DSC
Superstar
Member Bio
- Joined
- Jan 13, 2008
- Messages
- 19,246
- Reaction score
- 27,014
- Location
- St Lawrence Market Area
The TTC is not the most accurate source of information, but they think that the Ship Channel Bridge will be out for another month.
Effective May 12, 2024 - 07:00 AM to June 22, 2024 - 07:00 AM
202 Cherry Beach will divert both ways, via south on Cherry Street, east on Commissioners Street, north on Carlaw Avenue, west on Lake Shore Boulevard and north on Cherry Street, to regular route.
Pedestrians and vehicles will not be allowed across the bridge.
Stops not served; Cherry Street, between Commissioners Street and Cherry Beach.
PortsToronto do not seem to have a reopenig date but their website says:
The Ship Channel Bridge initially sustained hardware damage on April 22. Follow-up inspection on initial repairs confirmed that the main shaft of the bridge is bent, which has the potential to cause a full failure of the lifting mechanism. This mechanism is an original, 92-year old part of the bridge and is scheduled to be replaced and/or rehabilitated as part of the final stage of an ongoing rehabilitation project led by PortsToronto and the City of Toronto, which has been underway since March 2022.
202 Cherry Beach–Temporary route change due to Cherry Street bridge work
Effective May 12, 2024 - 07:00 AM to June 22, 2024 - 07:00 AM
202 Cherry Beach will divert both ways, via south on Cherry Street, east on Commissioners Street, north on Carlaw Avenue, west on Lake Shore Boulevard and north on Cherry Street, to regular route.
Pedestrians and vehicles will not be allowed across the bridge.
Stops not served; Cherry Street, between Commissioners Street and Cherry Beach.
PortsToronto do not seem to have a reopenig date but their website says:
The Ship Channel Bridge initially sustained hardware damage on April 22. Follow-up inspection on initial repairs confirmed that the main shaft of the bridge is bent, which has the potential to cause a full failure of the lifting mechanism. This mechanism is an original, 92-year old part of the bridge and is scheduled to be replaced and/or rehabilitated as part of the final stage of an ongoing rehabilitation project led by PortsToronto and the City of Toronto, which has been underway since March 2022.
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