Final section of Highway 30 opens today - Action News
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Montreal

Final section of Highway 30 opens today

As of 1 p.m. today, the last section of Highway 30 will be open to traffic, will be open allowing east-west traffic to bypass the island of Montreal by the South Shore.

Truckers laud bypass, environmentalists worry it means urban sprawl

Highway 30 opens Saturday

12 years ago
Duration 2:03
Decades after it was first promised the South Shore bypass around Montreal opens. Emily Brass has that story.

As of 1 p.m. today, the last section of Highway 30 will be open to traffic, will be openallowing east-west traffic to bypass the island of Montreal by the South Shore.

The 42-kilometre, $1.5-billion stretch of highway, linking Vaudreuil-Dorion to Chteauguay, includes 30 overpasses and two major bridges, one of them a toll bridge linking Les Cdres and Salaberry-de-Valleyfield.

Officials will officialymark the opening of the highway in a ribbon-cutting ceremony on Monday, but drivers will be able to access the final section by Saturday afternoon.

The highway's construction dates back to the sixties. Contentious from the start, it was stalled for decades.

However, with growing congestion on Montreal's bridges and on highway 40, the main link traversing Montreal, in 2006 the federal and provincial governments set up a public-private partnership to complete the bypass.

"Mission accomplished," said Denis Lonard, the general manager of Socit-nouvelle-autoroute-30. "On time, delivered as planned."

Latestsegmentof A30 includes:

  • 1 tunnel
  • 2 major bridges
  • 5 bridges over rivers
  • 23 overpasses
  • 2 highway interchanges
  • 8 road interchanges
  • 1 walkway over a bicycle path

Already, the consortium's work has come under some criticism, with an architect raising the alarm about icicles of frozen salt water clearly visible in drainage holes on the underside of the bridge crossing the Beauharnois canal.

"The work is in progress," said Lonard. "It's just that the pipes are not installed. They'll be installed in a few days."

The consortium will operate the toll plaza for the next 3 decades and maintain the service roads for that period.

The toll fee is $1.50 per car and $1.15 per axle on every truck that uses the private portion of the highway.

Two-thousand transponders at $5 per unit have been sold already, in advance of the highway's opening. Motorists can also pay with credit cards or cash a traditional toll booths.

It's not clear yet how much the newly-completed link will ease congestion on the island of Montreal, but truckers forced until now to crawl along the Metropolitan highway appear to be uniformly delighted toll fees and all.

"A truck costs us a hundred dollars an hour to run," said Marie-Chantal Goyette, the vice-president of Mexuscan Cargo. "We think that just crossing the bridge is going to save us close to half an hour. And if you're skipping entirely the Metropolitan, we're estimating that we're going to save close to an hour or a hundred dollars."

Boon for Beauharnois, mayor predicts

Communities near the new highway are also welcoming its completion.

For Beauharnois, it means an end to heavy trucks passing through the heart of town and a boon for development.

Mayor Claude Hnault said the town will now be linked by the new highway to larger nearby municipalities, and new businesses are already moving in.

He said the world's largest computer server centre is spending $125 million to establish itself in Beauharnois, and he's set to sign a deal with another business to create 75 more jobs in the town in the coming weeks.

Wetlands at risk, environmentalists warn

Environmentalists are wary, however.

Serge Bourdon, president of SCABRIC, an environmental group based in Chteauguay, said with the new highway comes new pressure to rezone wetlands and agricultural areas for residential development.

"The first spot [is] all the wetlands and the areas that are going to be lost," Bourdon said.

He said already, east of Beauharnois, fields are being turned into new homes.