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Pierre Laporte Bridge Pont Pierre-Laporte (French) | |
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Coordinates | 46°44′42″N 71°17′27″W / 46.74500°N 71.29083°W |
Carries | A-73 |
Crosses | St. Lawrence River |
Locale | Quebec City and Lévis, Quebec |
Official name | Pont Pierre-Laporte |
Characteristics | |
Design | Suspension bridge |
Total length | 1,041 m (3,415 ft) |
Longest span | 667.5 m (2,190 ft) |
No. of lanes | 6 |
History | |
Designer | Demers, Vaudry, Gronquist Parsons Transportation Group |
Construction cost | Originally evaluated at $33 millions, it cost $55 million CAD[1] (Approx. 435M$ in 2024 per Bank of Canada inflation) |
Opened | 1970[1] |
Statistics | |
Daily traffic | 134,000 |
Toll | Free |
Location | |
The Pierre Laporte Bridge (French: Pont Pierre-Laporte) is the longest main span suspension bridge in Canada.[2] It crosses the Saint Lawrence River approximately 200 metres (660 ft) west (upstream) of the Quebec Bridge between Quebec City and Lévis. It spans 1,041 metres (3,415 ft).[1]
It was originally named the New Quebec Bridge (Nouveau pont de Québec) and was supposed to be called Pont Frontenac (Frontenac Bridge) until it was renamed in honour of Quebec Vice-Premier Pierre Laporte, who was kidnapped and murdered during the October Crisis of 1970 as construction of the bridge was nearing completion. The bridge was constructed for the Province of Quebec, Department of Roads in a joint venture with the private firm of Parsons Transportation Group.
It carries Autoroute 73 northbound from Autoroute 20, the Trans-Canada Highway, to Quebec City and Autoroute 40 and also northwards towards Saguenay.