Thursday, December 25, 2025
ADVT 
National

It Could Be Weeks Before Sinkhole Can Be Filled, Says Ottawa Mayor

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 09 Jun, 2016 12:44 PM
  • It Could Be Weeks Before Sinkhole Can Be Filled, Says Ottawa Mayor
OTTAWA — It's likely to take several weeks to re-open a major thoroughfare in Ottawa that was cut off Wednesday when a cavernous sinkhole opened up underground and swallowed three lanes of pavement, the sidewalk and a parked minivan.
 
Determining the specific cause of the road collapse will take even longer, Ottawa Mayor Jim Watson said Thursday.
 
Initially, Watson said city staff estimated it would be two or three weeks before the road is fully repaired. He later revised the prediction to between one and two weeks.
 
Overnight, Watson said crews poured 2,700 cubic metres of concrete into the gaping hole — the equivalent of about 300 truckloads.
 
Many businesses began reopening just one day after the collapse as crews restored electricity to the area Thursday morning. Natural gas service was expected to be available again by the end of the day.
 
However, a precautionary boil water advisory was also issued for area businesses.
 
No one was injured as the sinkhole opened, despite the fact the road was being used as a bus and taxi transitway while crews beneath were digging a tunnel for a new light rail transit line in the area.
 
Approximately 5,000 people work in the vicinity and roughly 20,000 people on average make their way daily through the busy Rideau Centre shopping centre that was evacuated when the road that runs alongside the mall collapsed.
 
The cause of the sinkhole has not been determined, said Watson.
 
"I want the public to be reassured that we are putting in all of our resources to determine the cause of the situation," said the mayor.
 
"We are currently focused on the rehabilitation and reoccupancy of the affected buildings, but we are committed to providing the public with regular and timely updates as information develops."
 
 
Pinpointing the cause, he said, could take "a couple of months."
 
The sinkhole formed at mid morning Wednesday a few hundred metres from Parliament Hill, near the corner of Rideau St. and Sussex Drive, just two blocks east of the Chateau Laurier hotel.
 
The resulting hole stretched across the entire width of the street, measuring about 40 metres long and 28 metres wide with an average depth of about five metres, said Steve Cripps, manager of the city's rail implementation office.
 
The ground in the area consisted of sand, silt and fractured rock that construction crews knew was unstable.
 
But officials said Wednesday they were unable to say whether the soil conditions were a contributing factor.
 
The road collapse came three weeks before a major North American leaders' summit that's set to take place June 29, which was already expected to add to the city's traffic headaches.

MORE National ARTICLES

Police Could Be Charged After Woman's Jaw Broken In Langford, B.C., Jail

Police Could Be Charged After Woman's Jaw Broken In Langford, B.C., Jail
Police watchdog has determined charges could be laid against RCMP officers after a woman's jaw was broken in a Langford jail.

Police Could Be Charged After Woman's Jaw Broken In Langford, B.C., Jail

Search Continues For Two Young Capybaras That Escaped A Toronto Zoo

Search Continues For Two Young Capybaras That Escaped A Toronto Zoo
TORONTO — The hunt continues for two large rodents — dubbed by staff as Bonnie and Clyde — that escaped a Toronto zoo.

Search Continues For Two Young Capybaras That Escaped A Toronto Zoo

Nova Scotia Car Collector Asked To Remove Graveyard-Painted Hearse From Driveway

Nova Scotia Car Collector Asked To Remove Graveyard-Painted Hearse From Driveway
A Nova Scotia car collector says his landlord asked him to remove his graveyard-painted hearse from his driveway after complaints from other residents of his largely elderly neighbourhood.

Nova Scotia Car Collector Asked To Remove Graveyard-Painted Hearse From Driveway

Fire At Burnaby Dog Trainer's Home Kills 10 Dogs, Cats

Fire At Burnaby Dog Trainer's Home Kills 10 Dogs, Cats
BURNABY, B.C. — Eight dogs and two cats have died in a blaze at a dog trainer's home in Burnaby, B.C.

Fire At Burnaby Dog Trainer's Home Kills 10 Dogs, Cats

War Survivor Awarded More Than $1Million By B.C. Judge For Crash That Worsened PTSD

War Survivor Awarded More Than $1Million By B.C. Judge For Crash That Worsened PTSD
British Columbia Supreme Court Justice Robert Sewell said in his written decision that Olivier Yewa Shongu led a difficult life before he came to Canada as a refugee in 2005.

War Survivor Awarded More Than $1Million By B.C. Judge For Crash That Worsened PTSD

B.C. Serial Killer Cody Legebokoff To Appeal 4 Murder Convictions

Cody Legebokoff was sentenced to life in prison with no chance of parole for 25 years by a Prince George judge in September 2014.

B.C. Serial Killer Cody Legebokoff To Appeal 4 Murder Convictions