Bridge Name: | Bridge of the Twenty-Three Camels |
Carries: | Two lanes of British Columbia Highway 99 |
Crosses: | Fraser River |
Locale: | Lillooet, British Columbia |
Owner: | British Columbia Ministry of Transportation and Infrastructure |
Open: | June 26, 1981 |
Length: | 341.50 m[1] |
Spans: | 5 |
Bridge of the Twenty-Three Camels is the official name of the highway bridge over the Fraser River at Lillooet, British Columbia, Canada, on BC Highway 99. It replaced the older 1913-vintage Lillooet Suspension Bridge, just upstream, which had no highway designation but connected the town to BC Highway 12, a designation which today only refers to the Lillooet-Lytton highway but, until the extension of the 99 designation from Pemberton, also included the Lillooet-Cache Creek highway.
As something of a joke on this name, the crossing of the Yalakom River at Moha, a small concrete truss span, sports the sign "Bridge of the Twenty-Three Chipmunks".
The bridge was opened on June 26, 1981 by Transportation and Highways Minister Alex Fraser and Thomas Waterland, Minister of Forests and the MLA for Yale-Lillooet.[2]