Previous drafts of DRIC's Windsor-Essex Parkway included only 1.5 km (25 percent) of covered tunnel, but the team upped it to 1.9 km with about 240 acres of parkland and walking trails lining the corridor.
Clearly, the much-hyped GreenLink proposal influenced DRIC's final decision, but it was always unlikely the team of bureaucrats would totally adopt the city's preferred alternative.
Ontario Finance Minister Dwight Duncan and Windsor Liberal MPP Sandra Pupatello weren't shy about promoting DRIC's cheaper solution in recent months. And just last week, DRIC got a rise out of City Council when it took aim at GreenLink, suggesting the project would cost about a billion more than the city's original $1.6 billion estimate and that the width of the roadway shoulders and storm drainage were areas of concern.
Predictably, Mayor Francis wasn't enthused with DRIC's version. He told local media this morning that the final blueprint isn't close enough to the more environmentally-sound GreenLink proposal.
Big manufacturers that depend on fast, efficient, just-in-time truck crossings were otherwise pleased by today's announcement.
"This crossing is critical to the entire region, especially for major manufacturers such as Chrysler, whose operations are dependent upon a reliable and efficient infrastructure for trade between Canada and the U.S.," Chrysler Canada CEO Reid Bigland, said in a press release.
Added Len Crispino, president and CEO of the Ontario Chamber of Commerce: "Today's announcement provides one more critical step towards meeting the timelines required to get the new international crossing operational in 2013, a deadline we cannot afford to miss."
Later this summer, DRIC will formally announce the exact location for a new international bridge and plaza. The structure, which will be built and managed through a public-private arrangement, will likely go in one of three spots off of Ojibway Parkway.