T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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1005.1 | cars rule: get used to it | POLAR::WILSONC | strive to look better naked | Mon Aug 19 1996 03:34 | 19 |
| i was in a greasy spoon in my neighborhood the other morning, when i
happened to overhear some PEI'ers talking about that bridge. the
consensus seemed to be that the bridge would be a good thing, since the
economy in that area has been demolished.
but really, how much can we hold on to these "treasured" little spots?
was not the soil you are reading notes files from once a little piece
of paradise?
it seems to me that people want cars, microwaves, computers etc., but
they are not willing to admit that much destruction, and exploration
of the earth has been responsible for those very things we cherish.
i say "Pave the World", for only when we have destroyed the world will
we know what we have done, then we can do something about it.
build a bridge Bob, get over it.
chris
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1005.2 | It's on it's way... | TROOA::MCRAM | Digital: There's no Life like it! | Mon Aug 19 1996 09:31 | 7 |
|
The bridge is a massive, huge project with gigantic pre-assembled sections.
It's about half-built. I don't think it aill change the place that much.
It's too far from the mainstream now.
Marshall
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1005.3 | | GVA05::DZIALOWSKI | sharks gotta swim, bats gotta fly... | Mon Aug 19 1996 10:13 | 8 |
| I don't think it is half-built yet. The real project calls for a bridge
to PEI, starting from Brest, Saint-Malo, or Galway (TBD), with a
stop-over in Saint-Pierre or Miquelon. It is sponsored by potato
appreciation clubs and the prime contractor is the Franco-English company
which dug 1) the tunnel under the channel, and 2) itself into bankrupcy.
As non-potato-connoiseurs around western Europe do not know where PEI is
or even that it exists, it is also advertised as a caribbean vacation
destination, expecting it could accelerate the fundraising.
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1005.4 | | FSCORE::PAVEZKA | Why.....Why me!!! | Mon Aug 19 1996 10:20 | 4 |
| The bridge is more than half built...in fact, it is supposed to be
completed in the Oct-Nov timeframe.
pete
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1005.5 | Don't pay the ferryman | OTOOA::CROOK | Your Ad Here! | Mon Aug 19 1996 10:33 | 10 |
| re: .0 How do you get to Martha's Vineyard without a bridge? For
PEI, it's strictly ferries and air travel and the cost to
provide those was one of the reasons to put in a fixed link.
Thought being it will 'eventually' be cheaper to get us all
onto, and then to hell off of, the Island. Also, the weather
and its affect on air/ferry travel was a bit of a factor I
think?
and totally un-related to anything about today, PEI is
supposed to have some wonderful golf courses...
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1005.6 | Use it and abuse it! | POLAR::MAHANEY | | Mon Aug 19 1996 10:38 | 14 |
| I do believe it will change the landscape of PEI. As Chris, stated in
.1, we destroy things, and then later look back and say, geez that was
a mistake. Why do the residents live in PEI? For the landscape and
laid back style of living. (and potatoe growing?) Yet they are building
a bridge that can increase employment in the area so they can continue to
their present lifestyles. But this bridge will in the end (IMO) alter
or destroy their present way of life and the landscape of PEI.
Nasty circle. I think Canadians should look at the United Staes, and
then discuss, is this the direction we want to go?
Sean
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1005.7 | I'm going there soon, before it's too late | IROCZ::MORRISON | Bob M. LKG1-3/A11 226-7570 | Mon Aug 19 1996 14:38 | 14 |
| Where are the start and end points of the bridge? I would like to check it
out on a map.
Re ferries and planes to the island: Are the ferries heavily subsidized?
If so, does the PEI government cover most of the subsidy?
I can see how the bean-counters would look at the situation and say that
a bridge will pay for itself in X years due to government money no longer
being spent to subsidize ferries.
PEI *will* lose its character as a result of the bridge, unless the residents
take vigorous action to preserve their scenery. I suspect that the framework
is not in place now to protect their environment because over-development was
never a threat before.
I have always wanted to see PEI, along with NB and NS. I'm going to plan on
going there within the next two years. I figure I have that much time to see
it more or less as it is now.
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1005.8 | evolution scale... | GVA05::DZIALOWSKI | sharks gotta swim, bats gotta fly... | Mon Aug 19 1996 17:14 | 8 |
| What's the big deal with PEI ? Sarnia , Ont. has about is 1/4 the population
size of PEI (OK, maybe not Sarnia, but certainly Lambton County), and
they are already twinning their initial bridge to civilization (ie. to
Port-Huron, Mi.), aka the Bluewatwer Bridge. On top of that most locals
have been equiped with thumbs for several generations, and all of those
I have met stand vertical on their rear legs (and so did I by the time
I left. I am still working on the thumbs aspect though), so what's the big
deal with PEI ?
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1005.9 | | OTOOA::CROOK | Your Ad Here! | Mon Aug 19 1996 17:14 | 14 |
| if you're going to see it before it gets 'ruined', you'll have to do
this year because by next year you'll be able to walk there!
There was/is quite a bit of concern that the Island would lose its
identity but the fixed link went ahead. I'm no authority but it seems to
me that the ferries are losing money and are subsidized and that is
where the bean counters came in. The ferries (I think there are 3?) fall
under the Canadian National Railway portfolio which has never made a $$
in its lifetime and has been under some serious 'down-sizing'.
Bridge builders need jobs too!
Sorry, don't know the details on where it starts/ends. Try the net to
see if there's any links about the link?
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1005.10 | Which end of a two-way bridge is the start? | TEKDEV::SMELLIE | | Mon Aug 19 1996 18:54 | 16 |
| I don't know where it "starts" or "ends", but the it reaches land at
almost the same points as the Borden (P.E.I.) / Cape Tormentine (N.B.)
ferry. On the P.E.I. side it is right beside the ferry terminal. On the
New Brunswick side it is a little further west from the terminal, maybe
a kilometer.
You get a really good view of the construction progress from the ferry.
It's an amazing technological undertaking (almost as amazing as the
Grand Canal).
By the by, my understanding is that the ferry from Wood Island, P.E.I.
to Caribou, N.S. is run by a private company (Northumberland Ferry
Limited?).
Regards,
Tom
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1005.11 | | POWDML::HANGGELI | Elvis is the Watermelon | Tue Aug 20 1996 12:19 | 35 |
|
Change Coming in Big Way to Unspoiled Prince Edward Island
CHARLOTTETOWN, Prince Edward Island (AP) - Change is
coming in a big way to this picturesque little island. One of the
world's longest bridges is rising, span by spectacular span, to
connect Canada's smallest province with the mainland.
The eight-mile bridge is more than half completed and is expected
to open on schedule next June, replacing a ferry service that has
linked the island to New Brunswick since 1832.
Government officials hope the bridge over the Northumberland
Strait will boost the number of tourists to more than 1 million
annually, up from the current 800,000, and inspire a wave of
business investment as transport becomes cheaper and easier.
The drive over the bridge will take about 15 minutes, compared to
45 minutes on the ferry. But islanders say that comparison
understates the convenience the bridge will bring - in peak summer
season, backed-up motorists often wait hours to get their vehicles
aboard a ferry.
The bridge construction project is anything but simple, though it has
proceeded on schedule and within its $613 million budget. Some
2,500 workers have been involved; three have been killed on the
job.
The bridge consists of 44 spans, each with a main concrete girder
630 feet long. A towering, Dutch-built heavy-lifting vessel has been
carrying the 7,500-ton girders from an on-shore construction site
and hoisting them delicately atop huge piers rising from bases
below the strait.
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1005.12 |
| TROOA::BROOKS | | Tue Aug 20 1996 13:55 | 12 |
| As a potential tourist to the area in the next few years, I would
appreciate the bridge over the ferry. I think the bridge will hurt
Nova scotia more than it affects PEI. PEI is small enough you could
drive around it in less than a day. This will make it very tempting to
a lot of maritime visitors who will forsake other areas of the
maritimes.
I don't expect the nature of PEI to change that much. The magnitude of
change is now in the hands of the local city councils who regulate
local development and such.
Doug
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1005.13 | Beautiful Island Province ! | GRANPA::MMARVILLE | | Tue Aug 20 1996 16:15 | 18 |
| Just got back from PEI last Tuesday as a matter of fact. It is even
more beautiful than "they" say it is. The bridge seems to be going up
quickly. I heard(read) a stat that in 1995 there were 800,000 visitors to
PEI last year(PEI Tourist Board). Seems people believe that the
tourist number wouldn't increase by any incredible number since for
most people to get to PEI involves quite a drive from other parts of
USA and Canada already. But the impact on the commercial life of the
island is expected to be great. Goods to market etc.
From conversations etc. (albeit not scientific) people seem positive about
the bridge.
By the way PEI has a fine network of roads. Of course it's
small compared to ONT. and QUE. but the whole Atlantic provinces make
it very easy to get around.
MIke
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1005.14 | Check out this website : http://www.peinet.pe.ca/SCI/bridge.html | MILKWY::ARSENAULT | Paul Arsenault MRO1-3/C3 DTN 297-8164 | Tue Aug 20 1996 17:17 | 5 |
| I just got back from a week in New Brunswick and took a day to bring
the wife and kids on the "Abegweit" one last time. It looks like the
bridge will be done for next year.
-Paul
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1005.15 | | NETCAD::MORRISON | Bob M. LKG2-A/R5 226-7570 | Wed Sep 18 1996 17:18 | 17 |
1005.16 | | POLAR::WILSONC | you can not force me to care | Sun Nov 24 1996 19:50 | 2
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