Bridge Name: | Thousand Islands International Bridge |
Official Name: | The Thousand Islands Bridge system |
Carries: | 2 lanes of and |
Crosses: | Saint Lawrence River |
Locale: | Wellesley Island, New York, United States to Hill Island, Ontario, Canada |
Maint: | Thousand Islands Bridge Authority |
Design: | suspension, open-spandrel deck arch bridge & truss bridge[1] |
Mainspan: | American suspension: 800feet Canadian suspension: 750feet Canadian truss: 600feet |
Length: | Total: 8.5miles |
Below: | U.S.: 150feet Canada: 120feet |
Toll: | Varies $3.75–$23.50 (USD) or $4.75–$31.00 (CAD) |
Coordinates: | 44.3474°N -75.9835°W |
The Thousand Islands International Bridge (French: Pont des Mille-îles) is an American-maintained international bridge system over the Saint Lawrence River connecting northern New York in the United States with southeastern Ontario in Canada. Constructed in 1937, with additions in 1959, the bridges span the Canada–US border in the middle of the Thousand Islands region. All bridges in the system carry two lanes of traffic, one in each direction, with pedestrian sidewalks.
The Thousand Islands International Bridge system is a series of five bridges[2] spanning the St. Lawrence River. From south to north, they are:
The system's southern end connects with Interstate 81 and the northern end with Highway 401 via Highway 137. There is also an interchange with the Thousand Islands Parkway on the Ontario side.
The actual international border bridge crossing is a set of two parallel 90feet bridges between Wellesley Island in the United States and Hill Island in Canada.
The bridge system is administered by the Thousand Islands Bridge Authority, a New York State public benefit corporation, whose seven board members (Four Americans and three Canadians) are appointed by the Jefferson County Board of Legislators.[3] The Authority also maintains and administers Boldt Castle.
Tolls are paid only by cash, E-ZPass, or Commuter Discount Fare Trip Tags, which are prepaid for either 16 trips (US$20.00) or 72 trips (US$32.00). The Bridge Authority is a member of the multi-state E-ZPass consortium, and introduced electronic toll collection in June 2019.[4] [5] No other ETC transponders are currently offered or accepted, although the Bridge Authority offers sales of transponders of Florida's SunPass for the convenience of Canadian travelers en route to Florida.[6]
See main article: Thousand Islands Border Crossing.
The Thousand Islands Border Crossing connects the towns of Alexandria Bay, New York and Ivy Lea, Ontario at the Thousand Islands Bridge.
It is the westernmost of the three St. Lawrence River crossings, and is very busy, with up to two-hour waits in the summer.[7] The US border station at Alexandria Bay is sometimes called Thousand Islands. The Canada border station of Lansdowne is sometimes called Gananoque, for the nearby town where international ferry service is provided. These border stations are also responsible for inspecting vessel traffic between the countries. The US has seasonal vessel inspection stations on Heart Island and at Cape Vincent, NY, and Canada has seasonal vessel inspection stations at Rockport, Ontario and Gananoque, Ontario. Both Canada Border Services Agency (CBSA) and the U.S. Customs and Border Protection (CBP) travel to selected ports and marinas on request for inspections.
The entire Thousand Islands Bridge system took sixteen months to build, beginning with a ground-breaking on April 30, 1937.[8] Completed ten weeks ahead of schedule, the bridges opened on August 18, 1938, with the ribbon cut by President Franklin D. Roosevelt and Prime Minister William Lyon Mackenzie King.[9] Its total cost was $3.05 million (equivalent to $ million in dollars).
Shortly after opening, the bridge displayed aerodynamic oscillation problems that were quickly corrected via structural upgrades.[10]
In its first year of operation, over 118,000 vehicles crossed the bridge.[11] Today, annual crossings exceed 2,000,000 vehicles.[12]