The U.S. Army Corps of Engineers has approved a fully funded cost for the New Lock at the Soo of $2.619 billion, according to Detroit District spokesperson Carrie Fox. The cost reduction amounts to 13% less than the $3.2 billion figure previously authorized by Congress. The estimate was certified on July 9 and publicly announced during a stakeholder webinar on Sept. 11.
Fox said the certified figure includes all construction contracts—completed, ongoing and future—as well as management reserve, contingency, and Corps labor costs for planning, project management, design, and supervision and administration. It does not cover operations or maintenance after the lock is placed in service.
Rendering, above, depicts how the Soo Locks will look once the New Lock at the Soo is complete in Sault Ste. Marie, Mich. Image: USACE.
No features required for a fully functional 1,200-ft chamber have been de-scoped, she added. “The $2.619B fully funded project cost includes all features required for a fully functional 1,200-foot long navigation lock,” Fox told ENR by email.
With efficient funding through fiscal years 2026 to 2030, the project remains on track for summer 2030 completion. The project is considered essential to national supply chains; a 2015 Dept. of Homeland Security study warned a six-month Poe Lock outage could idle 11 million U.S. jobs.
The New Lock at the Soo will add a second Poe-size chamber—1,200 ft by 110 ft by 32 ft—in the footprint of the Sabin Lock, to handle the 1,000-ft freighters that move nearly all Great Lakes iron ore. USACE has said more than 88% of commodities transiting the locks system are limited to the Poe, underscoring the need for redundancy.
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The project was authorized in the Water Resources Development Act of 2022 at about $3.219 billion. Fox emphasized that certified cost estimates are an internal tool providing a “snapshot in time” of anticipated cost through completion and “do not affect or change the authorized cost of the project from WRDA 22.”
Progress So Far
Phase 1 upstream channel deepening finished in 2022, and Phase 2 upstream approach walls reached substantial completion in September 2024.
In June 2025, the Corps awarded Kokosing-Alberici-Traylor LLC $95.3 million in remaining Phase 3 options covering downstream work, hands-free mooring and downstream ship arrestors. Those awards followed the $1.068-billion base Phase 3 contract let in 2022.
Phase 3 also includes demolition of the Sabin Lock, infilling of the Davis Lock, construction of a new pump well, rerouting of power and a bridge to the hydropower plant. The Corps says the overall program remains on track for summer 2030 completion with steady appropriations.
Also this month, ENR Midwest named “Upstream Approach Walls at the Soo Locks Complex, Phase 2” one of three finalists for its 2025 Project of the Year, which will take place Nov. 18 at the Renaissance Chicago Downtown Hotel. Click here for more information about the event.