Canadian Coast Guard Tahsis Search and Rescue Station - Wharf Reconstruction

The Fisheries and Oceans Canada (DFO) Canadian Coast Guard (CCG) is proposing to replace the existing condemned municipal wharf and construct a new Search and Rescue Station (SAR) wharf at the Village of Tahsis, British Columbia. The project is a Government of Canada initiative to enhance CCG capacity to provide marine search and rescue capacity and environmental protections in the waters off the Northwest Coast of Vancouver Island.

 

The proposed project activities will include in-water works. There will be no infilling or dredging. The project will involve a demolition phase and a construction phase. Demotion will involve the removal of the entire structure including the wharf head topsides, deck panels, and piles. Construction will involve installation of a wharf structure with a dual concrete float with upland access. The mooring facility will be designed and constructed to accommodate emergency response vessels. The proposed project will include: A pile supported upland access pier, approximately 56 metres long and 5 metres wide connecting to a wharf head that is about 15 metres long and 16 metres wide. Attached will be a hinged access ramp, approximately 9.5 metres long and 1.8 metres wide, leading to a concrete moorage float that is approximately 26 metres long and 17 metres wide. There will also be a pier head at the offshore end of the pier (entrance of the ramp) with dimensions of approximately 1.8 metres by 12 meters.

 

The physical disturbance of intertidal foreshore and subtidal seabed will be limited to the installation of the pier support and moorage piles. The support piles will be limited to the upper foreshore within the existing rip-rap shoreline. The moorage float and anchor piles will be located over relatively shallow nearshore subtidal seabed, approximately 0.5m and 4.5 m below water.

 

The moorage float will be constructed of expanded polystyrene foam floatation billets contained and armored within concrete side and end walls and topped with a concrete deck slab. The tie-up rails will be pressure treated wood. Moorage and support piles will be steel pipe and installed using a pile setting vibro-hammer. The access pier sub structure will be pressure treated timber. The access ramp will be welded aluminum structure and fabricated off site and transported to the site by truck or barge. The construction of the pier is required to support the facility and search and rescue vessels.

 

Key equipment and machinery that will be used on site includes: pile driving/crane barge, material supply barge, support tugs, mobile concrete batching plant, concrete delivery/mixing trucks, lifting crane for handling of steel piles and sheet pile panels on the ground.

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Latest update

May 28, 2022  – The public comment period on the project and its potential for causing adverse effects is closed. The Department of Fisheries and Oceans Canada is considering comments received to inform its determination on whether the project is likely to cause significant adverse environmental effects.

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Contacts

Fisheries and Oceans Canada Real Property Technical Services
Don Storry, Project Engineer, Real Property & Technical Support
200 - 401 Burrard Street
Vancouver, British Columbia V6C 3S4
Telephone: 604-666-8526
Email: Don.Storry@dfo-mpo.gc.ca


  • Location

    • Canadian Coast Guard Tahsis Search and Rescue Station (British Columbia)
  • Nature of Activity

    • Building and Property Development
  • Assessment Status

    Completed
  • Start Date

    2021-06-01
  • Proponent

    Canadian Coast Guard Ocean Protection Plan
  • Authorities

    • Fisheries and Oceans Canada
    • Transport Canada
  • Assessment Type

    Project on federal lands
  • Reference Number

    83582
Disclaimer

This map is for illustrative purposes. The markers represent the approximate locations based on available data. More than one marker may be identified for a given assessment.

 

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...within 200 kilometres
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