Reconnecting the Rockies
Improving safety for animals and people thanks to one of Canada’s most ambitious wildlife crossing system outside a national park, spanning B.C. and Alberta.
Key Stats
Roads and wildlife are a deadly mix
The Reconnecting the Rockies project enables animals to safely move across a busy, and deadly, highway in the Canadian Rockies.
The project aims to advance a connected network of wildlife crossing structures and fencing on 80 kilometres of Highway 3 from Hosmer, B.C., through Sparwood, then east into Alberta to Lundbreck.
Reconnecting the Rockies will reduce deadly crashes between vehicles and animals and will save both lives and money. It marks one of Canada’s most ambitious wildlife crossing systems underway outside a national park.

What We're Doing
Reconnecting the Rockies is a collaborative project to improve landscape-level connectivity across Highway 3 by creating safe crossings for animals large and small, reducing wildlife deaths on the highway and keeping motorists safer.
How We’re Doing It
Our goal is to create a system of wildlife crossing structures (underpasses, overpasses, retrofitted bridges, and fencing) from B.C.’s Elk Valley to the Crowsnest Pass region in Alberta to reduce risks to motorists and create safe movement of wildlife across Highway 3.
Building a system of crossings under and across Highway 3 will make sure wildlife habitat and ecosystems important in western North America stay connected.