Ottawa Citizen

Strandherd-armstrong bridge faces new delays

Aug. 31 deadline won’t be met: councillor

- NECO COCKBURN ncockburn@ottawaciti­zen.com twitter.com/necocockbu­rn

The Strandherd-Armstrong bridge project likely faces a delay of months after welding did not meet city specificat­ions, says a city official.

The $48-million project was expected to be finished by Aug. 31, but Gloucester-South Nepean Councillor Steve Desroches indicated last month that timelines were being assessed after testing determined that additional welding work was required.

On Friday, Desroches said a new completion date still hadn’t been determined, but: “I do believe that we will be looking at a delay.”

“I don’t think it will be weeks, he said. “It will likely be months, and this is what’s being confirmed at the present time.”

The bridge over the Rideau River between Strandherd Drive and Earl Armstrong Road was supposed to be finished by late last year, but work stalled last March when the original contractor went into receiversh­ip. The new deadline at the end of August was set when the project resumed.

Staff are now seeing if time can be made up in other parts of the project, and constructi­on work continues, said Desroches.

A full update is expected in mid-April, he said.

“We don’t want to compromise the safety for the sake of a ribbon-cutting. I hope to have more informatio­n in the coming weeks with more clarity on the deadline, but clearly the welding is taking some considerab­le time,” said Desroches.

“There are very high standards that have to be met because of the weight, and I think, as someone whose family is going to travel on this bridge, I want to ensure that the bridge is safe.”

Desroches said in February that some of the welding on the bridge’s arches didn’t meet city specificat­ions.

“It is a complex welding process,” he said on Friday, with “very sophistica­ted testing that is part of the quality control.”

Each of the three bridge arches is composed of 10 pieces that must be welded together, according to informatio­n posted to the councillor’s website.

The bridge was originally expected to open to traffic in early 2012. That timeline was stretched before contractor ConCreate USL of Bolton, Ont., went into receiversh­ip in March.

The city held a $23-million performanc­e bond on the project, and its bonding company — The Guarantee Company of North America — chose Horseshoe Hill Constructi­on, composed of employees of ConCreate USL, as the builder to complete the project.

A $5,000-a-day penalty applies for failing to complete work by the end of August, Desroches said, and “this would fall under the responsibi­lity of the bonding company.”

Welding is being completed by a subcontrac­tor, Montacier, according to Desroches. Staff at that company and at Horseshoe Hill referred questions to the city.

Desroches said in mid-February that more than 70 per cent of the project had been completed.

“I’m disappoint­ed that the welding is taking some considerab­le time, but we are putting tremendous pressure on the contractor and on the bonding company,” he said on Friday.

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