Design Arch Bridge No. of spans 1 Width 9 m Bridge type Arch bridge Architect David Lennox | Material Stone Opened 1833 Longest span 6 m Location Blaxland, Glenbrook | |
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Carries Light Motor vehicles, pedestrians and bicycles Locale Blaxland, New South Wales, Australia Height 9 metres (30 ft) at highest point Address 88 Mitchells Pass, Glenbrook NSW 2773, Australia Similar Blue Mountains, Lapstone Zig Zag, Lennox Bridge - Parramatta, Glenbrook Native Plant Res, Prospect Creek |
The Lennox Bridge (also known as The Horseshoe Bridge) is a stone arch bridge designed by David Lennox situated in Blaxland, New South Wales, Australia. It is a single arch of 6 metres (20 ft) span and 9 metres (30 ft) above water level, with a road width of 9 metres (30 ft).
History and description
Lennox Bridge, opened in 1833, is the oldest surviving stone arch bridge on the Australian mainland. It crosses Brookside Creek (also known as Lapstone Creek) on the road known as Mitchells Pass. It replaced an earlier crossing of the creek 600 metres (2,000 ft) further south, which today survives as a walking track. A nearby quarry is thought to have been created for the purpose of providing stone for the bridge.
The bridge served the main route to the Blue Mountains for 93 years until 1926, when the Great Western Highway was re-routed via the Knapsack Viaduct. It was closed in 1967 but later strengthened and repaired with an internal concrete structure and it re-opened in 1982.