Hudson Bay Railway: an eco-industrial approach to arctic infrastructures

In the spring of 2017, collapsing land as a result of permafrost thaw in addition to major flooding, completely destroyed multiple sections of track along the Hudson Bay Railway, ceasing rail operations and leaving many northern Manitoba communities isolated. The Hudson Bay Railway is the only land...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Speirs, Christopher William Georg
Other Authors: McLachlan, Ted (Landscape Architecture), Corne, Ian (Landscape Architecture), Trottier, Jean
Format: Master Thesis
Language:English
Published: 2022
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1993/36683
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author Speirs, Christopher William Georg
author2 McLachlan, Ted (Landscape Architecture)
Corne, Ian (Landscape Architecture)
Trottier, Jean
author_facet Speirs, Christopher William Georg
author_sort Speirs, Christopher William Georg
collection MSpace at the University of Manitoba
description In the spring of 2017, collapsing land as a result of permafrost thaw in addition to major flooding, completely destroyed multiple sections of track along the Hudson Bay Railway, ceasing rail operations and leaving many northern Manitoba communities isolated. The Hudson Bay Railway is the only land all-season access to many communities, with the remaining communities only having seasonal winter-road access. For nearly two years the rail line was inactive, desperately needing significant upgrades and repairs. Late in autumn of 2018, the rail line was finally repaired and operating once again, bringing joy to northern communities. The question remains, for how long? If the Hudson Bay Railway were to remain lifeless, how does that fair for communities that refer to the rail line as their 'lifeline'? Long facing the challenges of arctic terrain and adequate funding, this practicum re-imagines what the Hudson Bay Railway is by proposing a regional rail network throughout northern Manitoba, technically designed to be resilient against environmental challenges and remain dependable for generations of communities. October 2022
format Master Thesis
genre Arctic
Hudson Bay
permafrost
genre_facet Arctic
Hudson Bay
permafrost
geographic Arctic
Hudson
Hudson Bay
geographic_facet Arctic
Hudson
Hudson Bay
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institution Open Polar
language English
op_collection_id ftunivmanitoba
op_relation http://hdl.handle.net/1993/36683
op_rights open access
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spelling ftunivmanitoba:oai:mspace.lib.umanitoba.ca:1993/36683 2025-01-16T20:27:09+00:00 Hudson Bay Railway: an eco-industrial approach to arctic infrastructures Speirs, Christopher William Georg McLachlan, Ted (Landscape Architecture) Corne, Ian (Landscape Architecture) Trottier, Jean 2022-08-12T22:50:31Z application/pdf http://hdl.handle.net/1993/36683 eng eng http://hdl.handle.net/1993/36683 open access Hudson Bay Railway infrastructure environmental technical northern Manitoba Landscape Architecture regional planning master thesis 2022 ftunivmanitoba 2024-01-14T18:38:50Z In the spring of 2017, collapsing land as a result of permafrost thaw in addition to major flooding, completely destroyed multiple sections of track along the Hudson Bay Railway, ceasing rail operations and leaving many northern Manitoba communities isolated. The Hudson Bay Railway is the only land all-season access to many communities, with the remaining communities only having seasonal winter-road access. For nearly two years the rail line was inactive, desperately needing significant upgrades and repairs. Late in autumn of 2018, the rail line was finally repaired and operating once again, bringing joy to northern communities. The question remains, for how long? If the Hudson Bay Railway were to remain lifeless, how does that fair for communities that refer to the rail line as their 'lifeline'? Long facing the challenges of arctic terrain and adequate funding, this practicum re-imagines what the Hudson Bay Railway is by proposing a regional rail network throughout northern Manitoba, technically designed to be resilient against environmental challenges and remain dependable for generations of communities. October 2022 Master Thesis Arctic Hudson Bay permafrost MSpace at the University of Manitoba Arctic Hudson Hudson Bay
spellingShingle Hudson Bay Railway
infrastructure
environmental
technical
northern Manitoba
Landscape Architecture
regional planning
Speirs, Christopher William Georg
Hudson Bay Railway: an eco-industrial approach to arctic infrastructures
title Hudson Bay Railway: an eco-industrial approach to arctic infrastructures
title_full Hudson Bay Railway: an eco-industrial approach to arctic infrastructures
title_fullStr Hudson Bay Railway: an eco-industrial approach to arctic infrastructures
title_full_unstemmed Hudson Bay Railway: an eco-industrial approach to arctic infrastructures
title_short Hudson Bay Railway: an eco-industrial approach to arctic infrastructures
title_sort hudson bay railway: an eco-industrial approach to arctic infrastructures
topic Hudson Bay Railway
infrastructure
environmental
technical
northern Manitoba
Landscape Architecture
regional planning
topic_facet Hudson Bay Railway
infrastructure
environmental
technical
northern Manitoba
Landscape Architecture
regional planning
url http://hdl.handle.net/1993/36683