Responsive Image Banner

Contractors bag deal to build stations, rail, and systems on CAN$4.7bn Toronto project

A digital render of the Royal York station on the Eglinton Crosstown West Extension in Canada (Image courtesy of Acciona) A digital render of the Royal York station on the Eglinton Crosstown West Extension in Canada (Image courtesy of Acciona)

A consortium led by Acciona Infrastructure Canada has secured the contract to deliver the stations, rail and systems package on the CAN$4.7 billion (US$3.45 billion) Eglinton Crosstown West Extension (ECWE) in Toronto.

Operating as Trillium Rail Partners, the consortium brings together Acciona (40%), Amico Major Projects (30%) and Alberici Constructors (30%).

Trillium Rail Partners beat two other consortia to win the deal: Integrated Transit Partners (Sacyr Canada, NGE Contracting and Siemens Mobility), and WestEx Transit Solutions (Aecon Infrastructure Management, AtkinsRéalis Major Projects, Pomerleau Major Projects, and Dragados Canada)

The scope of the project includes the design and construction of seven new stations: Mount Dennis (connection station), Keelesdale, Scarlett-Jane, Royal York, Islington, Martin Grove and Renforth. Four of the stations will be underground, two elevated and at-grade.

The contract also covers the railway’s operating and control systems along the 9.2-kilometre (5.7-mile) route, as well as signalling, communications, data networks. Work also involves fit-out of a 1.5km elevated guideway, the tunnel, and tunnel ventilation.

The deal is being procured under a progressive design and build model, which means the consortium will now work with Metrolinx and Infrastructure Ontario to refine the design, cost, schedule. The financial value of the contract has not yet been disclosed and will only become clear at the end of this development phase.

Meanwhile, WSP in Canada has been named as the primary lead designer for the project, as part of the TRP consortium.

The extension runs west from Mount Dennis to Renforth and is due to open around 2031. Other packages already awarded include two tunnelling contracts and a CAN$290 million (US$212 million) elevated guideway scheme.

STAY CONNECTED

Receive the information you need when you need it through our world-leading magazines, newsletters and daily briefings.

Sign up

Longer reads
China’s Dingli dodged a bullet on anti-dumping duty – now its focus is innovation for growth
Dingli chairman and founder Mr. Xu Shugen speaks to Construction Briefing
New analysis: US steel tariffs push construction equipment prices up across the board
New analysis from Off-Highway Research estimates how steel tariffs will increase equipment costs for US buyers
The good, the bad and the undeniable truth about...
To really get on board with the digital transformation of construction, you have to know what it means – and what it might look like
CONNECT WITH THE TEAM
Andy Brown Editor, Editorial, UK - Wadhurst Tel: +44 (0) 1892 786224 E-mail: [email protected]
Neil Gerrard Senior Editor, Editorial, UK - Wadhurst Tel: +44 (0) 7355 092 771 E-mail: [email protected]
Eleanor Shefford Brand Manager Tel: +44 (0) 1892 786 236 E-mail: [email protected]
Peter Collinson International Sales Manager Tel: +44 (0) 1892 786220 E-mail: [email protected]
CONNECT WITH SOCIAL MEDIA