Ruins in the Ontario landscape, part one

Wednesday, August 9, 2017
by Dan Schneider
Neglected small stone bridge surrounded by grass

Stone bridge

Did I ever tell you about my passion for ruins?

What is a ruin? For now let's think of it as a “built heritage remnant.” The “landscape” in which we find ruins includes countryside, riverscape, even streetscape — although, as structures go, ruins tend to be anti-social and off by themselves.

On this side of the Atlantic, and compared to intact historic structures, the value of ruins is little understood and appreciated. Their potential as assets to the landscape is seldom recognized and exploited, and all too often ruin sites are deliberately degraded or destroyed.

But it’s August, the dog days of summer, so let’s eschew the analytical and just savour the aesthetic — the appeal to the senses and the imagination which is the basis of the poetic and picturesque associations of ruins, particularly of the “old world” kind.  While Ontario is lacking in ruinous castles, monasteries and temples, we do have more than a few ruins worthy of this romantic tradition. 

Painting of a landscape with a broken bridge in the background surrounded by water, titled "The Augustan Bridge at Narni" by Camille Corot

The Augustan Bridge at Narni, by Camille Corot

Indulge me while I show you some of my favourite ruins.  Today it’s bridges and viaducts, or what’s left of them.

A river near Paris, Ontario with the pillars left from a broken bridge

Ruins of railway viaduct, near Paris, Ontario

If a ruined building is one without a roof, no longer able to give shelter, than a ruined bridge is one without a deck, no longer able to provide passage from one side to the other.

What remains are the bridge supports — the piers, abutments, wing walls.

On the Grand River just north of Paris, Ontario, is one of the more spectacular remains of a railway viaduct in the province.  I have yet to find out which rail line it once carried and why it was abandoned.

A different view of the ruined bridge which acted as a railway viaduct in a river near Paris, Ontario

View of the viaduct from dowstream

The ruin of another massive stone viaduct can be found in Niagara, crossing Twenty Mile Creek at Jordan Station.

Neglected railway viaduct stone columns beside existing rail bridge surrounded by water vegetation

Ruined railway viaduct next to current rail bridge, Jordon Station, Ontario

The isolation of elements, when the linking pieces are no longer present, can have a strange, arresting quality.

A neglected single stone column that was a viaduct next to the existing rail bridge surrounded by water vegetation

In Glen Allan, west of Elmira, the old bridge across the Conestogo River was removed, but the stone abutments and cement parapet walls of one of the bridge's approaches survive.

Stone abutments and cement walls of a bridge approach with a wooden walkway in Elmira, Ontario
A metal plaque for a ruined bridge in Glen Allan, Ontario reading: "The Glen Allan Bridge was a camel back through pratt truss bridge 1915-2006, The Corporation of the County of Wellington"

Bridge ruin and plaque, Glen Allan, Ontario

Near Sebringville, just west of Stratford, is an old steel truss bridge, deckless but with its stringers and floor beams intact, more or less.  It crosses Black Creek, a tributary of the Thames, and once connected two parts of a farm.

A truss bridge in a forest over a river

Truss bridge near Sebringville, Ontario

One of the distinctive effects of many ruins is a gradual softening over time of the hard angularity of the structure.  The Sebringville bridge, half-swallowed in the encroaching verdure, reminds me of a line from Al Purdy’s poem “The Country North of Belleville”, about the vestiges of old farms:

the undulating green waves of time are laid on them

Neglected truss bridge in Sebringville with trees surrounding