Le Gardeur Bridge | |
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Coordinates | 45°42′13″N 73°29′1″W / 45.70361°N 73.48361°W |
Carries | Route 138 |
Crosses | Rivière des Prairies |
Locale | Montreal (Rivière-des-Prairies–Pointe-aux-Trembles) |
Official name | Pont Le Gardeur |
Maintained by | Transports Québec |
Characteristics | |
Clearance below | (?) |
Coordinates: 45°42′13″N 73°29′1″W / 45.70361°N 73.48361°W The Le Gardeur Bridge is a beam bridge that connects the east end of the island of Montreal (borough of Pointe-aux-trembles, district of the pointe-aux-prairies) to Repentigny, Quebec.
The bridge has two different sections across the Rivière des Prairies which are separated by Île Bourdon. The length of the two structures is 297 metres (974 ft) (west) and 565 metres (1,854 ft) (east).
Built in 1939, the bridge underwent a major reconstruction in 2001 as well as the addition of a reserved lane for the Metrobus on the eastern structure. The work included the demolition, reconstruction and widening of the bridge deck (that included the new transit lane) and its approaches as well as the rehabilitation of the 24 pillars. The Quebec Ministry of Transportation also made emergency repairs in 1999 to solidify the structure while frequent inspections were made between 1999 and the reconstruction of the bridge which was estimated at over $26 million.
The bridge is part of Quebec Route 138, which runs from the Canadian-US border southwest of Huntingdon to the Côte-Nord region via Trois-Rivières and Quebec City. It is one of only two river crossings at the eastern tip of Montreal to the Lanaudière region (Repentigny, Charlemagne and Lavaltrie areas), the other being the Charles de Gaulle Bridge on Quebec Autoroute 40.