Slocan Valley Rail TrailThe Slocan Valley Rail Trail is a multi-use recreational rail trail in the West Kootenay region of southeastern British Columbia. OverviewThe trail uses the former Columbia and Kootenay Railway rail corridor along the section of the Slocan Valley between South Slocan and Slocan that the Canadian Pacific Railway (CP) abandoned in 1994. Subsequently, CP removed the rails and ties, and dismantled the bridges.[1] The 52-kilometre (32 mi) trail[2] is owned by the government of BC and managed by the Slocan Valley Heritage Trail Society (SVHTS).[1] Timeline1993: CP ran last freight train on September 14. Sections
South Slocan box culvertIn 1962, southwest of South Slocan, a 90-metre (300 ft) long two-lane highway bridge, connecting embankment approaches, replaced a railway crossing. Five decades later, that bridge over the rail trail needed costly structural rehabilitation. In 2017, an embankment fill, with a 50-metre (160 ft) long concrete box culvert under the highway for cyclists and pedestrians, replaced the bridge.[6] Local artist Peter Vogelaar and volunteers painted a mural along the length of the tunnel detailing the valley history.[7]
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