Bridges with the
rail bridge crossing the
American Locks. The Sault Ste. Marie International Bridge, a steel
truss arch bridge, takes road traffic across the river. Directly to the west is the
Sault Ste. Marie International Railroad Bridge, which carries rail traffic on a single set of tracks.
Power plants The
Edison Sault Electric Hydroelectric Plant, located at the eastern end of the Sault Ste. Marie Power Canal which runs between Lake Superior and Lake Huron through the city south of the American locks, is one of the longest
hydroelectric plants in the world at in length. The plant consists of 74 three-phase generators capable of generating 25 to 30
megawatts. It was completed in 1902. The hydro plant is faced with stone quarried during the excavation of the Sault Ste. Marie Power Canal. The
United States Army Corps of Engineers owns and operates a
hydroelectric generating plant directly north of the American locks. Finally, the Francis H. Clergue Generating Station, owned and operated by Brookfield Renewable Energy, Inc., is a hydroelectric generating plant located directly north of the Canadian lock with a generating capacity of 52
MW. It was completed in 1981. File:Edison Sault power plant and Soo Locks 2010-04-20 USACE.jpg|
Saint Marys Falls Hydropower Plant at the mouth of the
Edison Sault Power Canal File:Soo Locks sluice gates.JPG|US Army Corps of Engineers hydroelectric plant seen from across the St. Marys Rapids File:Sea lamprey trap at FH Clergue Generating Station.JPG|Francis H. Clergue Generating Station
Canal The
Edison Sault Power Canal is used to power the Saint Marys Falls Hydropower Plant at its eastern end. The canal separated downtown Sault Ste. Marie, Michigan, from its mainland, making it an island. It was begun in September 1898 as the Michigan Lake Superior Power Company Canal, but completed by Edison Sault Electric Company in June 1902. Measured from its headgates to its end at the power plant, it is in length, between wide, and deep. The water runs down the canal at speeds upwards of .
Locks The American Soo Locks are the major transportation route around the St. Marys Rapids, but the Canadian Sault Ste. Marie Canal is still used by recreational and tour boats on account of its smaller size, simpler procedures, and additional mooring lines to support small craft. By agreement, traffic may use either country's locks without passports.
Other works A set of
compensating works are located at the mouth of the rapids, which are used to control the outflow of water from Lake Superior. Completed between 1901 and 1921, the works were built to provide greater supply of the rivers flow through the three hydroelectric plants and locks on the river. This flow is controlled by the
International Joint Commission. The works consists of 16
sluice gates, half of which are on the American side, and the other half on the Canadian side of the river. On average, upwards of 93% of the river's flow is diverted by the compensating works to power generation and navigational uses. The berm begins at Gate #1 of the compensating works so as to retain the ability to provide a dedicated flow over the fish spawning habitat, independent of water supply over the rest of the rapids. File:Ste Marys River.jpg|Remedial concrete berm along the St. Marys Rapids, an effort to improve fish spawning habitat File:International road and rail bridges 2.JPG|
International Bridge (left) and
rail bridge (right) with the remedial berm in the foreground File:Lake Superior flood control gates, 6 open.JPG|Lake Superior compensating works with a high rate of water flow (equivalent of 6 gates fully open) == Pollution ==