Medicine Hat News

City hopes CPKC co-operates with intersecti­on vision

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One of the most congested intersecti­ons in Medicine Hat could be opened up over the next few years, according to city roads officials lobbying CPKC railways to remove a spur line that crosses Dunmore Road near the Seven Persons Creek.

The line leads to the former P&H grain elevator further along Kipling Street, but the facility closed to grain deliveries after 2020 and is now privately owned with the intention of redevelopi­ng the land as non-industrial use.

With no more trains crossing the connection between Kingsway and Dunmore at the Shannon Bridge, more room for intersecti­on improvemen­ts could be opened if the line was removed, said city developmen­t division head Pat Bohan.

“We are doing road rehab on Dunmore Road (this summer) and we are talking to Canadian Pacific about potentiall­y removing those tracks,” said Bohan, referring to asphalt resurfacin­g of the area this summer.

Agreement might not be made on the rails or right-ofway — which is federally controlled and not subject to local government authority — until after the current work is complete, said Bohan.

But, he added, the change could be worked into other near term work.

“We are going to go through some preliminar­y design work on Kingsway,” said Bohan, adding that results from this year’s remake of Division Avenue — adding trail way and some traffic changes — will be evaluated first.

“We’re contemplat­ing a similar concept on Kingsway to Division, though that’s a couple years out.”

For more than 10 years, the city’s road priority list has outlined the need for improvemen­ts at the busy meeting of four crosstown routes.

But with built up developmen­t, the rail line, a bridge, an abandoned gas well and the nearby creek banks in vicinity to the roadway, transporta­tion planners have said options for technical and physical changes are limited.

Two years ago, the city dedicated a single right-hand turn lane for drivers going southward onto Kipling Street leading to the Allowance Avenue overpass.

The line also bisects a city storage yard, accessed by Marshall Avenue, that has been used on decreasing basis over several years. In 2021, developmen­t officials said the land next to the Seven Persons Creek could be examined for potential housing or mixed commercial uses.

Railroads are traditiona­lly leery toward abandoning track considerin­g the difficulty in getting new lines approved and the cost of reclaiming older ones.

All railroads must provide notice of intentions to abandon track on a three-year rolling basis as a requiremen­t in the Canada Transporta­tion Act.

 ?? NEWS FILE PHOTO ?? The intersecti­on of Kipling Street and Kingsway Avenue (becoming Dunmore Road) is scene in this September 2022 file photo. City road engineers are determinin­g improvemen­ts for the tight intersecti­on.
NEWS FILE PHOTO The intersecti­on of Kipling Street and Kingsway Avenue (becoming Dunmore Road) is scene in this September 2022 file photo. City road engineers are determinin­g improvemen­ts for the tight intersecti­on.

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