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La Prairie, Quebec

1647 establishments in the French colonial empireCities and towns in QuebecIncorporated places in Roussillon Regional County MunicipalityLa Prairie, QuebecPages with non-numeric formatnum arguments
Quebec populated places on the Saint Lawrence RiverUse Canadian English from January 2023
Vieux Laprairie Chemin Saint Jean (coin rue Saint Laurent) 2022 06 03
Vieux Laprairie Chemin Saint Jean (coin rue Saint Laurent) 2022 06 03

La Prairie is an off-island suburb (south shore) of Montreal, in southwestern Quebec, Canada, at the confluence of the Saint-Jacques River and the Saint Lawrence River in the Regional County Municipality of Roussillon. The population as of the Canada 2011 Census was 23,357.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article La Prairie, Quebec (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

La Prairie, Quebec
Rue du Quai,

Geographical coordinates (GPS) Address Nearby Places
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Wikipedia: La Prairie, QuebecContinue reading on Wikipedia

Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 45.42 ° E -73.5 °
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Address

Rue du Quai

Rue du Quai
J5R 1E5
Quebec, Canada
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Vieux Laprairie Chemin Saint Jean (coin rue Saint Laurent) 2022 06 03
Vieux Laprairie Chemin Saint Jean (coin rue Saint Laurent) 2022 06 03
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Nearby Places

Champlain Bridge (Montreal, 2019–present)
Champlain Bridge (Montreal, 2019–present)

The Samuel De Champlain Bridge, colloquially known as the Champlain Bridge, is a cable-stayed bridge design by architect Poul Ove Jensen and built to replace the original Champlain Bridge over the Saint Lawrence River in Quebec, between Nuns' Island in the borough of Verdun in Montreal and the suburban city of Brossard on the South Shore. A second, connected bridge links Nuns' Island to the main Island of Montreal. The bridge is the busiest bridge in the country with more cars flowing into it than any other bridge.The new span is located just north of the original Champlain Bridge, which is currently being demolished. The new bridge carries eight lanes of automobile traffic of the A-10, A-15, and A-20, with one lane in each direction dedicated for buses. It also includes a multi-use lane for cyclists and pedestrians. The central portion of the bridge deck carries the South Shore branch of the Réseau express métropolitain (REM) automated light metro system. At 60 metres (200 ft) wide, the new Champlain Bridge is the widest cable-stayed bridge in the world that uses two planes of cables.It is one of the largest infrastructure projects ever built in North America and with an estimated 59 million vehicles a year, one of the busiest crossings on the continent. It is built to last 125 years with the usage of stainless steel and high-performance concrete, and replaces the previous 57-year-old bridge, which had become functionally obsolete and its structure having been degraded by the repeated application of de-icing salt.