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Cadishead Viaduct

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Carries
  
Railway line

No. of spans
  
5

Clearance below
  
23 m

Body of water
  
Manchester Ship Canal

Number of spans
  
5

Crosses
  
Manchester Ship Canal

Opened
  
27 February 1893

Longest span
  
37 m

Owner
  
British Railways Board

Cadishead Viaduct

Maintained by
  
British Railways Board (Residuary)

Material
  
Black Engineering Brick and Steel

Constructed by
  
Cheshire Lines Committee

Similar
  
Clifton Viaduct, St Mary the Virgin's Church - E, Manchester Ship Canal, Clifton Aqueduct, Salford Town Hall

Cadishead Viaduct is a disused railway viaduct of multi-lattice girder construction. It was built in 1892 by the Cheshire Lines Committee to clear the newly built Manchester Ship Canal to carry the new deviation of the Glazebrook to Woodley Main Line. The central span is 40 yards (37 m) long, and the clearance is 75 feet (23 m).

It opened to goods on 27 February 1893 and to passenger traffic on 29 May 1893.

Following the withdrawal of passenger services in 1964, the line became goods only and when expensive repairs to the viaduct were needed the early 1980s British Rail closed the viaduct and the preceding line towards Glazebrook.

It is now blocked with containers on each end owing to anti-social behaviour and to stop people walking across it, as the deck of the viaduct is in a very bad state with major corrosion setting in on the soffits and trough decking of the major steel span of the viaduct.

References

Cadishead Viaduct Wikipedia