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Toll Information





and more....
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Cobequid
Pass
Creating
two safe routes through the Wentworth Valley
Facts At
A Glance
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45
kilometres between Masstown and Thomson Station
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Twinned, four lanes
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Wide median: 22.6 metres
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110 km/hour speed limit
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Five full interchanges
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Six major bridges
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Five large tunnels under the
road for access to land parcels, snowmobile trails and wildlife passages
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18 kilometres of access roads
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Constructed by Atlantic
Highways Corporation, a subsidiary of Canadian Highways International
Corporation, in 20 months (A national industry publication called Cobequid
Pass the fastest highway ever to be designed and constructed in Canada.)
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The Highway 104 Corporation
contracts the management of the toll plaza to Atlantic Highways Management
Corporation Limited
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Opened November 15, 1997
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Average daily traffic for
2006-07: cars – 6237; trucks - 1761
Industrial Benefits
Construction on
the Cobequid Pass Toll Highway pumped millions of dollars into Nova Scotia's
economy, most significantly for local communities in
Colchester and Cumberland Counties.
During peak
construction, more than 400 people were employed on the project in
manufacturing, construction and technical sectors. Most of the people were from
Colchester and Cumberland Counties while most others from outside the two
counties were from Nova Scotia.
Subcontracts in
engineering, design and construction were worth a total of $96 million, the
majority of which went to regional firms. Third party suppliers received
contracts worth $46 million.
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A series of silt ponds near Cumberland Brook is just one of the
environmental measures taken on this project. Environmental concerns
were at the forefront of discussions from the project's inception.

Copyright © 2000 Highway 104 Western
Alignment Corporation |
Construction
The Highway 104
Western Alignment Corporation contracted with the successful bidder, Atlantic
Highways Corporation (AHC) for the highway design and construction.
AHC was a subsidiary of Canada
Highways International Corporation (CHIC).
The major
subcontractors employed by
AHC were: Nova Construction and Tidewater Construction, The BFC Civil
Company of Canada for
structures, and SIRIT Corporation for the tolling system.
The operation
of the tolling facility is contracted to Atlantic Highways Management
Corporation Limited, then a subsidiary of
AHC, and the annual maintenance is being provided under contract with
the Nova Scotia Department of Transportation and Infrastructure Renewal.
In a national
industry publication, the
Cobequid Pass project was called the fastest ever to be designed and
constructed in this country. Given the highway's profile, that comment is
significant:
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Five full
interchanges with grade separations
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Six major
bridges
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22.6 metres
wide median with 16 kilometres of guardrails
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Five large
tunnels under the road for access to land parcels, snowmobile trails and
wildlife passages
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Seven
stream crossings with large concrete box culverts
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Construction of 18 Kilometres of access road
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Toll plaza
with an automated transponder toll system for frequent users
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4.7 million
cubic metres of fill were moved within the site
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Additional
0.52 million cubic metres of earth were borrowed for the project
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0.90
million cubic metres of rock were blasted
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347,000
tonnes of asphalt will be laid.
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This project is one of the first in Nova Scotia to use steel
arches in bridge construction. Equally as strong as conventional
bridges, the steel arch provides significant cost savings.

Copyright © 2000 Highway 104 Western
Alignment Corporation
The Toll
Plaza under construction

Copyright © 2000 Highway 104 Western
Alignment Corporation

Copyright © 2000 Highway 104 Western
Alignment Corporation |
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