Travel: Hit The Heights Across Canada From Spectacular Peak-To-Peak
January 6, 2009
The CN Tower elevator ride, the peak of engineering ingenuity
Canada’s tallest building, the CN Tower in Toronto, ON has created an eye-opening new thrill experience by adding glass panels to the floor of its newly enhanced elevator ride, already named #1 on the “World’s Top 10 Elevator Rides” by National Geographic’s JOURNEYS OF A LIFETIME: 500 of the World’s Greatest Trips. Now North America’s first and the world’s highest glass-bottomed elevator offers a view 345 metres (1,136 feet) straight down. Travelling at a speed of 22 km/15 mph, it rockets visitors to the top of the tower in 58 seconds. At a height of 553.33 metres (1,815 feet, 5 inches) the CN Tower is Canada’s National Tower. More than two million people each year ride the elevator to the top of this Canadian engineering marvel that has claimed first place as the world’s tallest tower for more than 32 years (only recently surpassed by the Burj Dubai building now under construction in Dubai). www.cntower.ca
World’s highest tides peak in Nova Scotia’s Bay of Fundy
The Bay of Fundy’s eight-knot current makes it the top contender for the strongest and fastest current in the world. Everyday, 100 billion tonnes of sea water flow in and out of the Bay of Fundy, equal in one tide cycle to the flow of all the rivers on earth. High and low tides reach their peaks on average every six hours and 13 minutes. And now this fierce barrage of tidal power may be on the leading edge of tidal power technology with the Nova Scotia Department of Energy declaring it “the most effective site for tidal power generation in North America.” Visitors flock to the Bay of Fundy to see the world’s mightiest tidal flow, the bay’s 12 species of whales, its vast rock cliffs, mud flats and wind-scraped sandstone sculptures. A site of major fossil and dinosaur discoveries, the Bay of Fundy is competing to become one of the world’s New 7 Wonders of Nature. www.bayoffundytourism.com
Peak travel time: 10 minutes to cross the world’s longest continuous bridge over sea
The curved 12.9 km (8 mile) long span of Canada’s Confederation Bridge arches over the Northumberland Strait linking the provinces of New Brunswick and Prince Edward Island and is not only Canada’s longest bridge, it is the longest continuous bridge in the world over ice-covered waters. The bridge has 310 street lights, 17 cameras, and 7,500 drainage ports. It took four years of construction, more than 5,000 local workers and a cost of $1 billion to build this fixed-link ocean crossing to pastoral PEI. Now peak travel time to cross is a mere 10 minutes, earning the rightful slogan “The Longest Bridge. The Shortest Route.” www.confederationbridge.com
About the CTC
The CTC is Canada’s national tourism marketing organization. Our vision is inspiring the world to explore Canada. With our partners in the tourism industry and the governments of Canada, the provinces and the territories, we advertise and market Canada in nine countries around the world, conduct industry research and studies, and promote product and industry development. For research and statistics, news and media resources, travel information and events, please visit www.canada.travel/media

