Harman Patil (Editor)

Daly's bridge

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Carries
  
Pedestrians

Locale
  
Cork

Design
  
Suspension bridge

Address
  
River Lee, Ireland

Location
  
Cork

Material
  
Wrought iron

Carry
  
Footbridge

Crosses
  
River Lee

Other name(s)
  
Shakey Bridge

Total length
  
~50m

Opened
  
1927

Bridge type
  
Suspension bridge

Body of water
  
River Lee

Daly's bridge

Similar
  
Cork Public Museum, Elizabeth Fort, Fitzgerald's Park, Red Abbey - Cork, Two Working Men

Daly s bridge top 5 facts


Daly's bridge is a pedestrian bridge spanning the River Lee in Cork, Ireland. Known locally as the Shakey Bridge, it joins Sunday's Well on the northside, to Fitzgerald's Park in the Mardyke area on the south.

Completed in 1926 and opened in 1927, it is the only suspension bridge in Cork city and was constructed by the London-based David Rowell & Company to the design of Stephen W. Farrington, the Cork City Engineer.

Constructed primarily of wrought iron, the bridge spans 160 feet, and the timber planked walkway is four and a half feet wide.

The bridge takes its official name from Cork businessman James Daly, who contributed to the cost of the bridge. Its colloquial name (the "Shakey Bridge" or "Shaky Bridge") derives from the movement of the platform when running or jumping on the bridge.

References

Daly's bridge Wikipedia