like an engineering disaster -- https://tinyurl.com/y7b3qtt2

If the water was that deep it would be far more expensive to build than a bridge.

It also has a canal and lock for marine traffic.  A lock because presumably while the waters are at sea level the tidal actions would cause different water levels on either side at some times of the day and/or heavy currents if there was an open channel.

The Strait of Canso is a long thin channel approximately 27 kilometres long and averaging 3 kilometres wide (1 km at its narrowest).

About 10 million tons of rock for building the causeway was quarried from a mountain on Cape Porcupine.  That is the size of a small mountain.  Causeways require massive amounts of fill material that has to be excavated from somewhere nearby.

This Wikipedia quote shows some unique geographical characteristics that may favor a causeway, but shows major negative consequences as well --
When the causeway was completed, the eastern end of the Strait of Canso became ice free during the winter.  Several industries were attracted to the Point Tupper area, including the Stora pulp and paper mill, a Gulf Oil refinery and a heavy water plant.
Aside from blocking sea ice, the blocking of the Strait of Canso caused significant environmental damage from the enormous changes in the tidal regime of the southern Gulf of St. Lawrence all the way to the mouth of the St. Lawrence River.  The causeway also had the effect of damming the waterway for migrating ground fish stocks for decades until some of these species were able to determine how to get around Cape Breton Island into the gulf.  In addition, the causeway allowed several non-native species of land animals access onto Cape Breton Island.  One particularly troublesome interloper has been the bobcat, which has slowly forced the more gentle lynx out of its traditional hunting grounds and up into the Cape Breton Highlands.



Northumberland Strait is a sea strait and I seriously doubt that any section of the crossing would be more feasibly built on causeway than on a bridge.

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Baloney is a reserved word on the Internet
    (Robert Coté, 2002)

ghYHZ

The rock-fill material for the causeway was right there. The face of Cape Porcupine Mountain was quarried then dumped in the strait less than a mile away providing work for local truckers. A bridge might have been more expensive.





Today's environmental concerns would probably not have permitted the face of Cape Porcupine to be quarried. Martin-Marietta Corp. still maintains a quarry here but it's all done "˜inside' the mountain. 

https://goo.gl/maps/X6NS93LfALu

Beltway

#10
Quote from: ghYHZ on August 17, 2018, 08:13:31 AM
The rock-fill material for the causeway was right there. The face of Cape Porcupine Mountain was quarried then dumped in the strait less than a mile away providing work for local truckers. A bridge might have been more expensive.

I rather doubt that.  Causeways are normally found in shallow (like less than 8 feet) waters that are non-tidal and have little or no flow. 

The aerial photo made it clear where the material came from, and that the mountain had been torn apart like by a small atom bomb.

Regarding the Brevard County, Florida causeways that I mentioned (all built prior the early 1970s), there have been official discussions in the last 10 years or so about the negative environmental impacts, and the environmental benefits from building bridges and removing the causeways and restoring the original ground on the river bottom.  It was concluded that while there may be major benefits that this would be extremely expensive financially and might create even more negative environmental impacts in the process of moving the material to a disposal area (and finding one in the first place for millions of cubic yards of earth, actually several given that the causeways are many miles apart) and restoring the original ground on the river bottom.   An official decision to leave them as is.  But the takeaway from this is that older causeways are now viewed as problematic enough that this replacement has been considered.

http://www.roadstothefuture.com
http://www.capital-beltway.com

Baloney is a reserved word on the Internet
    (Robert Coté, 2002)

Beltway

#11
Fun facts about the Brevard County, Florida causeways --

Mainland to barrier island crossings -- 8
River crossings -- 13
Manmade islands and peninsulas -- 33
Waterway bridges -- 21
Relief bridges -- 21
http://www.roadstothefuture.com
http://www.capital-beltway.com

Baloney is a reserved word on the Internet
    (Robert Coté, 2002)

ghYHZ

(BTW...we're getting a bit OT here......moving down the road from PEI to Cape Breton!)

This was the 1950's in an economically depressed area. The material was there and local workers/truckers were employed. Bridge components and bridge labourers would have come from away.

Here's the bridge proposed in 1903:

http://www.virtualmuseum.ca/sgc-cms/histoires_de_chez_nous-community_memories/pm_v2.php?id=display_original&lg=English&fl=0&rd=135888

http://www.virtualmuseum.ca/sgc-cms/histoires_de_chez_nous-community_memories/pm_v2.php?id=story_line&lg=English&fl=0&ex=00000566&sl=4495&pos=1&pf=1#5

Beltway

Quote from: ghYHZ on August 17, 2018, 09:49:34 AM
This was the 1950's in an economically depressed area. The material was there and local workers/truckers were employed. Bridge components and bridge labourers would have come from away.
Here's the bridge proposed in 1903:
http://www.virtualmuseum.ca/sgc-cms/histoires_de_chez_nous-community_memories/pm_v2.php?id=display_original&lg=English&fl=0&rd=135888

So the two main piers/towers are in 90 foot depth water, and an 1,800 foot long main span over the deep waters.

Description of what they made permanent changes to--

The dream and necessity of a permanent crossing at the Strait of Canso between mainland Nova Scotia and Cape Breton Island was in the hearts and minds of Cape Bretoners for many years.  This very deep waterway with swift running tides, winds blowing fiercely down through the Strait and huge ice floes in winter, had always made it a challenge to cross from the time of the earliest settlement in the 1780's.

http://www.roadstothefuture.com
http://www.capital-beltway.com

Baloney is a reserved word on the Internet
    (Robert Coté, 2002)

Richard3

What about going back to the PEI's first freeway segment, now...

It would have been great if the eastern end of that freeway connected at TCH-1 and Upton Rd. at Beach Grove instead of at PE-248 roundabout at North River.

The article says this is phase 2B of the entire project, and the PEI website mentioning that phase 1 and 2A are already done. But imagine this entire project as the step 1 of a multi-step freeway project, bypassing the entire Cornwall/Charlottetown/Cross Roads area, so let's see the other steps.

- Step 2: Building another segment of TCH-1, starting west at the new TCH-1 (this new freeway) east of Cornwall Rd., crossing PE-235 and 248 west and north of North River, then crossing York River and connecting to TCH-1 roundabout at Upton Rd. at Beach Grove.

- Step 3: Building another new segment of TCH-1, starting north of Queen Elisabeth Hospital in Falconwood, crossing Hillsborough River, then PE-21 east of Duffy Rd., and connecting actual TCH-1 a bit east of Brookside Dr., towards Hazelbrook.

- Step 4: Turn actual Charlottetown Bypass, between steps 2 and 3, into a freeway, building interchanges at Upton Rd., Malpeque Rd. (PE-2 West), Brackley Point Rd. (PE-15), St. Peters Rd. (PE-2 East, Veterans Memorial Hwy), and Riverside Dr. (actual TCH-1).

This entire project would take another decade to be realized, depending of available budgets.

What about that?  It would make a really more easy way to bypass the entire Charlottetown area, especially for truck drivers.
- How many people are working in here?
- About 20%.

- What Quebec highways and Montreal Canadiens have in common?
- Rebuilding.

States/provinces/territories I didn't went in: AB, AK, AL, BC, HI, KS, LA, MB, MN, MS, MT, ND, NL, NT, NU, RI, SD, SK, WA, WI, YT.  Well, I still have some job to do!

froggie

That would be useful, yes...but now you're straying into fictional territory.

Richard3

Quote from: froggie on August 20, 2018, 09:09:45 AM
That would be useful, yes...but now you're straying into fictional territory.

...yeah, I know!
- How many people are working in here?
- About 20%.

- What Quebec highways and Montreal Canadiens have in common?
- Rebuilding.

States/provinces/territories I didn't went in: AB, AK, AL, BC, HI, KS, LA, MB, MN, MS, MT, ND, NL, NT, NU, RI, SD, SK, WA, WI, YT.  Well, I still have some job to do!

Richard3

I resurrect this topic to ask a question; is there somebody who project to run Cornwall bypass once opened?

And when will it be open to traffic, exactly?

Incidentally, I have a couple of vacation weeks to take...
- How many people are working in here?
- About 20%.

- What Quebec highways and Montreal Canadiens have in common?
- Rebuilding.

States/provinces/territories I didn't went in: AB, AK, AL, BC, HI, KS, LA, MB, MN, MS, MT, ND, NL, NT, NU, RI, SD, SK, WA, WI, YT.  Well, I still have some job to do!

Chris

Google Earth has imagery of the bypass from June and July 2019.

The roadway looks too narrow for a freeway, the bridges are 14 meters wide. Maybe there will be auxiliary lanes between exits?




oscar

#19
Quote from: Richard3 on October 19, 2019, 07:00:56 PM
I resurrect this topic to ask a question; is there somebody who project to run Cornwall bypass once opened?

And when will it be open to traffic, exactly?

Incidentally, I have a couple of vacation weeks to take...

It will open 7am Atlantic time tomorrow (by coincidence -- or maybe not -- on your Election Day).

https://www.princeedwardisland.ca/en/alert/trans-canada-highway-realignment-opening-monday
my Hot Springs and Highways pages, with links to my roads sites:
http://www.alaskaroads.com/home.html

vdeane

Quote from: Chris on October 20, 2019, 04:35:16 AM
The roadway looks too narrow for a freeway, the bridges are 14 meters wide. Maybe there will be auxiliary lanes between exits?
Ever hear of a super-2?
Please note: All comments here represent my own personal opinion and do not reflect the official position of NYSDOT or its affiliates.

Chris

The first post of this thread was about whether this would be a freeway or not.

vdeane

Please note: All comments here represent my own personal opinion and do not reflect the official position of NYSDOT or its affiliates.

froggie

Hence why it's appropriate to differentiate between a limited-access Super-2 or a controlled-access Super-2.  Not all roadgeek adhere to the roadfan.com definition.  Note that in my OP I did conclude that it would be fully-controlled access and that the environmental document indicated it would be a mix of 2 and 4 lanes.

webny99

I don't think it's possible to argue, for example, that NY 104 from Williamson to Wolcott is not a Super 2.
Sure, it has at-grades, but the overall character of the road, and the fact that there's ROW for four lanes, are the defining features.



Opinions expressed here on belong solely to the poster and do not represent or reflect the opinions or beliefs of AARoads, its creators and/or associates.