Kichi Sipi Bridge | |
---|---|
Carries | Provincial Road 374 |
Crosses | Nelson River |
Locale | near Cross Lake, Manitoba, Canada |
Characteristics | |
Material | Concrete and Steel |
Total length | 260 m (850 ft) |
Longest span | 2 x 71 m (233 ft) |
No. of spans | 4 |
Piers in water | 2 |
History | |
Designer | Earth Tech |
Opened | December 16, 2002 |
The Kichi Sipi Bridge spans a deep channel of the Nelson River south of Cross Lake, providing the only all-weather road link between eastern Manitoba and the rest of Canada and North America. Its origins are unusual and its technology innovative. At 850 feet, it is the second longest road bridge in Manitoba.
Until 2002, the only road links to eastern Manitoba north of 51° (an area of some 120,000 sq. miles, with numerous communities) were seasonal ice roads. Kichi Sipi Bridge was constructed by the government of Manitoba as a result of a lawsuit by Cross Lake Indian Band. The lawsuit arose in turn from the 1977 Northern Flood Agreement, between five bands and the Crown concerning effects of hydro-electric development on several rivers in Manitoba. Article 17.1 of the agreement undertakes a policy of implementing recommendations that a government-sponsored Study Board made in 1975, including "that an all-weather road be built connecting the Cross Lake community road network with the Jenpeg access road." Article 14.2 provides that if such policies are not fully implemented in a timely way the bands may claim damages. In Claim 109, Cross Lake Indian Band sought damages for governmental failure to build an all-weather road to Cross Lake, including the lack of an all-weather crossing over the Nelson River (originally known as Kichi Sipi, or Great River, in Cree).
The governments of Canada and Manitoba took the position that Provincial Road 374, including a ferry crossing over the Nelson River, was an all-weather road. In 1993, the continuing arbitrator charged with enforcing the agreement found that "there is at present no all-weather road connecting Cross Lake and Jenpeg" because there was no bridge across the Nelson River. After further arbitration hearings, the Manitoba Court of Appeal finally ruled that one or both of the federal and provincial governments was liable to pay damages as long as no bridge was in place. The agreement provides that there is no appeal from the decision of the Manitoba Court of Appeal.
In 1999, the government of Manitoba announced that, in light of the Court's decision, it would implement the policy. It built a technically innovative quadruple-span concrete and steel bridge at a cost of C$25,000,000. Kichi Sipi Bridge was officially opened on December 16, 2002.