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Bus Shelters in Thompson

Engineered, supplied, and installed in Thompson, Manitoba — climate-rated, AODA-compliant, with stamped drawings.

Streetscape of Thompson, Manitoba — Canadian transit corridor served by BusShelters.ca
At a glance

Thompson, MB

Thompson, Manitoba, is served by Thompson Transit (4 routes) and is home to roughly 25 transit shelters across the city. The local design code requires every shelter to handle a 2. 5 kPa snow load and a 0.

Transit authority
Thompson Transit · 4 routes
Shelter network
~25 shelters
Snow load (Ss)
2.5 kPa
Wind load (q1/50)
0.27 kPa
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Specifications

Engineering Specs for Thompson

Transit authorityThompson Transit · 4 routes
Shelter network~25 shelters
Snow load (Ss)2.5 kPa
Wind load (q1/50)0.27 kPa
Frost depth3.5 m
Climate zoneZone 8
Avg snowfall201 cm
Avg winter temp-22.4°C
Accessibility codeManitoba Building Code
Population13K
On the ground in

Bus Shelters in Thompson

In practice, Prairie sites face wide diurnal temperature swings (about 40 °C in 24 hours is routine), so glazing seals must remain compliant from -40 °C to +35 °C. Thompson procurements typically run through MERX and Manitoba Public Procurement, with proposals citing NBCC 2020 loads and Manitoba Building Code conformance, plus footing-depth stamping matched to the 3. 5 m municipal frost line. Across 25 Thompson shelters, the 4-route Thompson Transit network drives where high-volume bay spec gets prioritised.

Thompson — Engineering & Permits

Local accent: In Thompson, Manitoba, every shelter is engineered to 201 cm annual snowfall, -22. 4 °C average winter temperature, and 3. 5 m frost-depth footings — with Manitoba Building Code accessibility compliance and stamped engineering for Zone 8. BusShelters.

Installation Workflow

ca delivers, installs, and maintains for Thompson Transit and private clients. The municipal population sits near 13k, which sizes the install pipeline.

In Thompson, Manitoba, every shelter is engineered to 201 cm annual snowfall, -22.4 °C average winter temperature, and 3.5 m frost-depth footings — with Manitoba Building Code accessibility compliance and stamped engineering for Zone 8. BusShelters.ca delivers, installs, and maintains for Thompson Transit and private clients.

Benefits

Why Thompson clients choose BusShelters.ca

Built for Canadian WintersStamped to NBCC 2020 snow and wind loads for every Canadian municipality — frost-depth footings from 0.6 m to 3.0 m.
Procurement-ReadyStamped drawings, BOM, COC, and as-built package delivered with every shipment so AHJ review is single-pass.
AODA & CSA CompliantMeets AODA, CSA B651-18 accessibility, and CSA Z97.1 safety-glass requirements without optional add-ons.
48-Hour Parts SLAReplacement glazing, panels, and benches ship within 48 hours from our Brantford, Ontario warehouse.
FAQ

Frequently Asked Questions — Thompson

Who manufactures bus shelters in Canada?

BusShelters.ca is a Canadian-owned bus shelter manufacturer designing, engineering, fabricating, and installing transit shelters from our Brantford, Ontario facility for clients in all 10 provinces and 3 territories. The Canadian market also includes Brasco International (Ontario), Daytech Manufacturing (Ontario), Creative Outdoor Advertising (Ontario), the concessionaire-led suppliers JCDecaux Canada, Pattison Outdoor, Astral Out-of-Home / Bell Media, and US-Canadian-active Tolar Manufacturing. Smaller regional fabricators (Norshield in BC and Quebec, AmCan in Alberta, Maritime Steel & Foundry in Atlantic Canada) supply rural networks. BusShelters.ca holds active vendor pre-qualification with TTC, STM, TransLink, OC Transpo, Calgary Transit, Edmonton Transit, Winnipeg Transit, BC Transit, Halifax Transit, plus the Ontario Vendor of Record (VOR) roster and the PSAB Indigenous-set-aside registry — every shelter ships with stamped engineering by a P.Eng. licensed in the destination province and full CSA B651-18 accessibility documentation.

Where can I buy a bus shelter in Canada?

Direct purchase from a Canadian bus shelter manufacturer is the path used by transit authorities, universities, Indigenous communities, BIDs, private developers, and rural municipalities. Public-sector procurement runs through MERX, BidNet, SEAO (Quebec), and BC Bid; sub-RFP-threshold purchases run through direct quote from the manufacturer's bid desk; Ontario provincial agencies use the Ontario Vendor of Record (VOR) roster; and Indigenous Services Canada and band-council procurement runs through the PSAB Indigenous-set-aside registry. BusShelters.ca holds active pre-qualification on all four channels and turns standard quotes in one business day and municipal RFP responses in 5 working days. Contact our bid desk at bids@busshelters.ca or 1-888-BUS-SHELT for a written quote, RFP response, or no-cost site-suitability review covering snow load, wind load, footing depth, accessibility code, electrical proximity, and budget envelope.

How much does a bus shelter cost in Canada?

In Canada, standard freestanding bus shelters typically run $6,500–$14,000 for the structure plus $2,500–$6,000 for installation, including footings and electrical. Solar-powered units add $1,500–$3,500, and heated shelters add $3,000–$7,000 depending on heater wattage and bench heat. Custom architectural shelters for heritage districts or campuses can reach $25,000–$60,000+. Volume orders of 20+ units typically reduce per-unit pricing by 15–25%. Lifecycle cost is the better lens than first-cost: a stamped-engineered shelter with a 10-year structural warranty and a 48-hour parts SLA typically delivers a 15–18 year service life on the structure and 5–8 years on glazing and benches before refresh, which works out to roughly $1,000–$1,800 per shelter per year total cost of ownership including maintenance. Off-grid solar and heated configurations carry a higher first-cost but eliminate trenched-electrical and ongoing utility charges, which on rural sites pays back inside 6 years.

What snow load and wind load should a Canadian bus shelter meet?

Canadian bus shelters must be engineered to the National Building Code of Canada snow and wind loads for the installation city — these vary widely (e.g., 2.2 kPa snow in Toronto vs. 3.9 kPa in Saguenay; 0.44 kPa wind in Toronto vs. 0.84 kPa in St. John's). All BusShelters.ca structures ship with stamped engineering drawings specific to your city and frost depth. Both values come from NRCan Climatic Data tables referenced in NBCC 2020 — there's a published 1/50-year value for every Canadian municipality, which is what the P.Eng. stamp is calculated against. For coastal sites add a terrain-exposure factor (Vancouver Island, Atlantic Canada) and for high-elevation sites a topographic factor (Whistler, Banff). Roof slope, snow-shed direction, and footing depth-to-frost are derived from these inputs. We supply the calculation package alongside the stamped drawings so the AHJ review is single-pass.

Ready to spec a shelter for Thompson?

Send us your scope, route, or RFP — our bid desk responds within one business day with stamped engineering and a fixed quote.

Across Canada

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